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Vetting and immigration process
Seems to be going well ....
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. government has mistakenly granted citizenship to at least 858 immigrants from countries of concern to national security or with high rates of immigration fraud who had pending deportation orders, according to an internal Homeland Security audit released Monday. The Homeland Security Department's inspector general found that the immigrants used different names or birthdates to apply for citizenship with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and such discrepancies weren't caught because their fingerprints were missing from government databases. DHS said in an emailed statement that an initial review of these cases suggest that some of the individuals may have ultimately qualified for citizenship, and that the lack of digital fingerprint records does not necessarily mean they committed fraud. The report does not identify any of the immigrants by name, but Inspector General John Roth's auditors said they were all from "special interest countries" — those that present a national security concern for the United States — or neighboring countries with high rates of immigration fraud. The report did not identify those countries. DHS said the findings reflect what has long been a problem for immigration officials — old paper-based records containing fingerprint information that can't be searched electronically. DHS says immigration officials are in the process of uploading these files and that officials will review "every file" identified as a case of possible fraud. Roth's report said fingerprints are missing from federal databases for as many as 315,000 immigrants with final deportation orders or who are fugitive criminals. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has not reviewed about 148,000 of those immigrants' files to add fingerprints to the digital record. |
Ahhhh, you're making this up.
I know this can't be true because "Somebody" here said they go through a grueling vetting process. |
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But O said the background check system doesn't work..
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No worries , Obama has this handled too . Spence , you get proved wrong almost as much as Hillary . Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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You do realize they're completely different processes right? |
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You know we are not being stabbed and bombed by Trump right ? Focus Spence Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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I still failed to see the benefit of risking it and taking more refugees in when we know , even by Obama's admission , a small percentage of them will turn out to be a terrorist Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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It would be interesting to ask Christian refugees who are coming from radical Muslim nations to escape religious persecution , how they feel about Muslim refugees coming from those same nations .
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The solution is to get the UN to send whatever forces are necessary, to improve their home situation to the point where they don't all want to flee. Until they do a better job of policing each other, that's the least horrible solution. |
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Yeah, I wonder how many Syrian refugees she's willing to take into her house. |
You can add another 900 plus to the 858 illegals given citizenship, that came out this morning and another 150 thou that finger prints were taken but not yet in data base.....:)
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Things are always worse than they say On the plus side, Governor Baker has reassured us that of the 10,000 refugees relocated to Massachusetts there are no bad skittles 😊 Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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heh...heh...
Bolstering Donald Trump's pledge to build a wall and deport criminal illegals, a former Mexican foreign secretary said that there are "many ways" the Republican presidential candidate, if elected, can get Mexico to pay for the wall and deport four million immigrants. "The wall is a perfectly feasible promise to fulfill, " said Jorge Castañeda, Mexico's secretary of foreign affairs from 2000 to 2003. Dismissing a Mexican Senate move to block federal payments to a Trump administration for the wall as "silly, " Castañeda offered up several ways for Trump to find the money. "If he really wants Mexicans to pay for the wall, he has many ways of getting many Mexicans to pay for the wall, increasing the fee for visas...increasing the toll on the bridges..taxing remittances, " he said at the Hudson Institute in Washington. What's more, he said that the wall is an extension of programs first put into place by former President Bill Clinton and extended under former President George W. Bush and President Obama . "Actually today you have somewhere like 40 percent of the 1,700 mile wall that is already there. So why can't Trump do what he has promised to do if his three predecessors did a lot of it without wanting to?" he said. Ditto on deportations. Noting that Obama has been dubbed the "Deporterin#^&Chief" for removing two million, Castañeda said doubling that to four million shouldn't be a problem. "He certainly could deport twice as many as Obama, why not, why not? Everybody knows where they it's very easy to find them. It's expensive, but it's not outrageously expensive and you could pressure a bunch of people including my country into paying for part of it and taking them back, " said the diplomat who is a New York University professor. "If Obama was able to deport a little more than two million...why can't Trump deport four million if he wants to?" he added. |
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