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  1. #1
    Senior Member dgremark's Avatar
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    GREAT NEWS..9th Circuit lets sanctions stand for now

    I just hope and pray that it stands along with ours in Oklahoma. The only bad part is if we don't fight the next president ( who ever it is Rep or Dem ) and congress, because if they pass amnesty this all will be for nothing. Thats what I worry about the most.






    Tucson Region

    By Howard Fischer
    Capitol Media Services
    Tucson, Arizona | Published: 02.29.2008
    advertisementA federal appeals court refused Thursday to bar prosecutors from enforcing Arizona's new employer-sanctions law while they hear arguments on its legality.
    The judges of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco rejected arguments by lawyers for business groups and their allies that they should not let prosecutors investigate, and potentially bring charges against, companies accused of knowingly hiring undocumented workers.
    In an unsigned order, the judges said they considered challengers' arguments they would suffer irreparable harm, and the likelihood the foes ultimately will succeed in convincing the court to overturn U.S. District Judge Neil Wake's ruling earlier this month that the law is constitutional.
    "We conclude the appellants have not shown that the case warrants a grant of temporary relief during the pendency of these expedited appeals," the order states.
    But the judges did agree to rush the case, at least by appellate standards, with all the legal arguments by both sides filed by the middle of May.
    Farrell Quinlan, a spokesman for some of the business groups contesting the legality of the statute, said his clients are disappointed. But Quinlan said the accelerated hearing schedule means there actually could be a final ruling as early as the end of the summer.
    In the interim, Arizona employers must check the legal status of all new workers through the federal government's E-Verify system. Business groups said the financial cost of compliance, ranging from buying computer equipment to having someone do the checks, is an unfair burden.
    Wake rejected that argument.
    The bigger issue for companies is the provision of the law, which took effect Jan. 1, that allows a state judge to suspend any and all business licenses and permits of any firm found guilty of knowingly hiring someone here illegally. A second conviction within three years puts the company out of business.
    David Selden, one of the lead attorneys in the case, has argued the law is an impermissible intrusion by the state into the exclusive power of the federal government to regulate immigration.
    Wake acknowledged that federal law bars states from imposing civil fines and criminal penalties against companies because they hire undocumented workers. But he pointed out that federal law specifically says states can use their licensing and similar laws to punish errant companies.
    And Wake said the fact that suspending or revoking a company's ability to stay in business could be more serious than a fine is legally irrelevant.
    Selden said rejection of the injunction request does not mean the court is unlikely to accept his arguments that the law is invalid.
    "To get an emergency injunction you've got to tip the scales very heavily at the outset in your favor," he said.
    "Obviously we would have preferred to win this motion. But we're still optimistic that when the litigation is over this will all be declared unconstitutional."
    Joining in the challenge have been groups including the American Civil Liberties Union and Chicanos Por La Causa, which have argued that businesses would be less inclined to hire Hispanics out of fear one might prove to be undocumented.
    53 Comments on this story
    http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/border/227484.php

  2. #2

    Join Date
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    I would not trust these lunes on the 9th for the long run,they are the most overturned circuit .death is the only way most leave office ,of the former 60 judges on there -4 resigned ,kennedy was elevated and is still on the supreme court ,one made secretary of labor ,1 recess appointment AND 53 DIED IN OFFICE

  3. #3
    Senior Member gofer's Avatar
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    15. Comment by Pragmaticcrat D. (pragmaticcrat) — February 29,2008 @ 8:10AM
    Ratings: -0 +29

    Maybe a lot of American kids who haven't been able to find work of late on a first-dibbs basis can start building their dreams again. I mean, my first job was as a busboy, my second job was scrubbing toilets and mopping floors, my third job was washing dishes, my fourth job was flipping burgers and scrubbing grills, and so on and so forth until I was finally able to work my way through college and begin my career as it is now. Without those stepping-stone jobs of my past that would have likely been denied to me in this day and age, to be given to an illegal worker instead, well, I would likely largely been denied that opportunity for working hard to make something of myself just like many of our kids have been denied of late. My own son, a college student himself, was repeatedly turned down for jobs as menial as bussing tables, cleaning toilets and mopping floors, washing dishes, flipping burgers and scrubbing grills, etc. because he doesn't speak fluent Spanish. My neighbor's son got a job at a construction site as a carpenter's helper only to have his car's tires slashed and windshield smashed, being ultimately forced to flee, because he was working in a position that a group of illegals from some town in southern Mexico had promised their cousin.Anyway, this is a victory for America's kids, for their parents, and for our American families' futures with our kids being able to find stepping-stone jobs again. So God bless you, Russell Pearce, and all under the capitol dome who labored with him to get things made right again.

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