Tag Archives: Customs Enforcement

Napolitano departure widens DHS leadership gap

The leadership vacancy created by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano’s resignation is the latest blow to a department where nearly one-third of the heads of key agencies and divisions have been filled with acting officials or have remained vacant for months.

Napolitano’s departure slated for September will create the 15th hole in the department’s 45 leadership positions.

Napolitano’s chief of staff and the director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement are leaving this month. The deputy secretary, general counsel, heads of Customs and Border Protection, privacy, legislative affairs, intelligence and analysis and more are filled with acting officials.

This swath of vacancies raises questions about how a department depleted of permanent leadership could implement changes, particularly as Congress considers overhauling the nation’s immigration system.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

ICE arrests 2 in Massachusetts town tied to Boston bombing case

Two foreign nationals have been arrested on immigration violations in the Massachusetts town where police say the surviving Boston Marathon bombing suspect may have once lived.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Saturday that Homeland Security Investigations agents had arrested two people in New Bedford.

An ICE spokesman would not comment on the people who were arrested or if they are connected to bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. The University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth student remains hospitalized after exchanging gunfire with police Friday.

ICE did not say whether they are suspected in any other crimes. A federal prosecutor’s spokeswoman declined comment.

New Bedford police said federal authorities searched off-campus housing near the school Friday and took three people in for questioning. Police say Tsarnaev may have lived at the complex.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/9KbsvkCsOlA/

Working Together to Combat Human Trafficking

By Valerie Jarrett, Todd Park

Yesterday, we hosted the first-ever White House Forum to Combat Human Trafficking. The event brought together leaders from government, the private sector, advocates and survivors, faith leaders, law enforcement, and academia to talk about what we can do, together, to end human trafficking.

We took time to honor the stories and lives of brave survivors. We noted the great progress we’ve made against this grave injustice at the national and grassroots levels. We honored the recipients of the first Presidential award for those who have led the way in fighting human trafficking. And we put our heads together to come up with more solutions that we can get to work on right away. Because even one life devastated by trafficking is one too many. That’s why President Obama’s administration is working with partners around the country and the world to eradicate human trafficking.

Last year, President Obama delivered a speech on the fight to end human trafficking at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) annual meeting in New York. There, the President said: “It ought to concern every person, because it is a debasement of our common humanity. It ought to concern every community, because it tears at our social fabric.”

The President called on everyone to step up the fight against trafficking. And we have. Since last year, we have renewed sanctions on some of the worst perpetrators of human trafficking. We have released for public comment the Victims Services Strategic Action Plan. We have partnered with organizations and groups that help women and children escape their abusers. And we have expanded our interagency task force to include enforcement partners such as the FBI and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, along with many other Federal agencies.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

‘Ice El Hielo’ Brings Deportation Protest To Song (VIDEO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Latin alternative group La Santa Cecilia wants to give the problem of deportation a human face and a soundtrack.

In collaboration with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network and filmmaker Alex Rivera, the band released a powerful music video this week for the song “Ice El Hielo,” which portrays the problem of illegal immigration from the perspective of undocumented immigrants, who constantly face the threat of having their families separated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE:

Ice is roaming free on the streets / You never know when it’s going to get us / The kids cry, crying when they leave / They cry when they see that mom didn’t come home.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Former South Texas deputy in court on drug charges

A former South Texas sheriff’s deputy who is the latest law enforcement officer in Hidalgo County to be accused of being on an alleged drug trafficker’s payroll pleaded not guilty Friday to a federal drug conspiracy charge.

The growing federal indictment to which former Hidalgo County sheriff’s deputies Jorge Garza and James Phil Flores were added this week now includes nine former officers, including the sons of the Hidalgo County sheriff and Hidalgo police chief.

Garza waived the reading of the indictment Friday and U.S. Magistrate Judge Dorina Ramos set his bond at $100,000. His attorney has declined to comment. A judge set the same bond for Flores last week. The charge carries a possible sentence of between 10 years and life in prison.

At the center is Fernando Guerra Sr., who was arrested in February. Prosecutors allege he would arrange to buy drugs in South Texas and then use corrupt law enforcement officers to intercept the deliveries. Prosecutors say what appeared to be legitimate busts were actually drug robberies with corrupt cops turning the product over to Guerra for resale.

The veneer of legitimacy was critical, because drug traffickers routinely mete out severe punishments for stolen loads. In at least some instances, Guerra went so far as to make sure the person he was buying from witnessed the phony police bust to tamp down any suspicion, according to court records.

