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Author Topic: Illinois toRelease Illegal Aliens Convicted of Violent Crimes Rather than Deport  (Read 1325 times)
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Forevermah
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« on: May 12, 2011, 09:22:17 AM »

Illinois to Release Illegal Aliens Convicted of Violent Crimes Rather than Deport

by Joel Griffith

Governor Pat Quinn quietly announced Illinois’ formal withdrawal from Secure Communities in a letter to the Department of Homeland Security.  This program, administered through Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is fully successful only when state prison systems cooperate with the ICE and the Department of Home land Security.  States can choose to participate by  enabling discovery of the residency status of convicts held in state prisons and alerting ICE of upcoming convict release dates.  According to ICE, this program targets the “worst of the worst”, ensuring that these offenders no longer remain in the United States following their release from prison.

According to the FBI, Illinois ranks near the top in violent crime—number 14 out of the fifty states.  Now instead of ensuring deportation of violent criminals, the governor is choosing to release them into Illinois communities.  Such a policy may also serve to attract more criminals to this state as the risk of deportation following a conviction in Illinois is now significantly reduced.

Not only has Governor Quinn made life more expensive for middle class citizens with an enormous income tax hike, this new policy will make life less safe in Illinois as well.


http://biggovernment.com/jgriffith/2011/05/11/illinois-to-release-illegal-aliens-convicted-of-violent-crimes-rather-than-deport/
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Ira
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« Reply #1 on: May 12, 2011, 09:42:29 AM »

What the ......????????????? So they are going to deport those with legal status for non-violent crimes (like an aggravated DUI) and let violent illegal ... "people" out???? Or am I getting something wrong?
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TimeStandsStill
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« Reply #2 on: May 12, 2011, 11:25:44 AM »

I think the "article" is a bit misleading.  Biggovernment.com seems to be a type of whistleblowers blogging website.  There is a link within that "article" llinois' formal withdrawl (link & text below) that was written last week by the Chicago Tribune and it doesn't use the words "violent crimes".  It says hardened criminals but the federal deportation program has also been used against illegal immigrants arrested for misdemeanor crimes.  In my opinion, the words violent and hardened are subject to definition.

Although the two are not related, I also think this "article" will do Illinois more harm than good when it comes to any type of early release since public safety is the issue being used politically.  The issue here is more about immigration enforcement but it is worded in such a way to look like Quinn is again putting Illinois residents safety in jeopardy.

http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/news/local/ct-met-state-dream-act-0505-20110504,0,2029177.story

[inserted by admin]

Illinois withdraws from federal immigration program

By Antonio Olivo, Tribune reporter

6:50 a.m. CDT, May 5, 2011
Gov. Pat Quinn and state lawmakers Wednesday cast Illinois as a sympathetic voice in the nation's volatile immigration debate with two actions that run counter to a wave of pro-enforcement measures approved or under consideration in Arizona and other states.

Quinn's office on Wednesday sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security declaring the state's formal withdrawal from Secure Communities, a federal deportation program that targets hardened criminals but has also been used against illegal immigrants arrested for misdemeanor crimes.

    Nearly a third of all illegal immigrants deported out of Illinois under the program have never been convicted of any crime, the letter stated, citing federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement figures. Quinn's office suspended the state's role in the program in November amid concerns about its effectiveness.

"During the suspension, we voiced our concerns to ICE and asked them to prove that Secure Communities can and will be implemented as agreed to," the governor's office said in a statement. "After review, we were not satisfied and determined that ICE's ongoing implementation of Secure Communities is flawed."

The governor's action came as state representatives were preparing to vote on legislation that would make participation in Secure Communities optional for Illinois counties.

In a statement, ICE defended its implementation of the Secure Communities program.

"ICE's goal is to enhance public safety by removing those illegally in our county who are also breaking criminal laws," the agency said. "ICE will work with the State of Illinois to meet that goal."

Meanwhile, the state Senate on Wednesday passed by a vote of 45-11 a local DREAM Act bill that calls for administering privately funded scholarships and other financial aid to students who were brought into the U.S. illegally.

Unlike the federal DREAM Act, which has failed repeatedly in Congress, the state bill would not grant scholarship recipients any kind of legal U.S. status and would not rely on public funds. The bill must still go before the House and get a signature from Quinn, who supports it, according to his office.

Both actions drew criticism from groups seeking tougher immigration enforcement.

"Illinois is without competition the most pro-illegal immigration state in the country, even before this," said Roy Beck, executive director of the Virginia-based NumbersUSA organization.

In the absence of federal action on immigration reforms, state governments have become increasingly frustrated.

An Arizona law sought to give local police authority to detain anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. Most of its provisions have been temporarily blocked by a federal lawsuit brought by the Obama administration. A similar law was recently passed in Utah, while like-minded bills have been written in Georgia, Oklahoma and several other states.

In Illinois, immigration advocates cheered Wednesday's actions by the governor and state Senate.

"This is a good day," said Josh Hoyt, executive director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, which bused demonstrators to Springfield to lobby for the DREAM Act bill.
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seaturtle
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« Reply #3 on: May 12, 2011, 11:30:48 AM »

Yeah... I agree with you TimeStandsStill ~ this article has bad press written all over it.  I in my oh so humble opinion it will not bode well in our hopes for MGT reinstatement.

 wc13
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jgraff49
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« Reply #4 on: May 30, 2011, 05:08:52 PM »

Does anyone know what happened in the General Assembly regarding the four bills that dealt with the reinstatement of MGT?  I called my representative at his Arlington Heights office, emailed him, and then called to talk to him personally about sponsoring these bills but got the run around from his secretary.  I was really ticked off when Mathias did not return my call even though I specifically asked that he do so.  I stressed the importance of these bills to the "bottom line" in Illinois but I guess, this issue was not important enough for him to call - even if he refused to sponsor the bills.  I'll remember that in a couple of years when he's walkiing around my neighborhood asking for votes.
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Forevermah
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« Reply #5 on: May 30, 2011, 05:31:50 PM »

Does anyone know what happened in the General Assembly regarding the four bills that dealt with the reinstatement of MGT?  I called my representative at his Arlington Heights office, emailed him, and then called to talk to him personally about sponsoring these bills but got the run around from his secretary.  I was really ticked off when Mathias did not return my call even though I specifically asked that he do so.  I stressed the importance of these bills to the "bottom line" in Illinois but I guess, this issue was not important enough for him to call - even if he refused to sponsor the bills.  I'll remember that in a couple of years when he's walkiing around my neighborhood asking for votes.

Go to this topic, we are posting as changes are made:

http://www.illinoisprisontalk.org/index.php/topic,23456.0.html
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Do not value the "things" you have in your life - value "who" you have in your life....



“Instead of thinking about what you're missing, try thinking about what you have that everyone else is missing.”
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