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Acceptance of Mexican ID's is illegal |
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![]() Glenn Spencer |
![]() Mayor Tom Daly, Center |
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| Dan Walters
/ Sacramento Bee Sealed documents could be smoking gun on Davis' fund raising ...Davis has collected so much money and there are so many anecdotal cases that his fund raising could backfire as he seeks re-election next year. Furthermore, it's now evident that there are documents in official federal investigative files that could place Davis' political fund raising in a more insidious, and therefore more damaging, context -- and the documents may surface soon. -- |
San Francisco
Chronicle Fremont police turn down ACLU, will help FBI with questioning The American Civil Liberties Union has asked Fremont police not to help federal anti-terrorism agents who want to question six foreign men living in the area, saying that the interviews constitute racial profiling. -- But Fremont Police Chief Craig Steckler said the ACLU's request wouldn't sway his decision to assist federal authorities.. -- The unidentified men are among 5,000... |
| EFE / Free
Republic Emigrants sent more than $45 billion to Mexico in last 10 years Mexicans living in the United States sent more than $ 45 billion to Mexico in the last decade, according to a report from the National Population Council (Conapo). The report estimates that some 8.3 million Hispanics born in Mexico, including nearly three million illegal immigrants, are now living in the United States. -- This figure represents about 3 percent of the U.S. population, and 8 percent of the Mexican census. |
Washington
Post Names of Deportees to Enter Database The names of more than 300,000 foreigners who disappeared after being ordered deported will be entered in a crime database so police can help track them down, the Immigration and Naturalization Service said Wednesday. -- By entering their names in the National Crime Information Center database, the missing deportees might be identified by officers in traffic stops or other identity checks, James Ziglar told the House Judiciary subcommittee on criminal justice. |
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Anaheim
City Council meeting Glenn, Just finished listening to the audio of the Anaheim City Council meeting on the website. Fantastic job and congrats to all who attended and participated. Know that your hard work does not go unnoticed outside of California. You have many supporters around this country we love to call home, even here in Utah. |
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Re:
Wells Fargo joins with INS to advance Mexican takeover of California My name is (withheld by AmericanPatrol.com). I am an Agent with the US Border Patrol in Arizona. I am outraged by a comment made by an INS spokesman from Los Angeles that appeared in one of the articles on the Americanpatrol.com website. -- The comments were made by Tony Lew, an INS spokesman from Los Angeles. I cannot believe that someone that could make such moronic comments could be in a position as a spokesman for an agency of the Federal Government. |
| Indianapolis
Star Taxpayers send cops south for Spanish lessons ...Patrolwoman Skye Griffin, of the Indianapolis Police Department, is one of dozens of Marion County police officers and firefighters who over the past two years have taken 20- week Spanish language courses and "cultural immersion" trips to Honduras. -- This time, 22 police officers and firefighters will go to Calnali, Mexico. From Feb. 28 through March 10, they'll join medical personnel to help the people in the small, poor community -- and learn to "swim" in Spanish by jumping in the deep end. |
| Greenwich
Time Shooting suspect arraigned The Stamford woman charged with killing the owner of a local employment agency felt the company had blackballed her, police said yesterday. -- Flora Canales is charged with fatally shooting Alicia M. Kirkel, the owner of Royal Domestics Inc., a placement service for nannies and maids. -- Bail Commissioner Lance Williams said Canales became a legal U.S. citizen on Oct. 9, 1991. She had previously been deported by the Immigration and Naturalization Service in 1979 for entering the country illegally from Guatemala. |
Orange Co.