An informant told authorities that Garza and Flores performed this ruse about 20 times and made about $10,000, court records say. Each load was typically more than 500 pounds of marijuana.

Additionally, authorities say Guerra paid Garza to guard the stash houses where the drugs were stored at night.

The pieces started falling in December, when four former officers were charged. Three of them were members of the “Panama Unit,” a joint task force between the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office and Mission Police Department targeting the street-level drug trade in that city.

The Mission officers, Jonathan Trevino and Alexis Rigoberto Espinoza, are sons of Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Trevino and Hidalgo Police Chief Rodolfo “Rudy” Espinoza.

Federal prosecutors say the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement department that conducts internal reviews received a tip in August about Espinoza and another task force member stealing drugs. Federal investigators set up a sting.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Texas murder case has ICE at odds with local prosecutors

A highly unusual murder trial where the defendant and victim were both federal informants drew six government attorneys to the courtroom of a Texas judge who admits he isn’t sure how to handle the case.

Defendant Ruben Dorado Rodriguez who, like the victim, was a member of a Mexican drug cartel, claims he confessed to local cops after being promised help the feds now deny offering. His handler at Immigration and Customs Enforcement initially refused to testify, then later admitted knowing prior to the 2009 murder of Jose Daniel Gonzalez Galeana that a hit had been ordered.

Dorado’s attorneys want the confession thrown out because they say it came after his handler at Immigration and Customs Enforcement promised to intervene. A frustrated District Court Judge Gonzalo Garcia, who had already expressed frustration with ICE for not complying with subpoenas, warned that Dorado’s relationship with ICE could result in a test case for potential transfer to federal court.

“As a judge in the state of Texas I have to follow Texas law which may pose a problem with what the agent has permission to testify to,” Garcia said Thursday at a pretrial hearing.

In addition to Dorado’s defense team, two attorneys from ICE, a pair of Assistant U.S. Attorneys and two local prosecutors were all on hand at the proceeding

Defense attorney Leonard Morales wants the confession tossed because his client’s ICE handler, Pete Loera, initially resisted to testify to what he may have known about the killing and what he may have promised Dorado after his arrest.

Loera was the handler for both men at the time of Galeana’s assassination, and recently testified that he knew the hit had been ordered. The triggerman has already been convicted, but Rodriguez faces charges for helping to carry it out.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Eduardo Castillo said Loera had wide latitude as to what he could discuss. Although the federal agency initially resisted the subpoena, Castillo said it complied because of the magnitude of the case.

“The position of the agency was to protect disclosures but given the severity of the charges, the agent was given permission to testify, we’re not interested in jeopardizing a fair trial without putting further lives or investigations at risk,” Castillo said.

Still, both Morales and Garcia voiced concern about heavily redacted ICE documents submitted into evidence. Castillo assured the court the process has begun to remove as much as possible.

Loera said Galeana, also known by the cartel name of “Picus” came into the fold as an informant in the summer of 2007 after being implicated in an investigation. He was given “protections” that Loera said he could not disclose.

Dorado, known in the cartel as “Meyer,” was brought in at a later date as an informant following an illegal immigrant investigation, but was not provided the same privileges as Galeana and was classified as a cooperating defendant.

Loera said neither Galeana nor Dorado knew the other was an informant. Galeana allegedly saved Dorado from a cartel hit in the past by vouching for him.

The relationships turned sticky in the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Immigrants Held In Solitary Cells, Often For Weeks

By The Huffington Post News Editors

On any given day, about 300 immigrants are held in solitary confinement at the 50 largest detention facilities that make up the sprawling patchwork of holding centers nationwide overseen by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials, according to new federal data.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

AP Exclusive: FBI finds ICE shooting justified

An FBI investigation has determined the fatal shooting of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent by a colleague at a Los Angeles-area federal building was justified.

FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller declined to provide other details, saying they would be kept confidential because no criminal charges are planned.

ICE agent Ezequiel Garcia shot his supervisor, Kevin Kozak, multiple times in February 2012 while discussing job performance. Another agent who heard the gunfire rushed into the Long Beach office, tried to disarm Garcia and fatally shot him. Kozak survived.

The other agent’s name was not officially released. However, a federal official with knowledge of the investigation previously told The Associated Press he is Perry Woo. The official was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Rick Perry CPAC Address Accuses Obama Of Allowing ‘Federally-Sponsored Jailbreak’

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) accused President Barack Obama of endangering the public as a political strategy by releasing undocumented immigrants from detention ahead of sequestration budget cuts.

