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January 21, 2005
Time
To End The Marriage Visa Racket
By
Joe Guzzardi
Since I moved back to California
in 1988, I’ve received three marriage proposals.
None had anything to do with love.
They were straight business propositions wherein I—an
American citizen— would be paid to marry illegal aliens.
Then my new bride would be able to pursue
legal permanent residence.
My first two proposals came
through two different intermediaries representing women,
one
Lebanese and one
Brazilian, living at undisclosed locations.
The intermediaries presented
photos of attractive women in their early to mid-30s. If
I said the word, the candidates would jet into town for
proper introductions.
Although financial details weren’t
settled, the sum generally discussed for my hand would be
in the low five-figure range—half up front and the other
half to follow when my bride’s paperwork was officially
processed.
My third and most recent proposal
was bold and brazen. A
visa over-stayer from
Thailand, a casual acquaintance, told me that it is
unseemly for men of a certain age and standing—my age and
standing, apparently—to be single.
"Let’s get married," she said.
My suitor acknowledged that money
usually is part of these arrangements and admitted that
she had none. However, she vividly described what she
would bring to our marriage in lieu of cash.
Naturally, since fraudulent
marriage is
against the law, I turned down all three proposals
flat.
But I’m confident that the women
found takers in no time.
Whenever there’s a few bucks to be
hustled, people
don’t give much thought to immigration law.
In
May 2004 NBC’s Dateline produced a television
special focusing on the "booming marriage fraud
industry."
Complete with hidden cameras and
undercover reporters, here are a few of the cases that
Dateline exposed:
- Sarah, a single California
mother of two who said she was so "desperate for
money" that she married a Chinese illegal alien she
met only moments before the wedding. Her fee: $2,500.
- Nathan, who identified himself
as a
UCLA student that would use his $5,000 to "buy
some books," turned out to be a felon recently
charged with credit card theft.
- A Brooklyn marriage broker
charged a would-be bride $2,500 to introduce her to
"Billy" whose matrimonial fee was $15,000.
According to Sarah, an active
network of recruiters from companies like California’s
Worldwide International (no longer operating under that
name) look for down-and-out people who will jump at the
chance for quick cash.
Said Sarah, "They just say
‘Come follow me.’"
Sarah described Worldwide
International as "a virtual money machine with
immigrants handing over suitcases full of money for sham
marriages."
These are bogus marriages at their
most ugly… where the unscrupulous and the broke team up
to
defraud the US government.
Even "Eda," one of the
"facilitators of fraudulent marriages," told a
Dateline reporter disguised as a prospective bride,
"Be careful with these people. Who get married for
money? People low-income and low class."
But other sham marriages are
perfectly legal. They are unions between two strangers
that involve a
fiancée visa or an
arranged marriage.
The fiancée visa, wherein a middle
aged, loser American male chooses a
catalogue bride, grows more popular every day.
In my English as a second language
adult education class, I now have no less than four such
brides as pupils—three Russians and one Peruvian.
Similarly, arranged marriages that
originate in the US are more common than most realize.
A typical case: two young women I
have known since they were teenagers returned to
Pakistan—against their will—for
arranged marriages. Their father had pledged to a
friend from his Pakistani village that, when his
daughters reached puberty, he would send them back to
marry his friend’s sons…so that they could come to
America.
Things ended poorly for the women.
They returned to the US, were soon joined by their
husbands and spent a few years in unhappy marriages
before divorcing.
But for the grooms, it was manna
from heaven: green cards and ultimately citizenship.
Fraudulent marriages represent
another layer of frustration for immigration reformers
because they trigger chain migration that pushes U.S.
population even higher.
But far worse than frustration are
the terrorism threats fraud marriages create. Terrorists
know how easy it is to exploit such a gaping hole in the
immigration system.
In her
September 2002 book,
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores,
Michelle Malkin named fifteen known terrorists—including
Osama bin Laden’s personal secretary!—who
married US citizens and remained inside the US.
One terrorist paid as little as
$1,100; another married three different American women
before getting his green card.
Shortly after the publication of
Malkin’s book, one hundred seven Middle Eastern men
living illegally in the US were arrested in South
Carolina under
"Operation Broken Vows." Federal authorities were
quick to say that the men from Pakistan, Tunisia and
southern Asia had no "terrorism-related connections."
But who really knows?
Now, more than two years after
Operation Broken Vows,
fraud marriages continue unabated.
On Dateline, Joe Green,
Assistant Deputy Director of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement of the Department of Homeland Security
estimates that 30 percent of all marriages between an
immigrant and a US citizen are fraudulent.
That adds up to tens of thousands
of
phony marriages annually.
Yet Green didn’t offer much
comfort.
"You could have potentially
very dangerous people living in the US," said
Green—apparently unaware that we already have thousands
of "dangerous people" well entrenched because of
loopholes like fraud marriage.
Of all of the avenues that America
could pursue to truly combat terrorism, ending the
fiancée visa, which ultimately benefits only
immigration lawyers, and more
crackdowns on sham marriage matchmakers like
"Operation Broken Vows", would be among the simplest.
If journalists can find
underground organizers who trade in fraudulent marriage,
then how hard could it be for the Department of Homeland
Security to root them out?
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English at the Lodi
Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column
since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |