Thursday, November 10, 2016

Deportation Proceedings Made Easy

I think that the Trump Administration will be fair and warn those here illegally that they will jeopardize their chances of immigrating legally to the U.S. if they wait to be formally deported, rather than return to their home countries voluntarily, to apply for a legal visa.  Activists and some shyster lawyers might jeopardize an alien's chances of immigrating legally, if they advise him/her to wait and be formally deported.   The DHS, under Trump, will probably have printed up some handbills and publish warnings and information in Spanish and English on the Internet, on TV  and in newspapers. The information addressed to illegal aliens, should warn them that if they wait for deportation, they must, after formal deporation, wait a minimum of five years  just to apply for a visa. There is no guarantee that they will then get one in five years, because Trump has proposed lowering immigration quotas, something that is long overdue.

Aliens under formal deportation proceedings do not have a right to release on bond and  Appearance Bonds  are  rarely granted.  The aliens can be detained for as long as it takes for them to appear before an immigration judge.  This cannot be emphasized too much: Illegal alien parents that think that theirchidren born here (anchor babies) will give them immunity against deportation are wrong.  (See Matter of Melendez, Interim Dec. #2539, dated 10/20/1976 and others referenced in this decision)

Before Obama  tried to make a new immigration law by executive order, citizen children of parents whom the parents do not wish to take back to their home countries, were always put into foster homes and put up for adoption.  Trump has promised to countermand Obama's illegal executive orders with his own orders his first day in office. Parents that lose their children in this manner will most likely never see them again.

A notice to illgal aliens should make the law clear, and warn that neither activists nor lawyers can change the law:

https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/8/212.2

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