“This president’s posture, it’d be laughable if he hadn’t taken it one step too far, dangerously releasing criminals onto our streets to make a political point,” he said at CPAC. “When you have a federally-sponsored jailbreak — and don’t get confused, that’s exactly what that is — when you’ve had a federally-sponsored jailbreak, you’ve crossed the line from politics of spin to politics as a craven form of cynicism.”

Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in late February that its agents had released “several hundred” people from detention, citing concerns over the budget. Earlier Thursday, ICE officials acknowledged that more than 2,000 people were released in the final three weeks of February. Those let out of detention were still kept in deportation proceedings.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

El Paso murder case could put ICE on trial

A murder-for-hire trial starring two alleged members of a Mexican drug cartel turned messy for the federal government when word emerged that both were informants for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Ruben Rodriguez-Dorado, 34, is charged with capital murder for his role in the 2009 shooting of Jose Daniel Gonzalez-Galeana. Both have not only been identified as members of the Juárez Cartel, but also as ICE informants who reportedly had the same handler.

Now, amid speculation ICE agents may have known about the hit in advance, the agency is refusing to cooperate with attorneys – possibly putting the prosecution of Rodriguez-Dorado, who allegedly hired two men for the killing, in jeopardy.

“We’ve been trying unsuccessfully to obtain testimony and document evidence from ICE in regards to their involvement in this case,” said Leonard Morales, Rodriguez-Dorado’s defense attorney.

ICE has repeatedly refused to comply with subpoenas filed by Morales. What little documentation he has received from ICE was heavily redacted and provided scant information, he said.

“Without ICE‘s support in state court there’s certainly going to be a difficult time prosecuting this case,” Morales said.

Perhaps most troubling is speculation that ICE officials in El Paso may have been aware of the hit on Gonzalez-Galeana before it happened and did not intervene. Authorities believe the hit was ordered after cartel bosses learned he was working with ICE. The murder occurred at his El Paso home just yards from the residence of the city’s chief of police.

“There’s violence that occurs on the border but this is one of the few cases that you can point a finger and say this was part and parcel of the Drug War,” said Leonard Morales, Rodriguez-Dorado’s defense attorney.

Gonzalez-Galeana was in so tight with ICE that he was in the country on a special visa as being contracted and protected by ICE. According to the El Paso Times, word of Gonzalez-Galeana’s shooting got out so fast to local ICE agents that they arrived at the scene almost simultaneously with El Paso police.

Morales, who said he must honor the gag order imposed by one of the earlier district court judges who handled the case that included three other defendants, said the court has received virtually no assistance from ICE and that is impeding the progress of the case and, according to a judge, is violating his constitutional rights.

The El Paso Times reported March 1 that during a motion hearing the previous day, a furious Judge Gonzalo Garcia chastised ICE for not complying with the subpoenas and said there is a risk of the charges being dropped against Rodriguez-Dorado.

But ICE officials say they are cooperating.

“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement‘s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) supports and works closely with its state and local law enforcement partners on many levels, and is attentive to their requests for disclosure of information,” said Leticia Zamarripa, the agency’s spokesperson for the El Paso Office. “HSI is currently working with its state and local law enforcement partners to resolve this issue and ensure justice is served.”

Rodriguez-Dorado was in the country legally …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Republicans blast ICE over document previewing release of 1,000 detainees every week

House Republicans renewed their complaints about the Obama administration’s move to release illegal immigrants from local jails over budget cuts, after obtaining an Immigration and Customs Enforcement document that appeared to detail plans to release 1,000 detainees every week.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox News – Politics

Thousands of illegal immigrants already released, according to report

Thousands of illegal immigrants ticketed for deportation have been released from federal detention centers in recent weeks, according to a report that came out even as the White House and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano denied any involvement in the policy.

Plans to release illegal immigrants in anticipation of looming budget cuts were announced earlier this week, but the report by The Associated Press detailed the policy had already taken effect and on a much larger scale. Citing federal documents, the agency said more than 2,000 illegal immigrants facing deportation had been released from immigration jails and plans exist to release 3,000 more people by the end of the month.

The newly disclosed figures are significantly higher than what the Obama administration acknowledged this week as a “few hundred” who were released without the White House‘s direct knowledge. And on Friday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, whose agency oversaw the move, said the decision to release illegal immigrants was made “in the field,” and without her knowledge.

Republicans in Congress, already critical of the plan to release illegal immigrants, demanded details, including the number of illegal immigrants released and the nature of any criminal charges they were facing as part of the deportation process.

“Simply blaming budget reductions as a means to turn a blind eye toward the national security of the American people is a dangerous plan, and one that calls into question the department’s preparations for sequestration,” wrote two Republican lawmakers, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa and Rep. Bob Goodlatte of Virginia, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.

The budget documents obtained by the AP show that Immigrations and Customs Enforcement released roughly 1,000 illegal immigrants from its jails around the U.S. each week since at least Feb. 15. The agency’s field offices have reported more than 2,000 released before intense criticism this week led to a temporary shutdown of the plan.

Napolitano claimed Thursday that she had no part in her department’s decision to release low-risk detainees as a way to deal with the sequestration cuts that take effect today.

“Detainee populations and how that is managed back and forth is really handled by career officials in the field,” she told ABC News.

The states where immigrants were released include Arizona, California, Georgia and Texas.

The White House has said it was not consulted about the releases, and Napolitano has acknowledged they occurred in a manner she regrets.

White House spokesman Jay Carney on Wednesday said the government had released “a few hundred” of the roughly 30,000 illegal immigrants held in federal detention pending deportation proceedings. Carney said the immigrants released were “low-risk, noncriminal detainees,” and the decision was made by career ICE officials.

As of last week, the agency held an average daily population of 30,733 in its jails. The internal budget documents reviewed by the AP show the Obama administration had intended to reduce those figures to 25,748 by March 31.

The White House did not comment immediately Friday on the higher number of immigrants released.

ICE spokesman Brian Hale said Friday …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

DHS Official Resigns After Immigrants Are Freed

By Breaking News

Homeland Security logo SC DHS official resigns after immigrants are freed

WASHINGTON — The senior Homeland Security Department official in charge of arresting and deporting illegal immigrants announced his resignation the same day the agency said that hundreds of people facing deportation had been released from immigration jails due to looming budget cuts, according to a resignation letter obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press. The government said he had told his bosses weeks ago that he planned to retire.

Gary Mead, executive associate director over enforcement and removal operations at Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, disclosed his departure in an email to his staff Tuesday afternoon. The announcement of the release of the illegal immigrants had come earlier in the day.

President Barack Obama’s spokesman, Jay Carney, said Wednesday that the decision to release the immigrants was made without any input from the White House. He described the immigrants as “low-risk, non-criminal detainees.”

The announcement that a few hundred illegal immigrants were being released was among the most significant and direct implications described so far by the Obama administration about the pending, automatic budget cuts that will take effect later this week under what is known as sequestration.

Republicans in Congress quickly criticized the decision and pressed the Homeland Security Department for details.

In an email to his staff obtained by the AP, Mead said he was leaving the agency at the end of April “with mixed emotions.” He did not say what prompted his departure. Mead did not immediately respond to an email and a telephone call.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Alicia A. Caldwell.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Video: ICE Reveals Shocking Details About Immigration Enforcement

By Daniel Noe

At a hearing yesterday in the Judiciary Committee, Chris Crane, president of the union representing the nation’s 7,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, testified and shared his concerns with immigration amnesty proposals.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Family of US Agent Killed in Mexico Sues Feds

By Kevin Spak The family of a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who was killed in Mexico and another agent that survived the attack are suing the US government, the agents’ supervisors, the company that made their armored SUV, and the gun shops that allegedly sold two of the weapons used, the… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Lawsuit filed in 2011 ambush of US Customs agents in Mexico

The family of a U.S. Customs Enforcement agent killed in a 2011 ambush on a Mexican highway and another agent who survived filed a lawsuit Tuesday seeking to hold the government and nearly two-dozen other defendants accountable in the attack.

The federal lawsuit arises from the Feb. 15, 2011, attack on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents Jaime Zapata and Victor Avila. They were attacked in their armored sport-utility vehicle near San Luis Potosi, Mexico, shortly after picking up some equipment from another agent.

Zapata died and Avila was seriously wounded.

The lawsuit names the agents’ supervisors, the company that armored their vehicle and gun shops that allegedly sold two of the weapons used. It alleges that Zapata and Avila never should have been sent on the dangerous mission, their armored SUV was flawed and at least two of the guns used in the attack were bought in the United States and eventually smuggled to Mexico.

