Wednesday, May 03, 2006

I SAY FEED HIM A STEADY DIET OF PORK

Jury Rejects Death Sentence for Moussaoui

By William Branigin, Jerry Markon and Timothy Dwyer
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, May 3, 2006; 4:39 PM

A federal jury decided today to spare the life of Zacarias Moussaoui, sentencing the avowed al-Qaeda conspirator to life in prison for his role in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist plot.

The verdict was reached after seven days of deliberations following a two-phase death penalty trial that lasted six weeks.

The jury of nine men and three women began deliberating April 24 to determine whether Moussaoui, 37, a member of the al-Qaeda network headed by Osama bin Laden, would get the death penalty or life imprisonment for his role in the Sept. 11 plot.

The same jury found Moussaoui eligible for the death penalty April 3 after three weeks of hearings in the first phase of his death penalty trial in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va. In the second phase, which began April 6 and featured testimony from relatives of Sept. 11 victims, the jurors had to decide whether to actually apply capital punishment or sentence Moussaoui to life in a federal penitentiary without possibility of parole.

Moussaoui is the only person charged in the United States in connection with Sept. 11.

In trying to reach their decision, the jurors had to grapple with a 42-page "special verdict form" that listed the charges against Moussaoui, as well as a number of aggravating and mitigating factors. A day after beginning their deliberations, the jury asked for a dictionary, but U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema denied the request on grounds that giving them one would be like putting "extraneous" evidence in the jury room.

The issue came up again April 28 when Brinkema admonished the jurors not to do any independent research after learning that one of them had looked up the word "aggravating" in a dictionary at home. Brinkema said that after speaking privately with the errant juror, she concluded that he had not committed a "material" violation of her previous instructions, and she allowed deliberations to continue.

The episode underscored the jury's dilemma in weighing the "aggravating factors" advanced by prosecutors against "mitigating factors" proposed by the defense. Among the aggravating factors was whether Moussaoui was responsible for the nearly 3,000 deaths on Sept. 11. Mitigating factors included whether sentencing him to death would essentially play into his hands by fulfilling his previously stated wish to become a "martyr."

Just before the case went to the jury, closing arguments reflected the intense feelings that animated the sentencing trial. Prosecutors flashed photographs of some of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the Sept. 11 attacks and played videotapes of victims jumping from the burning World Trade Center.

Earlier in the second phase, the prosecution had presented relatives of victims, many sobbing on the stand, who told of their pain and loss. They showed the trade center towers falling and played 911 calls of frantic people about to be overcome by smoke and flames.

They also played for the first time the cockpit voice recording from United Airlines flight 93, which crashed in a field in Pennsylvania as four Sept. 11 hijackers on board tried to fly it toward Washington. The recording captured some of the sounds of a revolt by passengers determined to prevent the hijackers from carrying out their plan, which reportedly was to crash the plane into the U.S. Capitol.

"This is the United States of America, and we are not going to put up with a bunch of thugs who invoke God's name to slaughter 3,000 people," Assistant U.S. Attorney David J. Novak said as the prosecution argued for the death penalty. Prosecutors called Moussaoui "pure evil" and said "there is no place on this good Earth" for him.

Defense attorneys countered that jurors should reject the "easy answer" of sentencing Moussaoui to death. Because Moussaoui is seeking martyrdom, defense attorney Gerald T. Zerkin suggested, the jury should do the opposite and force him to spend the rest of his life in prison.

"He wants you to sentence him to death," Zerkin said. "He is baiting you into it. He came to America to die, in jihad, and you are his last chance."

The jury faced only two choices in the case: If the jurors could not agree unanimously on the death penalty, a life sentence would be imposed, and Moussaoui mostly likely would be sent to the federal "supermax" prison in Colorado.

Jurors looked grim as they filed out of the courtroom to begin deliberations after the closing arguments. The defendant, a French citizen of Moroccan descent, did not look at them but had earlier smiled when prosecutors described the suffering of victims of the attacks on the trade center and the Pentagon. As he left the courtroom for a midmorning break, Moussaoui had shouted: "You'll never get me, America! Never, never!"