Register A closer look: Immigration policy, post-Sept. 11 The Sept. 11 attacks upset a seeming emerging consensus for a new U.S. immigration policy. The Register's Chris Reed discussed the fallout with immigration expert Kitty Calavita of UCI. --- Q. Big changes were expected after President George W. Bush met Mexican President Fox earlier this year. What about now? --- A. I think there will be changes - but not in the direction we were heading before Sept. 11. Fox and Bush were discussing some opening up of the border... |
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Anaheim
City Council meeting Great Work Glenn!!!!! --- I'm ready to do it again, as often as needed!!! -- God Bless you Glenn & all of the effort and hard work you put into this. Let's not forget all of the "TRUE CITIZEN'S" who participated yesterday. --C.J.D. Long Beach |
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Anaheim
City Council meeting To All Participants and Attendees at the Anaheim City Council Meeting: GREAT WORK..The yields of such "up close and personal" events are immeasurable. Do it again. --Dave Drew |
| Financial
Times (UK) Mexico's migration dilemma ...While Mr Fox has promised to reduce the flow of illegal migrants to the US, the exodus of an estimated 300,000 migrants a year has served as a crucial safety valve for labour market pressures in Mexico. -- The decline in emigration comes just as the government's ability to create jobs has been severely hampered. Mexico is heading into the second year of a recession and instead of creating the 1.2m jobs needed to keep up with the population, it has lost an estimated 500,000. |
| AZ Republic
(Free Registration) AFL-CIO Likely to back amnesty In a landmark shift for labor, the AFL-CIO on Tuesday was expected to endorse amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants in the U.S. -- Nearly 1,000 delegates at the AFL-CIO's biennial convention in Las Vegas were considering the resolution. It would ratify a position taken in July by the organization's executive council, which said the U.S. "should embrace immigrants for the diversity and values they bring, rather than fear them as threats to our values or jobs." |
Newsday Groups Protest Ashcroft Orders Arab-American and Islamic groups are protesting Attorney General John Ashcroft's orders to have about 5,000 Arab men who recently entered the United States interviewed as part of the war on terrorism. -- The groups say that while they support the campaign to end terrorism, the interviews amount to a dragnet that smacks of racial profiling and violates fundamental rights such as the presumption of innocence. |
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Anaheim
City Council meeting Glenn: Well, I attended the meeting in Anaheim & must say the City Council heard from a great many patriotic citizens & I hope all the points brought up have overwhelmed them. Thank you & God Bless you for being such a great leader. -- Audrey in Glendora |
| V-Dare.com
- Allan Wall Fox Guarding Henhouse? Guess who's helping us secure the border? Vicente Fox, that's who! -- Yes, the Fox administration is cooperating with the U.S. on border security and George Bush and Tom Ridge are grateful. -- Almost immediately after the 9/11 attack, the Mexican government responded by detaining travelers from the Middle East. This of course involved a lot of profiling. (Mexican cops can still profile with impunity. |
Orange County
Register Mexican ID cards come before council About 50 people opposed to a decision by the Orange County police chiefs to accept Mexican identification cards lobbied the City Council on Tuesday night in an attempt to persuade members to order Anaheim police to reject the documents. -- The Mexican government issues the identification cards, known as "matricula consular," to residents living abroad who can prove Mexican citizenship... |
| L.A. Times Police Urged to Review Mexican-ID Rule Dozens of anti-immigration protesters at Tuesday's Anaheim City Council meeting demanded that police reconsider a decision to accept Mexican consular cards as identification. -- Police chiefs in Orange County agreed last month to accept the cards as a form of identification. Since then, San Francisco County supervisors have started considering a similar policy. -- Half a dozen Latino activists also attended Tuesday's meeting, mostly to monitor comments by the Sherman Oaks-based American Patrol anti-immigration organization and the California Coalition for Immigration Reform. |
| The News
- Mexico / Associated Press Report: Mexican migration to U.S. will continue Between 400,000 and 500,000 Mexicans will migrate to the U.S. annually over the next 30 years, an influx that could see the number of Mexicans living there top 18.2 million by 2030, according to a government report issued Tuesday. -- The report, compiled by the National Population Council, concluded that of the 8 million Mexicans who currently live in the U.S., some 3 million crossed the border illegally. |
Editorial
- L.A. Daily News Border check Say this much for Gov. Gray Davis, he's got a knack for timing. -- Tuesday, the same day that Attorney General John Ashcroft was up in Canada signing an agreement to bolster security and patrols along America's northern border, Davis was down in Mexico City, chatting up President Vicente Fox about loosening America's southern border. -- For most people, Sept. 11 made it clear that America needs to be more, not less, discerning about who it lets into the country. |
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