February 26, 2003
FBI – Finally Busting Illegals?
By
Juan Mann
You read it first on VDARE.COM:
look out illegal aliens and
criminal alien residents – the G-Men are coming!
Thanks to a recent delegation of
authority by
Attorney General John Ashcroft to the Director of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, all Special Agents
of the FBI now have the power to enforce the immigration
laws of the United States.[VDARE.COM
NOTE: Click here to see the memo.]
Putting the FBI on the case is an
historic step in the right direction for
immigration law enforcement. Beginning December 18,
2002, the FBI has the authority to locate, investigate
and apprehend anyone in violation of federal immigration
law - especially those in violation of the
terrorism-targeted “special registration system”
known as
NSEERS [National Security Entry-Exit Registration
System]. Previously, this authority was retained
exclusively by the late, unlamented INS.
But the FBI needs your help.
It’s time to start
reporting illegal aliens and criminal alien
residents to the FBI over the internet - or the
old-fashioned way, by calling or writing one of the FBI
field offices.
The FBI recognizes that the internet can be used to
report
suspected criminal activity. In contrast, in its entire
sorry history, the INS didn’t put up a single e-mail
address or web-based “tips” form. The FBI's already has
done this at https://tips.fbi.gov.
The FBI not only has the power but
also the duty to act as immigration officers. So
send in your
tips today!
The Attorney General’s decision
allowing the FBI to “exercise the powers and duties of
immigration officers” is a significant development for
the Department of Justice. By delegating immigration
authority to its own elite investigative corps, the
Attorney General has seen to it that the DOJ will still
have a hand in the immigration law enforcement business.
With the former INS leaving the DOJ
as of March 1 – and taking all of its immigration
officers with it – the new Department of Homeland
Security would have had a monopoly on enforcement. But
not now.
Don’t worry about turf battles.
With over
8.4 million illegal aliens in the country, there’s
plenty of work to go around.
But with the FBI on the case, it would be possible to
make short work of illegal alien day-laborers, visa
overstayers, convicted criminal alien residents, bogus
asylum applicants, phony
foreign students, international
alien smugglers, illegal alien gang-bangers,
border-crossing coyotes, and other assorted
foreign menaces on our shores.
Just think -- if the FBI compiles a big enough illegal
alien arrest record through citizen
reports, maybe enforcing the immigration laws of the
United States will become one of the FBI’s new
priorities.
A helpful suggestion: the new FBI
immigration officers should use the federal government’s
greatest weapon to fight illegal immigration – the
expedited removal power of Immigration Act
Section 235(b).
They should also ask their boss,
the Attorney General, to expand this enforcement tool to
the
fullest extent of the law.
The FBI could also use their
immigration powers to ship as many illegal aliens as
possible out of the country under administrative
removals and
“voluntary departure” orders while still in federal
custody (that is,
“under safeguards”) as an alternative to sending
them to the
litigation briar patch of the DOJ’s dysfunctional
Immigration Court system in the Executive Office for
Immigration Review.
The FBI’s immigration authority is
definitely good news for America. If the FBI devotes
even a fraction of its resources to immigration
enforcement inside our borders, it can succeed where the
former INS failed.
Juan Mann, a lawyer, is the
proprietor of
DeportAliens.com