Imigration Law Archives

American Immigration Council
July 28, 2010

Washington, D.C. – Today, Phoenix district court judge Susan Bolton enjoined key provisions of Arizona’s controversial immigration law, SB 1070. The judge recognized that the federal government has primary authority over making and enforcing immigration law, and that while states have limited authority in this arena, they cannot interfere with federal enforcement or undermine federal priorities. The decision acknowledges the complex nature of immigration law and the harmful consequences of local police attempting to make immigration determinations. The judge also recognized the serious strain that the Arizona law would place on federal resources, which would detract from the federal government’s ability to enforce immigration laws in other states and target resources toward serious criminals.

The following is a statement from Benjamin E. Johnson, Executive Director of the American Immigration Council.

“It is clear that Judge Bolton has a strong grasp on the complexity of immigration issues and the challenges facing the state. She blocked the most controversial and troubling parts of the law that not only intrude on the Federal government’s authority over immigration, but were also likely to violate the civil rights of legal immigrants and U.S. citizens. While it is important to acknowledge that there are serious problems in Arizona, if Arizonans truly want to target human trafficking, human smuggling, and other serious crimes, they must focus their efforts and resources on those criminal networks, and nothing in today’s decision prevents them from doing so.

Now the question is whether politicians at the state and federal level will stop playing politics and start solving problems. Arizona must start focusing on serious criminals and the federal government must assume its Constitutional duty of fixing the broken immigration system. America needs real solutions that make our communities safer, our border more secure, and finally fix our broken immigration system.”

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For more information contact Wendy Sefsaf at 202-507-7524 or wsefsaf@immcouncil.org

Ending Birthright Citizenship Would Be Unconstitutional, Impractical, Expensive, Complicated and Would Not Stop Illegal Immigration

A June 15, 2010 Immigration Policy Center Article discusses a hot topic

Ariz. Lawmaker: Stop Automatic Citizenship

PHOENIX, Ariz., June 16, 2010, State Sen. Proposes Bill That Would Deny U.S. Citizenship to Children Born in Arizona to Illegal Immigrants

Your only problem is the Constitution, dear Senator. I agree with the legal scholars, “the 14th Amendment guarantees citizenship to anyone born in the U.S.”

Wow!

38 Suspected Illegal Immigrants Rescued

Police Say People Were Living In Deplorable Conditions

Open the Borders..

I got my June 28, 2010 Forbes issue and its headline title is ‘Open the Borders: the Case for (and against) extreme immigration reform.

Here is a special report titled Let them In: Opening America’s borders is morally right, economically beneficial–and would even make America safer.

Although I have yet to read all the immigration-related articles, I am happy to see so much attention being paid towards immigration reform.  Hopefully reform is around the corner..

 

Advocates protest US immigration fee hikes

June 11, 2010 – Advocates protest US immigration fee hikes

Immigration Fees Set to Rise, on Lower Demand

USCIS raised prices dramatically in July 2007, only 3 years ago and now they plan to raise prices on a few applications but not as much as they did in 2007.  I am not sure when they plan for the raise to take effect but clients should make a point to file before the hike to save some money on filing fees.

For more, a June 10, 2010 Wall Street Journal Article: Immigration Fees Set to Rise, on Lower Demand

April 28, 2010: The following IPC fact sheet shows that Arizona crime rates have been falling in recent years. The fact sheet also indicates that states with high immigration have the lowest crime rates and that unauthorized immigration is not associated with higher crime rates.

Originally published online: 19 February 2010 © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010

The Immigration Policy Center published the following article on May 26, 2010.

Throwing Good Money After Bad