Lock 'em up! Get 'em out!

(oo)

The Superb Owl
[h=1]Illegal border crossers now face criminal charges[/h]

Migrants who are caught crossing the border illegally for the first time are now facing criminal charges in federal court in Arizona as the Trump administration steps up efforts to deter illegal immigration.

First-time offenders until recently were deported instead of being criminally prosecuted.



That changed as of June in the Tucson Sector, which includes most of Arizona's border with Mexico and which has already seen the prosecution of 565 first-time offenders, the agency said in a news release on Thursday.



The U.S. Attorney's Office says immigrants are charged with misdemeanors and tried in federal court under Operation Streamline, a 12-year-old initiative in which migrants are charged, enter pleas and are sentenced within a few minutes in large groups.

Critics of Operation Streamline say it burdens the courts and results in migrants going through more dangerous routes to avoid getting caught. The Border Patrol says it decreases recidivism.



Tucson Sector spokesman Daniel Hernandez said the agency is able to go after first-time offenders because fewer border crossers have freed up resources. The program for first-time offenders is already in place in one part of Texas and was previously in effect in Tucson, although it has been several years since it was used.



"This one is aimed specifically to deter people from coming to the country illegally in a way that prevents deaths," Hernandez said. "It creates consequences in the west desert region where we're having a lot of people distressed."


The Tucson Sector has seen a rash of heat deaths and rescues during the past few weeks even as illegal border crossings are at an all-time low.



Border crossers without a prior record are being turned over to federal prosecutors, Hernandez said.



First-time offenders are charged with a misdemeanor and are typically sentenced to time served unless they have aggravating circumstances, said Cosme Lopez, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Arizona. He said that two Customs and Border Protection attorneys are detailed to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tucson and that they exclusively handle the program docket.



A recent docket for Operation Streamline, which takes place in Tucson several times a week, shows that 58 immigrants were tried on Thursday. About 35 were first-time offenders who were charged with improper entry. The rest were migrants who have previously been caught at the border and were charged with illegal re-entry.






http://azdailysun.com/news/local/il...cle_00e997e3-77b1-53bb-97d3-63fe65f4bcb4.html
 
Freakin' awesome. I am OK with the "time served" because I don't want the tax payers to pay for their incarceration. Send them home so they can tell their friends "if you go the the USA and get caught you WILL become a criminal". Mugshot, retinal scans, DNA swabs, send them home.
 
Critics of Operation Streamline say it burdens the courts and results in migrants going through more dangerous routes to avoid getting caught.
or they could just stop their illegal immigration.
 
ColeJ20170714A_low.jpg
 
All of them, since he entered the US illegally before they were born.

How many of those that support these kids being granted citizenship due solely to an illegal act would support the kids of a bank robber keeping the money?
 
How many of those that support these kids being granted citizenship due solely to an illegal act would support the kids of a bank robber keeping the money?

Support doesn't enter into it. Born here = citizen, says the law.

But dad is illegal and has got to go. He's crying because he's being deported but his kids aren't.

He should have thought of his kids a long time ago and done the right thing by applying for citizenship. He didn't and now he wants an exception on humanitarian grounds?

Fuck him.
 
Support doesn't enter into it. Born here = citizen, says the law.

But dad is illegal and has got to go. He's crying because he's being deported but his kids aren't.

He should have thought of his kids a long time ago and done the right thing by applying for citizenship. He didn't and now he wants an exception on humanitarian grounds?

Fuck him.

No, says those that misuse the 14th Amendment. It was NEVER the intention of those that wrote it for it to be used that way. Anyone that knows history knows that's true.

However, I do agree. Fuck him.
 
[h=1]Illegal border crossers now face criminal charges[/h]

Migrants who are caught crossing the border illegally for the first time are now facing criminal charges in federal court in Arizona as the Trump administration steps up efforts to deter illegal immigration.

First-time offenders until recently were deported instead of being criminally prosecuted.