On Feb. 15, 2011, Zapata and Avila drove from Mexico City to San Luis Potosi to pick up equipment from another agent from the Monterrey office. Shortly after beginning their return trip the pair was ambushed by armed men. Zapata parked the vehicle, but when he did so the automatic door locks unlocked. Gunmen pried open the door and in their struggle to close it the agents partially lowered the window which allowed their attackers to fire inside.

Julian Zapata Espinoza is awaiting trial on murder and attempted murder charges in federal court in Washington, D.C. Zapata Espinoza was allegedly a member of the Zetas cartel who Mexican authorities say mistook the agents’ Suburban for rivals.

Three weapons believed used in the attack have been recovered though information has only been released on two of them, according to federal court documents.

One was a 7.62 mm AK-47 style Draco handgun that federal authorities traced to a straw purchase by Otilio Osorio from a Texas gun shop. Osorio and his brother were sentenced to prison on weapons charges. Another was an AK-47-style semi-automatic assault rifle bought from JJ’s Pawn Shop in Beaumont in another straw purchase and passed into Mexico by Manuel Barba, who has also been sentenced to prison.

Osorio, Barba and the pawn shop are among those named as defendants in the lawsuit.

In a procedural notice to the government filed last year, the agents’ lawyers sought $25 million for Zapata’s family and $12.5 million for Avila. No figures were included in the lawsuit filed Tuesday.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

AP Exclusive: New HQ bids to end agency rivalry

A first-of-its-kind headquarters has opened in Chicago for 70 federal agents, police and prosecutors to work side-by-side, year-round to fight drug traffickers — a set-up meant to end inter-agency rivalry and miscommunication that can hamper investigations.

The recent, fanfare-free opening of the Chicago Strike Force building comes as Mexican cartels now supply over 90 percent of the narcotics in Chicago, and as street gangs vying for turf to sell those drugs kill each other and bystanders caught in the crossfire.

Inter-agency and -department cooperation is hardly a novel concept, but typically takes the form of occasional meetings or temporary joint task forces on specific investigations, said Jack Riley, the head of Chicago’s DEA office.

“But you can’t talk to your counterparts in once-a-week meetings — you have to talk as things are happening,” said Riley, who took the lead in pushing for the facility. “When we get information here, it’s not put in a pile and forgotten. It’s acted on, now.”

Riley gave The Associated Press an exclusive tour of the three-story brick building. Citing security, he asked the AP not to reveal its exact location.

The staff includes city and suburban police, as well as agents from the DEA, FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the IRS and a half-dozen other agencies. In another rarity, U.S. and state prosecutors also work alongside one another. Riley declined to reveal its budget.

It’ll take time to see if the headquarters makes anti-trafficking efforts in Chicago more efficient, said Fred Burton, a security analyst for the global intelligence firm Stratfor.

“It sounds great on paper,” he said. “But getting federal agencies to act in unison can be like herding cats.”

Over the years, competition has led to situations where agencies end up unknowingly targeting the same traffickers, creating the risk that they could inadvertently foil each other’s investigations, Riley said.

Thus, the headquarters was designed to foster camaraderie. Employees’ desks all sit in a warehouse-sized room with no dividers or signs identifying who belongs to what agency. Response teams are comprised of members from each agency.

A major focus of their investigations will be the point of contact between major traffickers and local gangs, who serve as street-level salesmen. That’s when traffickers are especially vulnerable, Reilly says, because they meet at unfamiliar places or use phones that can be wiretapped.

The ultimate goal is to arrest suspects, squeeze them to cooperate and then move along the cartel’s chain of command to indict everyone from the street dealer to the kingpins in Mexico. They hope to replicate investigations like one that led to the 2009 indictment of key leaders of the Sinaloa cartel and the extradition of Sinaloa lieutenant Vicente Zambada, who’ll stand trial in Chicago this year.

Beat officers should also benefit from the new headquarters, Riley said. A single office with a range of experts on everything from which gang controls what block to cartel structures in Mexico should help officers in the field make sense of anything suspicious, he said.

“They can call and say, ‘Hey, I saw this guy who I think is a gang member hand a bag to this other guy. Does it mean anything? “‘ he said. “Before, there really wasn’t a good place to call. There is now.”

___

Follow Michael Tarm at www.twitter.com/mtarm

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Judge Rules In Favor Of ICE Agents Suing Obama

By Breaking News

Janet Napolitano SC Judge Rules in Favor of ICE Agents Suing Obama

Federal Judge Reed O’Conner ruled on Friday that 10 ICE agents and officers indeed do have standing to challenge in Federal court the so-called Morton Memo on prosecutorial discretion and the DREAM directive on deferred action.

