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  1. #1
    Senior Member StokeyBob's Avatar
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    Boldly going where few have gone before!

    I can see many indicators that the laws of Aiding and Abetting of Illegal Aliens in this articles. The Revolutionaries in the government are boldly going where few criminals have dared go before; right out in front of the Main Stream Media.

    If anyone out there wants to help report some Main Stream Media documented cases of aiding and abetting I will leave some information of the laws and addresses to report them at the end of the article or evidence.

    Sorry, this is going to be long.



    http://www.sacbee.com/302/story/457778.html

    Day labor site touted for county

    Sheriff's Department is helping effort for south area job center.
    By Susan Ferriss - sferriss@sacbee.com

    Published 12:00 am PDT Sunday, October 28, 2007
    Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A1

    Print | E-Mail | Comments (0) | Digg it | del.icio.us

    Sheriff's Lt. Rosie Enriquez chats with day laborers at 47th Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. She believes a day labor center could help cut crime by getting job seekers off the streets. Florence Low / flow@sacbee.com

    See additional images


    Lt. Rosie Enriquez sat in a parking lot in her unmarked cruiser, looking out at a small sea of about 50 men waiting for the promise of work to arrive.

    Within minutes, a pickup loaded with six large fence posts turned into the gas station at Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and 47th Avenue. The men rushed the truck, and two with the sharpest elbows hopped in and drove off, past strip malls in south Sacramento.

    Enriquez stepped from her own car, and the men crowded around her. "Buenos dÃ*as, muchachos. Hay mucho trabajo?" the uniformed Sacramento County Sheriff's Department lieutenant said. "Good morning, boys. Much work?"

    The Latino day laborers, most of them undocumented immigrants, greeted her in unison like a chorus of schoolkids.

    Enriquez believes the men are mostly harmless. But their presence, she said, intimidates and frustrates residents and merchants, who call the department to complain about littering, loitering, traffic hazards and general blight.

    The low-income area already has a serious crime problem, Enriquez said, the worst of any division in the department. She and other ranking officers in the department's Central Division realized they needed a solution for what's both a nuisance and a magnet for crime.

    The conclusion: The department pushed to get the immigrant workers off the street – and into a privately run day labor center where they can be dispatched in an orderly, safe fashion so deputies can devote more time to fight crime.

    It's a decision that bucks a national current of hostility toward undocumented workers, Enriquez acknowledged. But it makes sense to deputies who would rather concentrate on preventing burglaries, drug trafficking, gang shootings and assaults, and armed robberies of the cash-carrying immigrant workers.

    In the past year, of 71 felonies reported in one five-square-mile area where laborers tend to gather, all the victims were Latinos, a revealing detail, according to Enriquez.

    "I usually see them as victims – victims of criminals and employers. It's like a double whammy," she said.

    Enriquez began nearly two years ago to research how day labor centers function. She visited several of them. The most promising model, she said, is in the Bay Area city of Concord.

    Enriquez serves at the center of a nonprofit coalition that's combining the privately run – and privately funded – day labor center with a more broad-based community center that will be built at 41st Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. In addition to offering workers a place to pair up with employers, the center will offer services ranging from parenting classes to English lessons.

    Day labor centers have divided communities where some residents complain they encourage illegal immigration. About 65 exist nationally now. A handful have closed because of poor management, objections to them receiving public funding or simply because of protests that illegal immigrants were involved.

    But some communities are still choosing to open them, and local law enforcement across the country almost always serves a key supportive role, according to Abel Valenzuela, a UCLA urban planner and day labor expert.

    The Sacramento County Sheriff's Department has gone further than many agencies by putting Enriquez, who is bilingual, in charge of instigating the creation of a center.

    Merchants in the Central Division support the idea and are helping raise money for it. Objections have been loud but minimal, said Enriquez and Chief Deputy R.C. Smith, who initially assigned her to the project.

