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Today on ImmigrationReform.com - Facts About the New Alabama Law
FAIR's media team today takes a look at the recently passed Alabama immigration enforcement law. There's been a lot of misinformation out there, so check out for yourself what the real facts are at www.immigrationreform.com.
Mexico Claims Central American Immigration Drops 70 Percent
"The number of Central American migrants crossing Mexico to reach the United States has dropped almost 70 percent over the last five years, the Mexican government said Tuesday," Forbes reported.
"Immigration Commissioner Salvador Beltran del Rio said the estimate is based on the decline in the number of Central Americans detained for being in Mexico without proper documents. He said there were 433,000 such detentions in 2005 and 140,000 last year."
NYC Immigration Attorney Charged in "Fraud Mill" Operation
"Federal authorities say an indictment charges 12 people with operating a massive immigration fraud mill through a New York City law practice. They say the defendants and their co-conspirators applied for legal status for tens of thousands of illegal immigrants based on bogus claims that U.S. employers had sponsored them," the AP reported.
Alabama Argues Against Stopping New Immigration Law
"Alabama attorneys this afternoon urged a federal appeals court not to grant a Justice Department request to stay the state's immigration law," The Hunstville Times writes.
"The 46-page filing is in response to requests made Friday by the U.S. Justice Department and a group of 36 plaintiffs who want the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to stay the law while their appeal of the judge's order, which mostly upholds the law, is pending."
"The issue that wouldn't go away for Texas Gov. Rick Perry - no matter where the presidential contender went to campaign to be the GOP nominee for the 2012 election - actually did go away, at least for one night, during Tuesday's Republican debate in New Hampshire," says Fox News Latino.
"The word "immigration" never came up - not by the moderator, PBS's Charlie Rose. Not by the reporters. Not by the candidates themselves, either in their answers to questions or when they got a chance to ask one of their rivals a question on anything they wanted."