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  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    More immigrants to get green cards before full review

    Our incompetent, asinine, idiotic government at work:
    More immigrants to get green cards before full review
    By MARISA TAYLOR
    McClatchy Newspapers
    Published on: 02/11/08

    Washington — In a major policy shift aimed at reducing a ballooning immigration backlog, the Department of Homeland Security is preparing to grant permanent residency to tens of thousands of applicants before the FBI completes a required background check.

    Those eligible are immigrants whose fingerprints have cleared the FBI database of criminal convictions and arrests, but whose names have not yet cleared the FBI's criminal or intelligence files after six months of waiting.

    The immigrants who are granted permanent status, more commonly known as getting their green cards, will be expected eventually to clear the FBI's name check. If they don't, their legal status will be revoked and they'll be deported.

    The decision to issue green cards demonstrates how federal agencies are struggling to keep up with surging immigration applications while applying stringent post-Sept. 11 background checks.

    About 150,000 green card and naturalization applicants have been delayed by the name check, with 30,000 waiting more than three years.

    DHS officials are determining exactly how many are affected, but confirmed that tens of thousands of people could be eligible for the expedited procedure. The new policy was outlined in an internal memo obtained by McClatchy Newspapers. Officials said the policy will be posted this week on the department's Web site.

    Lawyers who represent immigrants applauded the change and predicted green cards would be issued faster.

    However, advocates of stricter immigration enforcement accused DHS of creating security loopholes and not solving the problem.

    "It defies the imagination that you can require a security check only to decide that you're going to ignore it," said Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies.

    DHS officials said the new process does not pose new security risks because green card applicants have been allowed to remain in the country while they wait to be screened.

    "This is something that we're doing to get benefits to people who deserve them as quickly as possible," said Chris Bentley of Citizenship and Immigration Services, the DHS agency that processes green cards and citizenship.

    Immigrants seeking citizenship will continue to be required to clear name checks before being naturalized. Officials said the requirements remain in effect for naturalization because U.S. citizenship is more difficult to revoke than a green card.

    The backlog of background checks swelled in the wake of the 2001 terrorist attacks after immigration officials resubmitted 2.7 million names to the FBI.

    At the same time, the bureau tightened its background check requirements. The FBI not only runs applicants' names against lists of suspects in criminal and intelligence files but also looks for names of applicants that have surfaced during the course of an investigation or any associates of suspects.

    "It's a very complicated process," said Bill Carter, a FBI spokesman. "It involves dozens of agencies and databases and often foreign governments."

    Adding to the backlog, a surge of applications flooded Citizenship and Immigration Services last year, prompted partly by fee increases.

    Although the FBI clears about 70 percent of the name checks within 72 hours, the bureau struggles to keep up with more than 74,000 requests per week, roughly half arising from immigration applications.

    Slowing the process even more, many applicants who don't immediately clear are flagged for extra scrutiny because their names are similar to those of suspects.

    Hundreds of people caught up in the backlog have sued the government to force the agencies to initiate background checks. Some of the plaintiffs have found the FBI inexplicitly clears them soon after a lawsuit is filed.

    Michael Baylson, a judge in Philadelphia overseeing six of the lawsuits, recently expressed frustration with the government for what he described as "a strategy of favoring delay by litigation, instead of developing an orderly and transparent administrative resolution."

    "Congress certainly did not intend for the process to become tortuous, expensive, mystifying and delayed, but it has," the Bush appointee wrote in January when ordering the government to explain the delays.

    Critics have charged the naturalization delays could unfairly shut potential voters out of the upcoming presidential election. Last month, Emilio Gonzalez, director of Citizenship and Immigration Services, vowed to hire 3,000 new and retired employees to cut the backlog.

    Immigrant advocates question why applicants waiting for naturalization couldn't be approved before the FBI clears their names, too. Many people who apply for naturalization are green card holders who have lived in the United States for at least three years and have undergone similar background checks before.

    "These people already have been scrutinized," said Daniel G. Anna, an immigration lawyer.

    Two of Anna's clients, a Pennsylvania psychologist and a doctor who works at a New York veterans' hospital, have waited years to become U.S. citizens even though they have green cards. The doctor, who is from Pakistan, recently cleared the name check after she filed a lawsuit, but the psychologist, who is from Nigeria, is still waiting.

    "If you're going to speed it up for green cards, then it makes sense you would do the same thing for naturalization," Anna said.

    Krikorian said the better solution would be for Congress and the administration to earmark more money for both agencies to conduct the complete background checks or to reduce the number of people who are eligible for green cards or citizenship.
    http://www.ajc.com:80/news/content/news ... _0211.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    They have my vote to lower the number of people elegible for green cards and citizenship.

    It seems immigration to the USA is out of controll and will eventually ruin our quality of life.
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

  3. #3
    Senior Member Gogo's Avatar
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    "The immigrants who are granted permanent status, more commonly known as getting their green cards, will be expected eventually to clear the FBI's name check. If they don't, their legal status will be revoked and they'll be deported. "


    Ya right if you can find them. Isn't this similar to the 911 hijackers. In here legally, then over stay or here illegally but you can't find them? Give me a break.
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  4. #4
    Senior Member ourcountrynottheirs's Avatar
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    Who the hell is running this show? Doesn't this kind of defeat the purpose? And, if they don't get clearance from the FBI, who's going to track them down? Do they really believe they will find these people? I am astonished. Prepare for another 9/11 cause it's coming.
    avatar:*912 March in DC

  5. #5
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Have you ever thought maybe you are letting too damn many people in this country you stupid fool idiots.....this is just frigging unbelieveable!!!
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  6. #6
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    Duplicate

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