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October 03, 2007


Top ICE Official in Michigan Indicted for Bribes from Hezbollah

"A top immigration official in Detroit has been indicted by a federal grand jury for accepting tens of thousands of dollars in bribes to release aliens who were supposed to be deported and facilitate other immigration frauds," the Detroit News reports.

Debbie Schlussel has posted in-depth commentary about the case including the lag in response by the U.S. attorney that let most of the Hezbollah suspects flee the country. Her summary: "A top U.S. Immigration official has been accepting bribes from Hezbollah operatives in America for years. But the U.S. Attorney--Stephen Murphy III, the Justice Department's top official in Eastern Michigan--delayed indictment for FOUR Years(!), while he quietly allowed the Hezbollah criminals involved to flee the country."

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UCLA Rally Endorses Revolution Inside U.S.

"Do you really know your enemy? This racist professor in UCLA knows exactly what he is talking about. Listen half way through and note the South American Countries he mentions. All leftist, all nine our enemies and all nine receiving U S tax dollars. While our elected officials are sitting on their rumps," says Col. Albert Rodriguez in response to this video shot (apparently) at at UCLA rally.



 


Prince William Board Backs Immigration Crackdown, Concerned Over Cost

"Prince William County supervisors slowed their closely watched crackdown on illegal immigrants yesterday, as one of the nation's most aggressive efforts at local enforcement has run into the reality of budget constraints at a time of declining revenue. County supervisors remained united in wanting to show that local governments can do more to rid their towns of illegal immigrants, voting unanimously to support a new police policy that increases residency checks and improves cooperation with federal immigration authorities. But when it came to allocating the $14.2 million it would cost to implement the policy, the supervisors balked, voting to revisit the issue later," the Washington Post reports. "Supervisors also postponed their vote on proposals that would have denied county services to illegal immigrants, arguing that more time is needed to study the costs and potential consequences. The suggested service cuts outlined at yesterday's meeting did not put a price on tighter residency checks by county staff members. Supervisors also postponed their vote on funding a seven-officer Criminal Alien Unit within the police department."

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