News
Firm owner guilty of hiring illegal immigrants
Report shows immigrants tend to be in stable families
"A new report out this week from the Pew Hispanic Center confirms what many observers already suspected about the U.S. illegal immigrant population: It is made up increasingly of intact families and their American-born children. Nearly half of illegal immigrant households consist of two-parent families with children, and 73 percent of these children were born here and are U.S. citizens.
Rep. Hunter introduces border bill
Beef up border security, state officials urge
"Arizona officials pleaded this morning with members of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs to beef up security along the Mexico border to curb drug cartel violence that some fear has already seeped into U.S. cities.
Gov. Jan Brewer and Attorney General Terry Goddard offered testimony and faced questions as part of the first panel of the day, while Phoenix Police Chief Jack Harris joined other local law enforcement leaders in explaining the impact of the violence on Arizona communities."
Duluth man convicted of immigration crimes
Giffords: Dump employer sanctions
Advocate: Neb. immigration measures slow progress
Saturday, Apr 25, 2009 - 10:22:51 pm CDT Cities and states that are trying to work out their own solutions to illegal immigration are not making constructive changes and are slowing efforts in fixing what is a federal problem, a national immigrant-rights advocate said.
Legislation aimed at curbing illegal immigration, whether on the state or local level, has instead amounted to costly legal battles and divided communities, said Lucas Guttentag, director of the American Civil
Obama, Congress to revisit Real ID
Department of Homeland Security ordered to reopen immigration cases
"A Los Angeles federal court judge has issued a preliminary ruling ordering the Department of Homeland Security to reopen the immigration cases of nearly two dozen people who were denied green cards because their U.S. citizen spouses died during the process.
U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder wrote in the 35-page decision that the department must follow a 9th Circuit Court decision from 2006 saying that applicants don't lose their status as spouses because the government didn't rule on their cases before the citizen's death."