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  1. #1
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    U.S. shifts focus to stop employers from hiring illegals

    U.S. shifts focus to stop employers intentionally seeking illegal labor

    12:08 AM CDT on Friday, April 3, 2009
    By LAURENCE ILIFF / The Dallas Morning News
    liliff@dallasnews.com

    JIUTEPEC, Mexico – U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Thursday that there will not be a "moratorium" on workplace raids against illegal immigrants but rather a shift toward going after the employers who seek them out.

    "I would not say we're talking about a moratorium; that's too blunt a word to use," she said at a news conference after she and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder were meeting on law enforcement issues with their Mexican counterparts.

    "It's a more nuanced priority setting, based on how do you get the best immigration enforcement at the work site and really get to those who profit unduly from hiring illegal labor," she said.

    Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had hinted at a shift in policy during her visit to Mexico City last week that is more in line with President Barack Obama's campaign stance that employers should be more of the focus of immigration enforcement.

    Napolitano said new guidelines for immigration agents who work in the interior of the country would be issued soon, reflecting the shift in the administration's focus, but insisted the ultimate goal is better enforcement of U.S. immigration laws.

    "With respect to the workplace, it is my view and the view of many that we have to have a much more focused effort aimed at the employers themselves, who are intentionally seeking out illegal labor," she said, "and creating demand that helps pull illegal immigrants across our borders."

    The U.S. officials have been meeting with Mexican Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora, Interior Minister Fernando Gómez Mont and Public Security Minister Genaro GarcÃ*a Luna for the past two days. Jiutepec is just south of Mexico City, near Cuernavaca.

    The primary focus has been to develop a bilateral strategy to stop the illegal flow of weapons from the United States into Mexico that fuels a drug war that has killed thousands.

    Holder said the exact percentage of U.S.-procured weapons used by the Mexican drug traffickers was not the issue. Rather, the U.S. needs to take responsibility – like it does for drug use – for its role in strengthening drug trafficking groups that operate on both sides of the border.

    "The vast majority of the weapons, and especially the high-powered weapons, that are found here in Mexico, that are seized by the Mexican police, the Mexican army, are weapons that come from the United States," he said.

    "This is a reality that we have to face in the United States; it's certainly a reality that people in Mexico and people in law enforcement in Mexico have had to confront," he said. "We will take responsibility for what is happening and do all we can on our side of the border to stop that flow of guns."

    Medina Mora said Mexico has set up a special border station in Matamoros, across from Brownsville, to search vehicles for illegal weapons and drug money being moved from the U.S. to Mexico.

    In coming months, Mexico will spend $1.7 billion to establish such checkpoints all along the border, using a system in which vehicles are checked at random. The stated goal was to search 10 percent of vehicles entering Mexico.

    Medina Mora also had some good news – a rare commodity in the drug war – concerning the number of drug-related killings in Mexico, which has been breaking records for several years.

    During the first three months of this year, he said, there were about 1,600 drug-related killings across Mexico. That is about 25 percent less than the last quarter of 2008.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent ... 4bb69.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Yeah right.....they're going to go after the employers.

    That's the same load of crap we were handed for years and we could count on one hand the number of employers EVER held accountable for illegally hiring.

    In other words, we're right back to square one where not a blasted GD thing is done about illegal immigration and at a time when millions upon millions of American citizens are losing their jobs, homes, and everything else and this country is on the verge of going down in economic flames while these people continue to bleed us dry and send billions of dollars out of here in the form of remittances.

    Any member of obama's rah-rah squad want to blame Bush for THIS too?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Larry's Avatar
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    More B.S... The "employer focus" is just a scam to avoid picking on the poor illegals here seeking a "better life".

    The illegal alien employees have broken the law by sneaking into America and using false documentation to obtain employment. They are criminals. The employer has proven their guilt by hiring the illegals. The employers are also criminals.

    A good analogy for the current emphasis on going after employers rather than the illegal alien workers would be a crack house raid where the crackheads present during the raid are set free ("Please drop off your pipes and rocks by the door prior to exiting... Thank you.") and only going after the owner of the crack house.

    The only genuinely EFFECTIVE method is prosecution of the illegal alien employees AND the unethical employers. It certainly doesn't take a genius to figure that out.

    It is a stall tactic by Obama & Crew to keep as many illegal aliens here for their pending amnesty push. Nothing more, nothing less.

    Fight the (D)REAM Act!!!

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