FORMER IMMIGRATION OFFICIAL SENTENCED TO 3 AND A HALF
YEARS IN PRISON FOR TAKING BRIBES IN EXCHANGE FOR
GRANTING CITIZENSHIP TO ALIENS



  • United States Attorney
    Southern District of New York
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    January 10, 2008
    CONTACT:
    U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
    YUSILL SCRIBNER
    REBEKAH CARMICHAEL
    PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
    (212) 637-2600




MICHAEL J. GARCIA, United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, announced that JIMMIE ORTEGA, 59,
a former Supervisory District Adjudications Officer with the
naturalization unit of the United States Citizenship &
Immigration Services ("CIS") in New York City, was sentenced to
42 months in prison today for taking tens of thousands of dollars
in bribes in exchange for granting United States citizenship to
ineligible aliens. The sentence was imposed by United States
District Judge JOHN F. KEENAN in Manhattan federal court.
According to the Indictment and other documents publicly filed in
this case, as well as statements made during ORTEGA's guilty plea
proceeding:
From October 2004 to April 2006, ORTEGA used his
position with CIS to obtain approvals for ineligible aliens who
were seeking United States Citizenship in exchange for bribes.
ORTEGA, working with one or more other CIS employees, arranged to
approve aliens' citizenship applications without the aliens’
meeting necessary requirements, including the requirements that
they appear at CIS's office in New York for an interview with a
CIS adjudications officer, demonstrate proficiency in the English
language during such interview, and pass the required civics and
United States history examination during such interview.
ORTEGA solicited and received bribes from each alien of
between $1,500 and $4,000 in exchange for arranging for that
alien's naturalization, and solicited bribes from at least 20
aliens in connection with the scheme. ORTEGA retired from his
position at CIS in April 2006.
ORTEGA was arrested in connection with these charges on
October 26, 2006, and pleaded guilty in July, 2007, to one count
of conspiracy, one count of soliciting bribes, and one count of
procuring or attempting to procure naturalization unlawfully.
During his guilty plea, ORTEGA admitted, "I accepted
bribes from applicants seeking citizenship that could not speak,
read or understand sufficient English to pass the English
proficiency and United States history requirements,â€