That changed as of June in the Tucson Sector, which includes most of Arizona's border with Mexico and which has already seen the prosecution of 565 first-time offenders, the agency said in a news release on Thursday.



The U.S. Attorney's Office says immigrants are charged with misdemeanors and tried in federal court under Operation Streamline, a 12-year-old initiative in which migrants are charged, enter pleas and are sentenced within a few minutes in large groups.

Critics of Operation Streamline say it burdens the courts and results in migrants going through more dangerous routes to avoid getting caught. The Border Patrol says it decreases recidivism.



Tucson Sector spokesman Daniel Hernandez said the agency is able to go after first-time offenders because fewer border crossers have freed up resources. The program for first-time offenders is already in place in one part of Texas and was previously in effect in Tucson, although it has been several years since it was used.



"This one is aimed specifically to deter people from coming to the country illegally in a way that prevents deaths," Hernandez said. "It creates consequences in the west desert region where we're having a lot of people distressed."


The Tucson Sector has seen a rash of heat deaths and rescues during the past few weeks even as illegal border crossings are at an all-time low.



Border crossers without a prior record are being turned over to federal prosecutors, Hernandez said.



First-time offenders are charged with a misdemeanor and are typically sentenced to time served unless they have aggravating circumstances, said Cosme Lopez, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Arizona. He said that two Customs and Border Protection attorneys are detailed to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tucson and that they exclusively handle the program docket.



A recent docket for Operation Streamline, which takes place in Tucson several times a week, shows that 58 immigrants were tried on Thursday. About 35 were first-time offenders who were charged with improper entry. The rest were migrants who have previously been caught at the border and were charged with illegal re-entry.






http://azdailysun.com/news/local/il...cle_00e997e3-77b1-53bb-97d3-63fe65f4bcb4.html

That's kinda funny, "first-time offenders are charged with a misdemeanor and are typically sentenced to time served," meaning the two they had to wait before they got sent back. That will deter them

Easier, and less expensive to just send them back
 
That's kinda funny, "first-time offenders are charged with a misdemeanor and are typically sentenced to time served," meaning the two they had to wait before they got sent back. That will deter them

Easier, and less expensive to just send them back

Except that hasn't worked so well. Lots of illegals just came right back over the border in the past, didn't they?

Incarceration plus deportation plus border control needs a chance to work.
 
Except that hasn't worked so well. Lots of illegals just came right back over the border in the past, didn't they?

Incarceration plus deportation plus border control needs a chance to work.

Incarceration? We got to house and feed them for three days while pissing away valuable time in legal proceedings that mean absolutely nothing, that's a deterrent
 
Incarceration? We got to house and feed them for three days while pissing away valuable time in legal proceedings that mean absolutely nothing, that's a deterrent

What do you think happens now?

With strong border enforcement and universal e-verify implementation it should cut down on repeat offenses. We'll see.
 
What do you think happens now?

With strong border enforcement and universal e-verify implementation it should cut down on repeat offenses. We'll see.

So if it is happening now what's the difference other than the cost to us for the same results?
 
So if it is happening now what's the difference other than the cost to us for the same results?

As the word gets out that the USA is serious about illegal immigration, the hoped-for result is that fewer will try it. Catch and release didn't work. The new tactics will be a step in the right direction, I think. I heard that work on a wall has begun.

We'll see.
 
As the word gets out that the USA is serious about illegal immigration, the hoped-for result is that fewer will try it. Catch and release didn't work. The new tactics will be a step in the right direction, I think. I heard that work on a wall has begun.

We'll see.

You keep missing, or dodging the point, it is the exact same thing except the immigrants get to spend two or three days in jail on our dime, did you actually think that two or three days is going to discourage one from attempting to cross again?
 
Except that hasn't worked so well. Lots of illegals just came right back over the border in the past, didn't they?

Incarceration plus deportation plus border control needs a chance to work.

It seems saying "Please don't break the law coming back" doesn't register with illegals.
 
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