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No argument justifies amnesty for illegal aliens

beastboy said:
That does stink, but if she is her illegaly, she needs to go back....no exceptions.

I don't disagree, it just bothers me that they're only catching the easy ones.

Big whoop, you know? Great, the INS can catch the ones that walk onto their doorstep.
 
from AMW.com... i am watching this right now... basically this guy is an illegal who thought he was going being arrested, so he stabbed and killed this security officer.
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Additional Quirks:

1. A large mole on his left cheek
2. Warts on his right forearm

Story:

Napa County authorities have identified and obtained an arrest warrant for Juan Jose Hernandez-Mendoza, 22, in the fatal stabbing of Yountville Veterans' Home security officer Manuel Reyes, 58, on August 4, 2003.
Reyes was later found stabbed to death near his marked security vehicle that had crashed into a tree at Dry Creek and Mount Veeder roads around 12:30 a.m. This was an hour after he had agreed to give a ride to a young Hispanic man who was having trouble communicating with a cab driver.

Police are not sure of the exact order of events leading to the truck crashing into the tree and when the stabbing occurred. They are also unsure of the motive. The knife used as the murder weapon and also a baseball cap with the "Titleist" logo were recovered at the scene.

The identity of the suspect was obtained from witnesses who came forward after a composite sketch was circulated in the local media. Through investigation, the detectives were able to track Mendoza's activities before hailing the taxi cab. Detectives tracked him to a sporting goods store for which they have obtained video surveillance of Mendoza entering and exiting the store several times. Detectives also discovered that Mendoza made a purchase in the store, which was a knife.
 
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A federal judge presiding over the case of a pregnant woman fighting deportation to Mexico cited a law enacted after the deaths of Laci Peterson and her unborn son to keep the woman in the United States.

Myrna Dick, 29, of the Kansas City suburb of Raymore, is five months pregnant and married to a U.S. citizen. Senior U.S. District Judge Scott O. Wright ruled Thursday that the couple's unborn child was also a U.S. citizen and thereby entitled to legal protection.

During the hearing, Wright asked Dick if she knew the sex of the baby. She said it was a boy.

"Then I can call him `he,' " Wright said. "If this child is an American citizen, we can't send his mother back until he is born."

In rejecting the federal government's request to lift a temporary stay granted April 30, Wright cited the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 2004, which grants unborn children equal protection under the law.

The law is also known as "Laci and Conner's Law," for the California woman and her unborn son whose bodies washed up along San Francisco Bay in April 2003. Scott Peterson, Laci's husband, is charged in their deaths.

Wright said the government does not have grounds to deport Dick's unborn baby. Unless Wright's order is overturned, that baby would probably be born - as a U.S. citizen - before the case is decided.

He ordered that Dick be allowed to stay for the time being and told both sides to begin preparing for a possible trial.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey P. Ray indicated he would appeal the decision to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis.

Dick was born in Mexico, but lived in the United States most of her life.

She is accused of falsely claiming American citizenship while returning from a 1998 trip to visit a relative in Mexico. The violation carries a punishment of immediate and permanent deportation from the United States. Dick was arrested in April after going to immigration officials to renew her work permit.

Her attorneys say it is a case of mistaken identity. Earlier in the hearing, Rekha Sharma-Crawford challenged the government's assertion that U.S. authorities had known for quite some time that Dick was the person who had given false information at the border crossing, asking why they would wait until she went to immigration offices to arrest her.

Ray told the judge Thursday that the government had solid evidence, including fingerprints, that Dick is the person who lied at the border.

"If this case is going to be decided on sympathy, then I'm in a lot of trouble," Ray said. "But I do have the law on my side."

Dick maintained her innocence after the hearing.

"America has great laws, but they need to make sure they have the right person," she said.

She and husband Brady said they realize they have a long way to go before Dick would be able to stay permanently in the United States, but expressed relief at Wright's decision.

"Our baby is a person now," Brady Dick said.
 
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