when is enough is enough?
@whiteheather39 (24403)
United States
April 27, 2007 6:11am CST
To me when you read that the national average of Immigration Felony cases in the US is 84 per year but in the Southwest it 397 per year. OMG are we really going allow illegals to ruin our country because our politicians dont have the balls to do something about it?
Immigration-Related Cases Clog Courts
WASHINGTON (AP) - Immigration-related felony cases are swamping federal courts along the Southwest border, forcing judges to handle hundreds more cases than their peers elsewhere.
*****Judges in the five, mostly rural judicial districts on the border carry the heaviest felony caseloads in the nation. Each judge in New Mexico, which ranked first, handled an average of 397 felony cases last year, compared with the national average of 84.*****
Federal judges in those five districts - Southern and Western Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and Southern California - handled one-third of all the felonies prosecuted in the nation's 94 federal judicial districts in 2005, according to federal court statistics.
Judges say they are stretched to the limit with cases involving drug trafficking or illegal immigrants who have also committed serious crimes. Judges say they need help.
A bill by Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., and co-sponsored by Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and Texas Republican Sens. John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison, would add 10 permanent and temporary judges in Arizona, New Mexico, and Southern and Western Texas. This proposal, and others like it, have gone nowhere in the past two years.
"I can't even tell you how much we need that," Roll said.
The entire federal court system is affected, from U.S. marshals to magistrate judges. The bottleneck has even derailed enforcement efforts.
The idea, called "Operation Streamline," was to make it clear that people caught illegally in the U.S. would be prosecuted.
Then New Mexico's federal judges reminded the Border Patrol that they lacked the resources to handle the hundreds of new defendants who would stream into the court system every day.
"We were obviously alarmed because where would we put our bank robbers? Our rapists? Those who violate probation?" she said.
***It is estimated more than 1 MILLION people sneak across the southwestern U.S. border and illegally enter the country every year. In Arizona, the busiest entry point for illegal immigration, state officials believe almost 4,000 people attempted to enter every day in 2006.
Many lawmakers, advocates and President Bush favor overhauling guest worker programs and rules for businesses that hire illegal immigrants. The intent is to eliminate the incentive for workers to sneak into the country. Bush promoted his latest proposal for new worker visas this month in the border community of Yuma, Ariz.
In recent years, however, Congress has focused on increased enforcement.
The Border Patrol has almost 2,800 more agents than the 9,821 it had in September of 2001. An additional 6,000 National Guard troops have provided logistical support to the Border Patrol since last May.
Congress has made available more than $1.2 billion for reinforcements, including fences, vehicle barriers, cameras and other security equipment.
Homeland Security officials say the increased security is working. In Yuma, Bush said that the number of people apprehended for illegally crossing the southern border into the U.S. has declined by nearly 30 percent this year.
Court officials, however, say they are in crisis mode trying to deal with all the defendants.
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., a staunch opponent of illegal immigration, has urged U.S. attorneys and courts to prosecute more illegal immigrants and pushed for more resources for both. But he has discovered that while his colleagues who do not represent a border district are eager to add Border Patrol officers, many do not realize the effect that will have on the court system, his spokesman said.
Even lawmakers from border states say they cannot justify adding judgeships in one district when other districts also need them.
California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, says her state needs 12 judges, not just help on the border.
"I'd be happy to support any bill that gives California its fair share," Feinstein said in a statement. "And I will seek to amend any bill that does not."
In New Mexico, Vazquez, the chief judge, and former U.S. Attorney David Iglesias went on a Spanish-language radio station broadcast in Mexico this winter to warn people about the penalties for illegally entering the country.
Court administrators have trouble keeping employees, such as interpreters, because of the grind. Judges' staffs struggle with burnout. Everyone fights to keep up morale as they hear countless sad stories from migrants who broke the law searching for a better life in the United States.
"It'd be swell to have another judge or two," said Judge George Kazen, who is based on the border in Laredo, in the Southern District of Texas. "It would mean a little more time to spend on civil stuff, and a little more time to reflect. We have to make quick calls and move on."
http://story.news.ask.com//article/20070427/D8OOSOR80.html
4 people like this
9 responses
@lonewolfnan (4366)
• Canada
27 Apr 07
Tonight(Friday,Ap.27) CNN is having another special on immigration and looking at the Bills being introduced to the government and their effects.The show's preview talks about the negative implications surrounding the current interpretation of the laws and how it is creating severe problems for all Americans.I live in Canada but plan on watching this show as what the US decides obviously has major implications for us as well.
@whiteheather39 (24403)
• United States
27 Apr 07
Thank you for the great tip. I shall definitely be watching.
