Government Failure On The Immigration Front Line
[Peter
Brimelow writes:
One of the wonders of the internet is that able
writers are constantly presenting themselves by email.
In the winter, while I was struggling to finish my
boring book on the teacher union, I had a
correspondence with
David Montoya,
accepted this article, and made a mental note that he
would be a serious force in the immigration debate.
Tragically, before we could post, David Montoya died
suddenly of heart failure, leaving a wife and three
year-old son. We post now this last service to his art
and his country, and will contribute in his memory to
the
Fund for
Ethan Montoya, c/o Temple Israel. 3183 Mecartney Road,
Alameda, CA 94502]
By David Montoya
Like most Americans, I always blamed our country’s
immigration problems solely on the Immigration and
Naturalization Service. After all, the INS is the
agency
charged with overseeing the nation’s immigration
security. However, within a few days of becoming
employed as a German/Dutch interpreter at San
Francisco International Airport, I discovered that the
INS is, in fact, mired down with
congressionally mandated regulations and quotas
and masses of complicated and unnecessary paperwork.
It only has about 12 seconds to determine whether the
person standing at America’s gate has legitimate
documents, should be admitted into the United States,
under what conditions, and for how long.
The agency carries out its important duties in a
manner not dissimilar to the Postal Service. When this
cumbersome bureaucratic culture merges with the
congresses’ arbitrarily changing and
politically-influenced immigration regulations, visa
lotteries, complex visa and visa waiver systems, and
TWOV (Transit WithOut Visa) loopholes–all entrusted
to
federal overtime seekers with little incentive to go
the extra mile –it is little wonder the U.S. has
problems.
I was always frustrated by the tall tales that people
attempting to gain entry to the United States would
spin. They would pose as engineers without being able to
explain the difference between a valve and a socket.
They would show up with six different documents, each
emblazoned with a different name. They would claim to be
from Liberia and not know who
Sgt. Samuel Doe is. There would be airplane loads of
Chinese with Honduran and Bolivian passports, often
bearing photos with no resemblance to the holder.
Salvadorans would claim to be Mexicans, solely to be
deported to Mexico and not all the way back to Central
America – which would aid them on their next attempt to
enter the United States illegally. Of course, they would
not know the words to
Mexicanos, al grito de guerra - the INS’ secret
pass/fail weapon for catching OTMs
(Other Than Mexicans).
Very early on, I was called upon to translate for a
Turkish man who resided in Germany. His nervous and
evasive reactions to the questions he was asked raised
suspicions. Even though his tourist visa could have
allowed him to stay in the United States for up to six
months, and could even have been extended for another
six months, the INS supervisor told him he could stay
for only three weeks - or go back to Germany
immediately. He became angry; demanding all of our names
and claimed because he was a “Turkish Muslim” he was
being singled out for harsh treatment.
Within days I was contacted by an
immigration attorney. He threatened me and every INS
inspector who had been present. This would be my first
of many encounters with immigration attorneys - people
who spend their days helping El Salvadorian
shoplifters and
radical Muslims delay and avoid federally-mandated
deportation.
On another day, a young
Surinamese man claimed to be a pilot for high
ranking government ministers (with no aviation
credentials, of course). He subjected me and two INS
inspectors to a three-hour Dutch-language song and
dance. Then he blurted out “asylum.”
With his lying strategy finally exhausted, he had
invoked the magic word - one which afforded him an
audience with a
judge.
However, the law does get enforced – where it’s easy
to enforce. I was often called upon to read through
young women’s diaries and letters to see if they
intended to be employed as domestic and child care help.
With all of the serious immigration related breaches of
national security I was amazed at the endless efforts
the INS employed to catch 19 year
Swiss and German nannies. Sometimes three and four
inspectors at a time would interrogate a young woman
about her cookbooks and letters mentioning children.
They would be so proud of themselves when they brought
her to tears and got her to admit she was coming to
baby-sit.
Certainly, these young women were breaking the law
and needed to be deported. But they are far down the
list of people causing economic and
national security damage. It would be nice if the
INS put the same kind of man power behind locating and
deporting illegal aliens as they did protecting the jobs
of 14 year-old American baby-sitters.
Another frequent immigration security concern: the
TWOV passenger, people who would require a visa to enter
the United States but do not posses one because they are
transiting the United States en route form one country
to another. An Iranian passenger en route from Germany
to
Canada, for example.
When the INS encounters a TWOV, he must be escorted
to his outbound flight as a security precaution. Don’t
picture an Airborne Ranger with an automatic weapon,
though. TWOVs are escorted by the same aged, non-citizen
airport personnel who have been handling airport
security for the past twenty years. These are the same
people who have been deemed unsatisfactory, mandating a
federal takeover of
airport security.
A near-sighted 70 year old non-citizen is not
infrequently the only thing standing between the U.S.
and an alien requiring an escort out of the country.
While I was working with them, INS inspectors
complained constantly about the lack of coordination
between the Justice Department, their overseer, and the
State Department, which issues
visas at overseas embassies and consulates. The
inspectors feel their mission is too complex - divided
between arrival inspections, law enforcement duties
shared with the
border patrol and customs, and the almost-unrelated
but major obligation to provide the public with
immigration information and move the mountains of
paperwork required to process all manner of temporary
and permanent immigrants and deport those deemed as
unacceptable for entry. They see the Congress and
administration as political players, who have little
interest in the consequences of mass legal and illegal
immigration.
Throughout my six years with the INS, I experienced
lying, fraudulent document scams, aggressive immigration
attorneys, and hopelessly frustrated, jaded, and cynical
INS agents. It was a sobering, and often, distressing
experience.
The average U.S. citizen should spend just one day
watching the endless lines of
asylum abusers, the cumbersome
bureaucratic incompetence, and the politically
mandated blind mass
paroling of
never-to-be-seen again aliens.
He would know then that the last thing that any INS
agent has time to think about is protecting the country
from the problem of illegal immigration.
November 12, 2002