    "We concluded that immigration status aside, the overwhelming majority of these workers were decent, law-abiding people who just want to put food on the table," said Smith, who is now one of the department's highest ranking officials. "A small percentage drink, do drugs or commit violence," he said, "but unquestionably, in our assessment, that's a minority."

    Enriquez said deputies have felt some pressure to round up laborers who can't prove they are here legally.

    Continue reading on next page

    When the department has called U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, they've been told ICE's priority is to arrest illegal immigrants with felony records and investigate document fraud.

    Local police have limited power to quiz people about immigration status, and little inclination, Enriquez said, because of concerns that it would discourage community cooperation with police.

    The Sheriff's Department doesn't think it would be a wise use of deputies' time when, in the Central Division alone, they have 47 square miles to patrol, she added.

    "What if someone's out burglarizing your house, which happens mostly during broad daylight, and I'm out here checking someone's documents?" Enriquez said.

    Smith agreed. "In no place in the U.S. has local law enforcement been the solution to the immigration issue," he said.

    Citing day laborers for loitering, Smith added, isn't a sound strategy to get them to leave either. "What would we do? Cite them for impeding traffic? Jaywalking?" he said. "Then they'll just go somewhere else."

    Enriquez noted that employers who drive up to hire the workers are a big part of the equation. They're as likely to be homeowners as contractors looking for cheap labor for a construction job.

    "There are small jobs you can't get a contractor to do," she said. "You can't find anybody who will fix two fence posts. And if you're in your 80s, it's hard to put in fence posts or get rid of a huge pile of branches."

    Enriquez's father immigrated from Mexico when it was easier for an employer to sponsor a foreign worker.

    As she struck up an early morning conversation with the men in the gas station parking lot off Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Florentino Gomez, 50, stepped forward to show her an ID and say he's a legal resident.

    "I know some people don't want us here," he said. "But others do. It would be for the good of all to have a place inside."

    During one of her visits to observe the Monument Futures day labor center in Concord, Enriquez warmly greeted George Vallejo, the half-Peruvian director, whom she credits with running a tight ship. Enriquez pointed at men sitting on chairs inside a large room, some at computers checking e-mail.

    A phone call came in from an Italian restaurant looking for cooks and bus boys, possibly for permanent jobs. "You got 'em, Tony," Vallejo said.

    Workers whose names have risen to the top of the daily roster have first crack at a job, but employers can request specific workers or someone with certain skills. Women, too, obtain work, mostly doing housekeeping.

    The workers pay $22 a month to join the center, are issued ID cards and must donate time cleaning the building. They pledge not to look for work on the street and must show up kempt and sober.

    "Did you hear that?" Enriquez observed. "George told a couple of men to go shave."

    Employers must pay a minimum hourly wage of $12, or $15 for more sophisticated work. The center asks that a job last at least four or five hours.

    Sometimes requests to book workers arrive via e-mail: "I would like to hire 2 movers for this Saturday," said one, "and then a cleaning lady for Sunday."

    Vallejo said staff are not required to check workers' documents because the center is not their employer. "To be honest, I thought employers would ask to see documents more," he said. "But most of them don't."

    While federal law doesn't require employers to demand to see the documents of someone they hire for quick, casual labor in the home, knowingly hiring an undocumented worker is an offense. That's hard to prove, Valenzuela said. "Why do you think Immigration doesn't ever seem to go after them?"

    Concord Police Lt. David Chilimidos said day laborers stick to the center once they begin using it. "They really like it," he said, but it remains difficult to persuade some who gather in other parts of the city to go there. "We can't force them," he said, but "we do outreach to them."

    Day labor centers may not eliminate nuisance calls about workers hanging out on street corners, but Enriquez said she hopes the Sheriff's Department is on its way to a solution.

    "Local law enforcement does not have the resources to deal with immigration," she said. "It's a matter of priorities."



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    About the writer:

    * Call The Bee's Susan Ferriss, (916) 321-1267.

