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You are not free to move about the country

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Dizel8

Douglas metal
Joined
Feb 27, 2003
Posts
2,817
U.S. agents board plane at RDU, arrest 11


Federal agents met a Southwest Airlines flight at the Raleigh-Durham International Airport and arrested 11 male passengers suspected of illegally entering the United States, authorities said Wednesday.
The 11 men boarded their flight Tuesday by showing federal agents one form of identification -- a Mexican voter registration card that contained a name, age and photo, said Thomas O'Connell, resident agent in charge of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Raleigh.

Southwest Airlines spokeswoman Marilee McInnis said the incident was the first time that she knew of that immigration agents boarded a Southwest flight to check passenger identification.

The events leading to the men's arrest began when an air marshal observed a group of men on a flight from Las Vegas to Chicago, O'Connell said. The marshal overheard the men discussing how they were smuggled into the United States.

McInnis would not give the flight number, saying she could not release passenger information.

When the flight landed in Chicago, the air marshal departed from the plane and called a customs agent in Atlanta who then notified O'Connell's office.

The men boarded a second flight, 2340, in Chicago and arrived in Raleigh at 6:40 p.m. Tuesday, according to officials.

The flight's 136 passengers were held on the plane for about 15 minutes while immigration, customs and border agents, along with the RDU police arrived on the scene.

Federal agents boarded the flight and began checking the identification of passengers. Officers detained 11 men who were then interviewed and taken to the Johnston County jail.

After spending another day in the Johnston County jail, the men will go to Charlotte and later to Atlanta for a deportation hearing, O'Connell said.

The men had each paid a smuggler $1,000 to cross the border near Douglas, Ariz., on or about March 22, O'Connell said. After crossing the border, a vehicle took the men to Las Vegas, where they stayed at a "stash house" for several days before boarding a Southwest flight headed for Raleigh.

It was not clear Wednesday how the airline tickets were purchased or how the group got past federal security agents without a passport and using a foreign voter registration card, O'Connell said.
 
This country needs to resolve its schizophrenic policies about immigrant workers, and soon.

I say- "screen 'em, permit 'em and tax 'em" and then REALLY close the border. If you are not permitted, then you are deported. Come back once, and go to jail, period.
 
Ty Webb said:
This country needs to resolve its schizophrenic policies about immigrant workers, and soon.

I say- "screen 'em, permit 'em and tax 'em" and then REALLY close the border. If you are not permitted, then you are deported. Come back once, and go to jail, period.

Well, we do screen, permit, and tax permitted immigrant workers already. That's what work visas are for.

I agree about closing the borders, we should do more. Unfortunately, for decades factions of both major political parties and private interests have worked to hamstring those engaged in the enforcement of immigration laws regarding illegals. Toss into the mix these factions supporting a huge legal "rights" industry aimed at tripping up enforcement by fuzzying the line between legal and illegal immigration in the courts and one's emotions when discussions ensue regarding "immigrants" in general.

This country legally accepts more immigrants than the rest of the world combined. I don't disagree with that policy, immigration is good, but in turn there's no reason..practical or moral...that we shouldn't lock down and do everything we can to stop access outside the legal avenue and draw a clear distinction between the two.

The reality is, if you don't elect individual lawmakers and administrations commited to enforcing immigration policy and hold their feet to the fire while they're in office, nothing will change.

Even after terrorist attacks by un-monitered non-citizens, issues such as the price of perscription drugs and caribou-mating get more press and attention than illegal immigration. The "resolve" has to come from constituents getting their priorities in order and voicing their opinions to those making the laws and holding the purse strings.
 
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I am a bit miffed as to why the Marshall allowed these men on the flight to RDU, obviously he already knew the men were not supposed to be here in the states...otherwise why the phone call, how did he know they were not up to something more dastardly?, Why not detain and question them in ORD before getting back on another US flight....?
 
Indeed, the plane NEVER should have left the ground.
Maybe we can learn how to say 'no' to illegal aliens, instead of pretending it's not happening or will just go away.
What's the number the sky marshall called? We should all have it and use it liberally.
 
CatYaaak said:
Well, we do screen, permit, and tax permitted immigrant workers already. That's what work visas are for.


I mean really applying the laws and procedures, not a wink and a nod.
 
Dizel8 said:
It was not clear ... how the group got past federal security agents without a passport and using a foreign voter registration card, O'Connell said.

When asked to comment, federal security agents replied, "Yeah, we did think a large group of guys with foreign IDs did seem a little strange, but we certainly didn't want to hurt their feelings or offend anyone by questioning them. Besides, we were so busy searching the pilots and feeling up the FAs, we really didn't want to deal with it."



Not clear, my a**.........
 
Dizel8 said:
It was not clear Wednesday how the airline tickets were purchased or how the group got past federal security agents without a passport and using a foreign voter registration card, O'Connell said.

I, too, am concerned about how they got through security. It doesn't sound like they were trying too hard to be secretive, they were travelling as a group after all.

And what is a "foreign voter registration card"? I've never heard of that piece of ID before.
 

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