3 people like this
@lonewolfnan (4366)
• Canada
29 Apr 07
It is now Sat.28 and I did not see the program.I bet I screwed up and instead of CNN,it was to have been on MSNBC,another station I watch.I apologize for the error.And my dog ate my homework.(I will think of other reasons why I messed up later).
2 people like this
@tess1960 (2385)
• United States
27 Apr 07
I agree this is a problem. But just think how easy it would be to solve. The U.S. should buy Mexico or Mexico should apply for statehood. and then we all start cleaning it up. Then we would have a lot more jobs for the mexican people and for the American people as we would be traveling back and forth with helping clean things up and all that and with creating a statehood would come democracy. A good solution I think. Yeah, like that will ever happen! It would help though.
3 people like this
@claudia413 (4280)
• United States
27 Apr 07
That's so typical of our government...getting more border patrol agents, then not funding for additional judges to try the cases. I'm sure many lawmakers (especially those NOT in border states) don't have any idea that more agents catching illegals will add up to more court cases to be tried. Duh...
It's like funding for anything. You have to also fund for things that will occur because of the original funding. Very sad that our lawmakers don't realize that.
3 people like this
@jennybianca (12912)
• Australia
28 Apr 07
We don't have anywhere near the problems the US have with illegal immigration, largely because our coastline is huge, & the ocean very large.
We did have quite a problem with boat refugeess for quite some time (most of whom weren't true refugees). Unsavoury people in Indonesia would accept large sums of money from potential refugees & transport them in very unsafe, leaky boats to some remote part of Australia. If they made it, & many didn't, as the drowned or were caught by pirates, they were invariably dumped in a hot, remote location. Thousands of people got to Australia this way. Our Prime Minister stopped it, by simply organising any boats illegally entering our waters, to be towed back from whence they came. It worked.
2 people like this
@mrbranan (1012)
• United States
27 Apr 07
Before we all get in an uproar about things you need to remember that unless you are a full blooded indian and I'm not by the way you came from somewhere else. Or at least your four fathers did. I'm not saying we should open our gates to every criminal to just walk right in but we do need to know that every one that walks through them is not one. We need to know that thier is just as much crimianl activity going on by US citizens.
@worldwise1 (14885)
• United States
28 Apr 07
While this situation is deplorable, it is absolutely true and it will not change until our legislators and our government are held responsible. If everyone would keep these issues in mind when going to the polls I am sure the situation can be turned around. The people who make our laws are the least likely to become victimized by these crimes. If the shoe were on the other foot they would rush to change the laws and make certain they are being enforced.
2 people like this
@Lakota12 (42600)
• United States
3 May 07
well it must of been on another court thing we talked about . I know of one case that will never be brought to court was one illeagle hit my friend in Louisiana and run across the border after no one know where to find him but she had to pay all hospita bills buy another car and pay for therapy for they were hurt real bad and alot from seatbelts!
They are getting better now but that illeagle will never come to court for he is gone now.
And I fgeel for the judges with such case loads and they do need more. I hate it that they get ouor taxes to pay for there stuff and if we are in need we have to lie and beg to get our tax money to us grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
1 person likes this
@sumofalltears (3988)
• United States
28 Apr 07
The illegal immigrant situation has got to be one of the stupidest things that has ever happened to this country. Nobody wants to tread on toes so nothing gets done. Putting more judges there will not solve the problem. I think all cases against illegals should be summarily dropped and they should be deported. If these illegals have run afowl of our legal system then they are not showing any repect for the laws of this land and therefore don't belong here. Seems like the right solution to me.
@sumofalltears (3988)
• United States
15 May 07
thanks for the best response vote, I appreciate it...:}
@wertzburg1 (200)
• United States
3 May 07
If I were ruler of the world I would gather all the illegals, ship them off to some deserted island, and blow the island up....but that's probably inhumane.
I heard they're considering building a cement wall all around the border about 8 or 9 feet high so no one can jump it. I would let the government take my money for that. Also, border patrol needs to be stricter. See an illegal jump the fence, shoot them...well...at least care to stop them.
But the system is flawed anyway. I spoke with an illegal immigrant and he said the only reason he came to America was to get money so he could go back to Mexico, buy "legal" papers from someone, then use them to cross the border "legally". When really, he's still illegal because his papers were fake! But the government doesn't seem to check it carefully enough.
Plus, some Mexican students hung a Mexican flag above the American in California AND hung the American flag upside down. If you're going to disrespect why did you come here in the first place? And if you're going to live here, learn our language! Or get out!
1 person likes this