    *************************************************

    Excerpts of Aiding and Abetting Laws and links.


    http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/...08_00001324----000-.html

    Section 8 USC 1324(a)(1)(A)(iv)(b)(iii)

    "Any person who . . . encourages or induces an alien to . . . reside . . . knowing or in reckless disregard of the fact that such . . . residence is . . . in violation of law, shall be punished as provided . . . for each alien in respect to whom such a violation occurs . . . fined under title 18 . . . imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both."



    http://www.dol.gov/esa/regs/statutes/whd/0006.iana.htm

    Section 274 felonies under the federal Immigration and Nationality Act, INA 274A(a)(1)(A):
    A person (including a group of persons, business, organization, or local government) commits a federal felony when she or he:
    * assists an alien s/he should reasonably know is illegally in the U.S. or who lacks employment authorization, by transporting, sheltering, or assisting him or her to obtain employment, or
    * encourages that alien to remain in the U.S. by referring him or her to an employer or by acting as employer or agent for an employer in any way, or
    * knowingly assists illegal aliens due to personal convictions.



    Also see authority to arrest;


    http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/search/display.html?terms=1...---000-.html


    TITLE 8 > CHAPTER 12 > SUBCHAPTER II > Part VIII > § 1324

    Snip...

    (c) Authority to arrest
    No officer or person shall have authority to make any arrests for a violation of any provision of this section except officers and employees of the Service designated by the Attorney General, either individually or as a member of a class, and all other officers whose duty it is to enforce criminal laws.

    "and all other officers whose duty it is to enforce criminal laws.â€

  2. #2
    Senior Member NOamNASTY's Avatar
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    WHERE ARE THE AMERICANS AND WHY THE HELL ARE THEY HIDING IN THESE INVADED CITIES .

    I will fight this invasion for awhile longer because I respect and honor the ones before me who lost limbs eyes and life so their fellow American could be free .

    Some are still dying everyday in hellholes all over the earth . No matter who,why or what sent them they went for honorable reasons .

    I thank God for the people here and others who are trying to keep what they fought for , but have nothing but contempt for the rest .

    I have pissed off family and friends who didn't seem to give a damn . But some are 'finally' beginning to listen .

  3. #3
    Senior Member ourcountrynottheirs's Avatar
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    "I usually see them as victims – victims of criminals and employers. It's like a double whammy," she said.
    If they are so victimized, why don't they go home? What about all the Americans who have been victims of murder, rape, robbery, and drunk driving at the hands of illegal aliens? The crimes go both ways. The only difference is one group belongs in the United States and one group doesn't.

    This Sheriff needs to be booted out of office.
    avatar:*912 March in DC

  4. #4
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    The biggest travesty and blatant disresect of our laws is the head of Homeland secuity assisting the governor of NY in aiding, abetting and horboring illegal aliens by giveing them a NY drivers license.

    While states are deporting illegals for not having identification, which gives them cause to do immigration checks and deport then , that will be the end of that once they have a drivers licence, this is so pathetic, and another way around enforceing the laws!!
    Please support ALIPAC's fight to save American Jobs & Lives from illegal immigration by joining our free Activists E-Mail Alerts (CLICK HERE)

  5. #5
    MW
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    Senior Member MW's Avatar
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    In the past year, of 71 felonies reported in one five-square-mile area where laborers tend to gather, all the victims were Latinos, a revealing detail, according to Enriquez.

    "I usually see them as victims – victims of criminals and employers. It's like a double whammy," she said.
    I'm betting most of the criminals that victimized the Latinos are also Latinos. It's probably Latino on Latino crime. Deport the illegals and much of the problem will probably magically disappear. Of course I don't need to tell Lt. Enriquez this, because she already knows.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts athttps://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  6. #6
    Senior Member StokeyBob's Avatar
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    Here is another place that may be worth trying to contact about these crimes of aiding and abetting.

    Jerry Brown
    Attorney General's Office
    California Department of Justice
    P.O. Box 944255
    Sacramento, CA 94244-2550

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