The agents filed their complaint in October, charging that unconstitutional and illegal directives from DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano and ICE Director John Morton order the agents to violate federal laws or face adverse employment actions. This is a major first step for the ICE agents in their case against the administration!

In his 35-page decision, Judge O’Conner found that the ICE agents and officers have standing, but that the State of Mississippi does not. He has not yet ruled, however, on the agents’ motion for a preliminary injunction to halt implementation of the DHS directives.

The primary impetus for the lawsuit came last June, when Secretary Napolitano issued a memo offering deferred action and employment authorization to illegal aliens under age 31 who meet certain criteria similar to those outlined in the DREAM Act, which has failed to pass Congress on three occasions.

Even before that, though, ICE Director John Morton essentially gutted immigration enforcement by issuing a memo on prosecutorial discretion that, in effect, prohibits ICE agents and officers from arresting or removing any but the most violent criminal aliens. Under Morton’s stated policy, most of the 12 million or so illegal aliens that the administration wants to legalize are currently safe from deportation.

This is just one of the reasons that the National Immigration and Customs Enforcement Council voted unanimously that they have no confidence in Morton’s ability to lead the agency. Aside from ordering ICE agents to not enforce federal immigration laws, Morton has also gutted worksite enforcement and the 287(g) program, which is a cooperative effort between local law enforcement and federal immigration agents.

The 10 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents filed a federal lawsuit against the Obama administration seeking an end of President Barack Obama’s new non-deportation policy derided as Obama’s Dream Act Light by opponents of his illegal immigration policies, according to the ICE agents’ union.

The ICE agents filed the lawsuit in federal court in one of the state’s most affected by the Obama policy — Texas. The agents allege that President Obama’s policies have reduced the number of illegal aliens who will be deported back to their country of origin.

The ICE agents allege in their lawsuit that the Obama executive order causes a confusing situation in which they must choose between enforcing federal laws and being disciplined by their commanders, or obeying their supervisors thereby violating oaths of office and a Clinton administration law — passed by a bi-partisan Congress in 1996 — that mandates the deportation of illegal aliens.

Kris W. Kobach, the secretary of state in Kansas, is representing the ICE agents in their lawsuit. Kobach has been a leading voice in support of state immigration legislation such as Arizona’s controversial law.

In the 20-page legal complaint, the agents state they’ve been ordered to ignore an entire category of illegal aliens. The agents allege they were told to stop requesting proof of citizenship or immigration status.

“Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano and her underlings want their agents and officers to just take the word of an illegal alien without verifying his or her statement,” said former police commander David Scher. “It’s as ridiculous as releasing a suspected bank robber who states he didn’t commit the robbery without any verification by police officers,” he said.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent Christopher Crane, President of the National Immigration and Customs Enforcement Council, the union representing America’s more than 7,000 ICE agents and personnel, and Border Patrol agent George McCubbin, President of the National Border Patrol Council, the union representing America’s more than 17,000 border agents and personnel, both blasted President Barack Obama’s de facto “Dream Act,” and the actions of superiors at their respective agencies.

“The Administration claims it has diligently enforced immigration law and that the border is ‘more secure than ever.’ But those on the front lines know this to be untrue. They see the violence, chaos and lawlessness. They have lost confidence in the leadership of their agencies,” according to the outspoken Agent Crane.

“This administration has engaged in a sustained, relentless effort to undermine America’s immigration laws. They have handcuffed and muffled those charged with protecting the public safety and the integrity of our borders. Such action has not only weakened our security but our democracy, as well,” he stated.

“All Americans, immigrant and native born, will have a better future if our nation remains unique in the world for the special reverence it places on the rule of law and fairness in our immigration system,” Crane stated.

“It‘s impossible to understand the full scope of the administration’s changes, but what we are seeing… concerns us greatly,” Crane said.

By Jim Khouri CPP.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

The NFL and Federal Government Team Up to Combat Against Counterfeit Super Bowl Merchandise

By Alicia Jessop, Contributor When it comes to buying Super Bowl XLVII tickets and merchandise, the NFL has one clear message for fans:  Buyer beware.  Over the last five months, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the FBI and other agencies have teamed with the NFL to conduct “Operation Red Zone,” an endeavor aimed at removing counterfeit sports team and league merchandise from the marketplace.  The operation marks the fifth consecutive year that the federal government has targeted counterfeit merchandise being sold around the Super Bowl.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest