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  1. #21
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Florida Highway Patrol also notifies immigration anytime a person can't produce a valid driver's license and ID indicating they are here legally. I like it as not only the highways that is their jurisdiction but also main roads from the highways. I many areas you can't avoid going on those main roads so their likelihood of getting caught increases.
    What gets me is when they claim they had no reason to pull them over. In order to pull someone over you need to see them commit a traffic violation, drive a vehicle with expired tags, have burnt out lights such as brake lights, or be in a vehicle similar to one which was used in a crime. Many times there will be a BOLO out for a car with a certain amount of people in it and if you are in that area and see that type and color of a vehicle then you will pull them over as you have probable cause. They can cry all they want.
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  2. #22
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    Here in Nevada if they run your plates and they can do so at any time
    if it comes back with not having insurance , your toast

    Also if you allow your insurance to lapse for 10 days the insurance
    company sends out a notice to the dmv and you get a
    show up or else letter in the mail , $350 for first offence

  3. #23
    Senior Member mapwife's Avatar
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    Updated: It finally made local news today after yesterday's staged protest led by Isabel Garcia.

    Published: 01.01.2008

    Protesters target deportation of mom with U.S. citizen kids
    By Josh Brodesky
    ARIZONA DAILY STAR
    Members of a border-rights group on Monday gathered in front of the Tucson Police Department headquarters Downtown to protest the deportation of a Mexican mother and her three young American children after a traffic stop in early December.
    Miriam Aviles de Reyes, whose children range in age from several weeks to 4 years, is returning to Cuernavaca, Mexico, after a deportation order requiring her to leave the U.S. by midnight Monday.
    "I guess I am going to have to go all the way over there; I don't know," Aviles de Reyes said through an interpreter.
    There is no debate over whether Aviles de Reyes was in the United States illegally, but Isabel Garcia, co-chair of Tucson-based Coalición de Derechos Humanos, said the Police Department overstepped its bounds when it called U.S. Customs and Border Protection after making a traffic stop involving Aviles de Reyes' family.
    "First of all, they violated their own policy of not enforcing immigration law," Garcia said.

    On Dec. 9, Officer James Kneup stopped a truck driven by Aviles de Reyes' husband, Gustavo Reyes, in the 1400 block of West Miracle Mile because a check of the license plate showed the truck's insurance had been suspended.
    The truck had Arizona plates, but Gustavo Reyes had a Sonoran driver's license. Moreover, both parents struggled to speak English.
    Because of this combination, Lt. Vicki Reza said there was "reasonable suspicion" that both parents were not in the country legally.
    "We may call the Border Patrol as a resource," Reza said
    , while also acknowledging that the officer could have called a bilingual city police officer.
    To make the situation more complicated, Aviles de Reyes went into labor after the U.S. Border Patrol arrived at the scene. While Aviles de Reyes was taken to a hospital to give birth while under the watch of the Border Patrol, the rest of her family was taken to a detention center for processing. The child, a boy, was born on Dec. 11.
    Gustavo Reyes has been deported to Mexico, but Aviles de Reyes was given 20 days before she would have to leave.
    Aviles de Reyes, 23, said she has lived in the United States for seven years. It was unclear if she worked while in the U.S., but she said her husband worked in construction.
    Standing in front of Tucson police headquarters with her three children, Aviles de Reyes said that police taunted her, and at one point she was pushed to her knees while police tried to get her to enter a Border Patrol van.
    But Reza denied those allegations, saying an informal internal review had found no wrongdoing or physical contact. Call-time records also did not match the timeline Aviles de Reyes and Garcia presented.
    Border Patrol officials also denied the allegations.
    "There is no record of any allegations of mistreatment in this case," said Border Patrol agent Dove Haber, an agency spokeswoman.
    Aviles de Reyes' three children are all U.S. citizens, but they will most likely be going to Mexico with their mother, said Mo Goldman, an immigration attorney who represented the woman.
    Goldman tried unsuccessfully to extend the amount of time Aviles de Reyes had before leaving to 120 days — the maximum time allowed for what are known as voluntary departures.
    "The sad thing is that our government would not have the humanity to allow her to remain for the entire 120 days, considering she just babied a child in the U.S. and would need some follow-up medical care," he said.
    A estimated 3.1 million children who are U.S. citizens are living in the United States with unauthorized families, according to a recent report by the Pew Hispanic Center.
    â—
    Illegal aliens remain exempt from American laws, while they DEMAND American rights...

  4. #24
    Senior Member americangirl's Avatar
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    "The sad thing is that our government would not have the humanity to allow her to remain for the entire 120 days, considering she just babied a child in the U.S. and would need some follow-up medical care," he said.
    The only follow-up medical care this 23-year-old illegal alien mother of three should get is a tubal ligation.
    Calderon was absolutely right when he said...."Where there is a Mexican, there is Mexico".

  5. #25

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    Immigration attorney Maurice Goldman tried unsuccessfully to get Aviles-Reyes' voluntary departure extended beyond 20 days until her baby, born jaundiced and with some other problems, has had all his wellness checks.

    I wonder how much medical costs for their three children have been so far?
    "We are being destroyed from within"

  6. #26
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by americangirl
    "The sad thing is that our government would not have the humanity to allow her to remain for the entire 120 days, considering she just babied a child in the U.S. and would need some follow-up medical care," he said.
    The only follow-up medical care this 23-year-old illegal alien mother of three should get is a tubal ligation.

    Pure BS, she can get Medical Treatment in HER country and let them pay for her care NOT US Taxpayers ! The child born AFTER she was caught definitely should NOT be granted a US Citizen Birth Certificate...No Way !!
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

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