In the first phase of the sentencing trial, Moussaoui took the witness stand over the strong objections of his court-appointed defense attorneys, whose role he vigorously rejects. He then undermined his defense by testifying that he was supposed to hijack a fifth airplane on Sept. 11 and fly it into the White House with a crew that included British "shoe bomber" Richard Reid. He expressed a desire to kill Americans and explained how he was prepared to cut the throat of a passenger or flight attendant during the hijacking.

Defense lawyers called their client a liar who was trying to inflate his role in the Sept. 11 plot in his quest for a death sentence. It was also noted that Reid, who was arrested in December 2001 after trying to set off explosives in his shoes aboard a U.S. airliner bound from Paris to Miami, had not been in the United States at the time of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Moussaoui pleaded guilty last year to six federal counts of conspiring with al-Qaeda. But until his testimony in his sentencing trial, he had insisted that he was to have been part of a second wave of attacks -- not those of Sept. 11.

Three of the six counts, including "conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries," carry the death penalty.

Although Moussaoui was sitting in jail Sept. 11, prosecutors convinced the jury in the trial's first phase that he was culpable for the deaths that day because he lied to the FBI, allowing the plot to go forward. Moussaoui was arrested on an immigration charge in August 2001 and questioned by federal agents after his behavior at a Minnesota flight school aroused suspicion.

The mercurial Frenchman took the stand again in the second phase of the trial, and again he seemed bent on doing all he could to turn jurors against him. He reaffirmed his claim of involvement in the Sept. 11 plot and said his only regret was that more Americans were not killed. He said he found it "disgusting" that weeping Sept. 11 survivors and family members would share their grief on the witness stand and described the testimony of one Pentagon survivor as "pathetic." He also expressed a desire to "exterminate" American Jews and said he wished to "destroy" America.

Asked by prosecutor Robert A. Spencer whether it was his choice to accept a suicide mission from bin Laden, Moussaoui replied, "It was my pleasure." He said he would carry out such a mission "today" if he could.

"Cruel, heinous and depraved does not even begin to tell this story," Assistant U.S. Attorney David Raskin said in his closing argument on April 24 as pictures of Sept. 11 victims flashed on television screens and Moussaoui smiled. "It's more than lack of remorse, ladies and gentlemen. It's hatred. It's . . . unexplainable, incomprehensible evil, and it's everything you need to know about this defendant."

Defense attorneys conceded that their client lacked remorse. Calling Moussaoui's testimony "callous," Zerkin said: "It is easy to despise Mr. Moussaoui. He has invited you, encouraged you, to do that, sitting there smugly, almost as if he thinks this is all a game."

Zerkin said Moussaoui is a "sacrificial lamb" and noted that the government has not put on trial higher-ranked al-Qaeda leaders who have been captured, such as Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. He and other operatives are being questioned in undisclosed locations.

"No, it's just Mr. Moussaoui," Zerkin said, "a veritable caricature of al-Qaeda terrorist, the operative who couldn't shoot straight."

Prosecutors suggested in their response that Mohammed and other al-Qaeda leaders would be brought to trial eventually.

The Justice Department chose to try Moussaoui in Alexandria -- instead of New York, where most major terrorism trials have been held -- in part because the jury pool is considered more conservative in Virginia.

Yet, in their effort to secure Moussaoui's execution, prosecutors were fighting the current of recent history: A federal jury in Alexandria has never voted for a sentence of death. Five times since 1998, in cases with defendants ranging from convicted spy Brian P. Regan to two members of the Mara Salvatrucha street gang convicted of killing a federal witness, juries instead chose life in prison.

Federal juries nationwide have also strongly preferred life over death. Since 1991, juries have voted for death sentences 51 times, compared with 93 sentences of life in prison, according to the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel. Since 2000, amid publicity about the exoneration of some death row inmates by DNA and other evidence, federal juries have returned 69 life sentences, compared with 29 for death.

In the case most comparable to Moussaoui's, the 2001 trial of four al-Qaeda members accused of blowing up U.S. embassies in East Africa, a federal jury in New York chose life in prison instead of death for the two defendants eligible for death. Ten jurors wrote on the verdict form that executing one of the men would make him a martyr, and five said life in prison would be a greater punishment.

"Killing isn't easy, and jurors only do it when they perceive it's absolutely necessary," said Kevin McNally, a defense lawyer affiliated with the death penalty resource group, which tracks federal capital cases nationwide. He added, however, that jurors are more likely to vote for death when they are swept up in a "tidal wave of emotion," such as in the Moussaoui case, and that Sept. 11 separates the Moussaoui prosecution from all others.

Sept. 11 "is a symbol of this country, a national tragedy," McNally said. "Someone has got to pay."

Staff writer Debbi Wilgoren contributed to this report.

Breaking: Verdict reached in Moussaoui sentencing


Update: Life in prison.

Update: The juror numbers on the various aggravating and mitigating circumstances will be posted on the court website within the hour. I’ll have the link when it goes up. Worth noting now that the life sentence was not unanimous, and also that none of the jurors considered the possible martyrdom effect of executing Moussaoui to be a mitigating factor in the sentence.

While we’re waiting for details, watch this.

Update: Instant reaction. Rusty is mortified, Stop the ACLU is relieved.

Update: Ace makes it two to one in favor of outrage and three to zero in favor of prison justice. Hot Air affiliate Expose the Left has video of the announcement.

Update: Even the professionals were blind-sided by this one.

Update: Meryl thinks they made the right call, as does Pieter Dorsman, who says Moussaoui has “residual asset value.”

Update: James Joyner: “Those who argue that the current system of capital punishment is arbitrary and capricious have much more ammunition now.” Still waiting for the answers to the juror questionnaire to be posted.

Update: Someone do me a favor and explain the “at least we denied him martyrdom” logic to me. Does that apply to Bin Laden too? If Moussaoui turns around tomorrow and says the worst thing we could do to him is supply him with lots of prostitutes, do we call the Mustang Ranch?

Update: TalkLeft sees good lawyering at work. Jay Reding gives a grudging thumbs-up because … at least we denied him martyrdom. Sigh.

Update: Ace follows up on his last post by wishing for — well, go read. Here’s a hint: it rhymes with “bang cape.”

Update: Here’s a fun quote via the New York Times for all the at-least-we-denied-him-martyrdom suckers:

“America, you lost!” Mr. Moussaoui shouted as he was led from the courtroom after the verdict was announced. His outbursts and rantings had become routine.

Update: Bill Quick wonders when the first round of hostages will be taken in the Middle East as ransom for Moussaoui’s release. Hey, come on, Bill — at least we denied him martyrdom.

Update: Roger L. Simon notes that Moussaoui carries a virulent, highly infectious disease, and hopes that he’ll be isolated for the sake of the rest of the prison population. And for our own.

Update: Charles Johnson doesn’t want to say he told you so, but he told you so. Tammy Bruce (who’s hanging out tonight with Wafa Sultan!) says throw the switch. And the Political Pit Bull has video of Rudy Giuliani trying to put on a happy face, despite his own feeling that Moussaoui deserved death.

Update: Bush responds to the verdict in his typical canned, hokey manner. And the Daily Telegraph has a selection of Moussaoui quotes. “I would like to fly in a professional like manners one of the big airliners.”

Update: Kim Priestap at Wizbang puts it succinctly: “Moussaoui dared the American people on that [jury] to kill him and they blinked.” True enough, Kim. But look on the bright side. No martyrdom!

Update: Newsmax reports on Giuliani’s comments on Hardball. Video link is above.

Update: Robert Spencer says let the jailhouse conversions begin!

Update: Here’s the PDF of the juror’s answers to the sentencing questionnaire. It’s from the District Court’s website. Haven’t had time to look at it yet, but I did read Beth’s post noting that Moussaoui is headed for Supermax. Follow the links.

Update: Evan Coyne Maloney echoes Charles Johnson in wondering why Moussaoui was in court to begin with, while Goldstein seems to think feeding, clothing, and entertaining this degenerate for the next 40 years is somehow a defeat for America. Don’t you get it, Jeff? We denied him martyrdom. We won!

Elsewhere, Misha’s being Misha. Content warning.

Update: Reading the juror answers now. Compare the responses to B and C at the bottom of page 2. Is the “emotional injuries” clause the difference?

More, from pages 6 and 7. I’m going to screencap this for the sake of the at-least-we-didn’t-martyr-him people:

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More, from page 8. Only three jurors thought the defense proved Moussaoui’s involvement in 9/11 was “minor.”

Update: Finished reading the questionnaire. You know why he got life instead of death? In all likelihood, here’s why:

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Those are the only two mitigating factors which a majority of jurors — not all, mind you, but a majority — agreed the defense had proved. The highest number for any other factor was five. The questionnaire didn’t ask them to weight the factors so we can’t know for sure how important each one was relative to the others, but in all probability the reason this guy will live instead of die is because … he had a rough childhood.

But hey. At least we didn’t martyr him.

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Update: Further thoughts on the last update, but first this from WaPo:

Edward Adams, the court spokesman, announced the verdict outside the courthouse and said the 12 jurors “were not unanimous” in favor of a death sentence for Moussaoui, meaning that he automatically gets a life sentence without possibility of parole. He said the verdict does not indicate how many jurors voted for a death sentence and how many opted to keep the defendant in prison.

It only takes one holdout to force a life sentence, of course, and it should be noted re: the questionnaire that three jurors wrote in a mitigating factor of their own — namely, Moussaoui’s limited knowledge of the attack plans. Insofar as they felt strong enough about it to add it to the court’s list, we can probably safely assume that it carried a lot of weight for those who signed on to it. Which means my emphasis on the childhood factor might be misplaced, especially if the three write-in jurors were the only holdouts. Let’s see if anyone’s willing to talk to the press about deliberations and what the vote was. WaPo is pretty comfortable using anonymous sources from what I understand.

Update: Ace mentioned this in one of his earlier posts but I want to highlight it too. Don’t jurors in a capital case have to be “death-qualified” in voir dire? That is, they have to at least be open to the possibility of imposing death instead of life; if they object to capital punishment on principle, they’ll be disqualified. Or so I’ve always understood. What’s up, then, with the first mitigating factor, which also happens to be the one with five jurors signed on to it?

moussaoui3.jpg

If (and that’s a big if) one of those five used this factor as the justification to impose life instead of death, then, er, isn’t that person in fact opposed to capital punishment on principle?

Update: Hot Air’s own Bryan Preston tries a common-law argument by noting, “He could have averted a war.”

WE DON'T NEED NO STINKIN' REFORM, AT LEAST THAT'S WHAT THE DEMS WOULD HAVE YOU BELIEVE

Well, those wacky illegals are at it again, and our politicians are taking the bait. Although our laws are quite clear on how to legally enter the United States, apply for work, as well as what’s expected of immigrants once they get here, hundreds of thousands of lawbreakers have once again been allowed to protest en masse in our streets demanding we change those laws in order to forgive their transgressions.

I wish it were that easy.

What exactly are our lawmakers going to reform? It would seem as a starting point, that they should enforce the law already written, because as I’ve read them, they are reasonable, there are no gray areas, and they debunk the slogans carried by illegals that they are not criminals.

Yes, they are.

Let’s take a look at the laws on the books, as documented by the Department of Justice….

    1911 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1325 — Unlawful Entry, Failure to Depart, Fleeing Immigration Checkpoints, Marriage Fraud, Commercial Enterprise Fraud

    Section 1325 sets forth criminal offenses relating to (1) improper entry into the United States by an alien, (2) entry into marriage for the purpose of evading immigration laws, and (3) establishing a commercial enterprise for the purpose of evading immigration laws. The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) amended 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1325 to provide that an alien apprehended while entering or attempting to enter the United States at a time or place other than as designated by immigration officers shall be subject to a civil penalty.

    Comment: Further discussion of these offenses is set forth in Chapter 4 of Immigration Law, published as part of the Office of Legal Education’s Litigation Series, and as part of the USABook computer library.

This appears to be fairly cut-and-dry. Section 1325 clearly reads that coming into the country without the proper paperwork, thus permission, is a crime. So, if you cross our border illegally, hide out as to avoid arrest, detention, and removal from the U.S., you are breaking the law.

It doesn’t make exceptions for those wanting a better life for their families. Lots of people around the world want a better life for their families. Bank robbers want to buy a new home for their mother. No one is going to forgive their breaking of the law. What makes these illegals think their special?

Section 1325 also covers people who get married just to get into the country. Network news magazines cover this issue periodically, but unfortunately it becomes more of a love lost issue than that of law enforcement. The section also covers those who profit from the importation of illegals into the United States. “Coyotes” are breaking the law, not providing a service. Lawyers providing “Immigration Assistance” are finding ways around the law. That, too, is wrong.

What needs to be “reformed” as far as the present law is concerned? Most of the people who’ve immigrated to this country had to play by those rules. Nothing in this section need be “reformed.”

    1908 Unlawful Employment of Aliens — Criminal Penalties

    Title 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1324a(a)(1)(A) makes it unlawful for any person or other entity to hire, recruit, or refer for a fee, for employment in the United States an alien knowing the alien is an unauthorized alien, as defined in subsection 1324a(h)(3).

    Subsection 1324a(2) makes it unlawful for any person or entity, after hiring an alien for employment, to continue to employ the alien in the United States knowing the alien is or has become an unauthorized alien with respect to such employment.

    Subsection 1324a(f) provides that any person or entity that engages in a “pattern or practice” of violations of subsection (a)(1)(A) or (a)(2) shall be fined not more than $3000 for each unauthorized alien with respect to whom such a violation occurs, imprisoned for not more than six months for the entire pattern or practice, or both. The legislative history indicates that “a pattern or practice” of violations is to be given a commonsense rather than overly technical meaning, and must evidence regular, repeated and intentional activities, but does not include isolated, sporadic or accidental acts. H.R.Rep. No. 99-682, Part 3, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. (1986), p. 59. See 8 C.F.R. ¤ 274a.1(k).A scheme for civil enforcement of the requirements of ¤ 1324a through injunctions and monetary penalties is set forth in ¤ 1324a(e) and ¤ 1324a(f)(2).

    In addition, 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1546(b) makes it a felony offense to use a false identification document, or misuse a real one, for the purpose of satisfying the employment verification provisions in 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1324a(b).

Let’s be clear on this. It’s illegal to hire a person you know is an illegal alien. That also means that any illegal who asks you for work doesn’t give a damn about you or your business, as they are putting you in legal jeopardy. I’ll take it for granted these illegals are intelligent.

This means whether you employ illegal aliens to work in a factory or trim your hedges, employing these people puts the person(s) who hire them at further risk as false documents are sometimes accepted to verify employment eligibility.

What needs to be “reformed” as far as this present law is concerned? Most of the people who’ve immigrated to this country had to play by these rules. Nothing in this section need be “reformed.”

    1942 18 U.S.C. ¤ ¤ 1541 to 1546 — Passports and Other Entry Documents

    Title 18 U.S.C. ¤¤ 1541 to 1546, provide criminal penalties for offenses related to passports, visas, and related documents. Sections 1541 to 1544 exclusively concern passports. Section 1545 deals with safe conducts as well as passports. 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1546 deals with visas, permits, and related documents. See 3 A.L.R.Fed. 623.

    A passport is defined at 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1101(a)(30) as “any travel document issued by competent authority showing the bearer’s origin, identity, and nationality, if any, which is valid for the entry of the bearer into a foreign country.” The Supreme Court has stated “[a passport] is a document, which, from its nature and object, is addressed to foreign powers; purporting only to be a request, that the bearer of it may pass safely and freely; and is to be considered rather in the character of a political document, by which the bearer is recognized, in foreign countries, as an American citizen; and which, by usage and the law of nations, is received as evidence of the fact.” See Haig v. Agee, 453 U.S. 280, 292 (1981).

    Title 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1104 entrusts control of passport and visa matters to the Department of State, and establishes a Passport Office and a Visa Office. Title 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1185(b) makes it unlawful for a United States citizen to attempt to depart from or enter the United States without a valid passport, except as authorized by the President.

    Section 211a of Title 22 authorizes the Secretary of State to issue United States passports in foreign countries. Title 22 U.S.C. ¤ 212 limits issuance of United States passports to United States nationals only. Section 213 prescribes the method of applying for a passport, Title 22 U.S.C. ¤¤. 213, 214a, and 215 control the fees for passports, 22 U.S.C. ¤ 217a limits the temporal validity of passports to no more than 10 years. State Department regulations governing passports appear at 22 C.F.R. Part 51. See 59A Am.Jur.2d “Passports” for a general discussion of the law of passports.

    The statutory maximum term of imprisonment for violations of 18 U.S.C. ¤¤ 1541 - 1546 is 10 years. However, 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1547 provides that notwithstanding any other provision of title 18, the maximum term of imprisonment that may be imposed for passport and visa violations (except violations under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1545) if committed to facilitate a drug trafficking crime is 15 years; and if committed to facilitate an act of international terrorism is 20 years.

    The statute of limitations for violations of 18 U.S.C. ¤¤ 1541 to 1544 is 10 years. See 18 U.S.C. ¤ 3291.

Now while I can understand how easily one can be fooled by a false document nowadays, especially if you are in a border state, care should be taken and checks should be conducted to assure that the person you are hiring is not only an illegal, but whom he/she says they are. The current concerns on national security dictate additional vigilance regarding the verification of documents.

What needs to be “reformed” as far as this law on false documents? Most of the people who’ve immigrated to this country had to play by these rules. Nothing in this section need be “reformed.”

    1945 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1543 — Making or Using a Forged Passport

    Section 1543 of Title 18 proscribes the forgery, alteration, etc., of passports or the use of or furnishing to another of a forged, altered, void, etc., passport or purported passport. It applies to instruments issued or purportedly issued by foreign governments as well as by the United States. See United States v. Dangdee, 616 F.2d 1118 (9th Cir. 1980).

    The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) amended this statute to provide for enhanced penalties if the offense was committed to facilitate an act of international terrorism or a drug trafficking crime.

Heads up for the criminal free-lance enterprises going on around Alvarado Street in Los Angeles. Making or using a forged passport, no matter what country is on the cover, is illegal. The only possible use of such a forged document is for deception of one’s identity. It doesn’t matter what immigrant rights groups or the clergy says. When you make or use a false passport to obtain anything, you are trying to pull the wool over someone’s eyes. You are attempting to bamboozle someone. You are attempting to make someone think you are someone else. You are being dishonest from the very first time someone meets you.

There is nothing in Section 1543 that needs to be reformed, that is unless you wish to make all persons who provide passports suspect as to their true identity. Also, the financial ramifications of such deception is obvious.

Federal, state, and local social service benefits can be improperly obtained using such documents. That, by all definitions, could be considered fraud. And who usually ends up paying for fraud, waste, and abuse…?

    1943 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1541 — Issuance of Passports Without Authority

    Section 1541 of Title 18 makes it a crime to issue or verify a passport, or other instrument in the nature of a passport, without authority to do so. For example, state and local governments may not issue documents designed to facilitate overseas travel of their residents. 17 Op.Att.Gen. 674 (1884). Similarly, forgery of a document purporting to be such a travel document issued by a state or local government would also violate 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1541. 9 Op.Att.Gen. 350 (1859). 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1541 also makes it a crime for consular officers to verify passports for persons not owing allegiance to the United States, even if they are citizens.

    The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) amended this statute to provide for enhanced penalties if the offense was committed to facilitate an act of international terrorism or a drug trafficking crime.

Simply stated, Section 1541 makes it illegal to “issue” a United States passport for the purpose of misleading an employer or government entity as to the false identity of a bearer. Section 1541 says nothing about use of such a false document to provide for anyone’s family. Giving out a passport is clearly done to make someone appear as someone else.

There is nothing in Section 1541 that needs to be reformed. Distribution of a false document for the purpose of creating a false identity is not a humane act. It is deception, pure and simple.

    1947 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1546 — Fraud and Misuse of Visas, Permits, and Related Documents, and False Personation

    The first paragraph of 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1546(a) proscribes the forging, counterfeiting, altering or falsely making of certain immigration documents or their use, possession, or receipt. The second paragraph proscribes the possession, or bringing into the United States of plates or distinctive papers used for the printing of entry documents. The third paragraph makes it a crime, when applying for an entry document or admission into the United States, to personate another or appear under a false name. The fourth paragraph makes it a crime to give a false statement under oath in any document required by the immigration laws or regulations.

    The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) amended subsection 1546(a) to provide for enhanced penalties if the offense was committed to facilitate an act of international terrorism or a drug trafficking crime.

    Subsection 1546(b) makes it a felony offense to use a false identification document, or misuses a real one, for the purpose of satisfying the employment verification provisions in 8 U.S.C. ¤ 1324a(b).

    COMMENT: Further discussion of offenses defined in 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1546 is set forth in Chapter 7 of Immigration Law, published as part of the Office of Legal Education’s Litigation Series, and as part of the USABook computer library.

As I mentioned above, the only reason one would obtain falsified passports or other documents of identification, is for receiving employment or social benefits while being in the country illegally. There is no social good that can be had for allowing anyone to use a bootleg visa or Social Security card. In essence, those using false documents are also stealing.

They are stealing jobs from someone who is legally eligible to obtain one in America. They are stealing food stamps, WIC benefits, Section 8 housing, thus they are stealing taxpayer money from every citizen in the United States. For every activist who claims that illegals pay taxes, the amount we have to pay in services for those who deem themselves victims, thus worthy of our charity, dwarfs whatever taxes they “pay.”

The bottom line is this:

The laws currently on the books are straightforward, non-discriminatory, and fair. They clearly define what is bad behavior. There are no exceptions to ignoring these laws so people can provide better lives for their loved ones. In every case, a person who violates these rules does no service to the United States or her citizens. The violators are attempting to deceive others and extract benefits from taxpayers. They are thieves; they are criminals. They are not undocumented, especially when they use false ones.

The only thing reforming the current laws will do is invite more to break them because it will be easier. Reforming our current immigration procedures will provide a victory to the millions who came here illegally and the millions who are coming to take advantage of reforms, should they occur.

I say should, because I believe this is not a done deal. I hope that the politicians in Washington understand that they are trying to make 11 million or so people who have broken many of the laws stated above legit, at the expense of the 300-plus million of us who pay all the bills. Hopefully, they’ll get their minds right and realize that it’s not the United States and her immigration laws that need reforming. It’s the behavior of those who have no problem breaking our laws and soaking us all in the process.

Reform? We don’t need no stinkin’ reform.

Bob Parks is a former Republican congressional candidate (California 24th District), Navy veteran, single father, member/writer for the National Advisory Council of Project 21, and is a Staff Writer for the New Media Alliance, Inc.

STOP AMNESTY NOW

RECONQUISTA 101

Read here.

Watch here.

And if the GOP asks you for money, send 'em a cero dinero. (Big sombrero tip: JYB). Send one to your congressional reps. Send one to the White House.

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Stop Amnesty Now.

THE BACKLASH BEGINS

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Voters say no to pols who supported tax-subsidized illegal alien day labor center

A local election in Herndon, Va., sends a message to pro-illegal alien politicians tonight. WJLA reports:

The day labor site in Herndon may have changed the face of politics in Herndon.

Steve DeBenedittis, a resident who opposed the center, has been elected mayor of Herndon, defeating incumbent Michael O'Reilly.

DeBenedittis captured 1,363 votes, 130 more than O'Reilly.
The center opened late last year, replacing a chaotic unofficial site in a 7-Eleven parking lot as a spot for employers to recruit day laborers.

There was also turnover on the Herndon town council, as only two, Dennis Husch and Harlon Reece, were re-elected. Connie Hutchinson, Dave Kirby, Bill Tirrell and Charlie Waddell have been newly elected to the council.

The mayor and town council take office on July 1.

Here are the official election results. The Washington Post has more (hat tip: Allah):

Herndon voters yesterday unseated the mayor and Town Council members who supported a bitterly debated day-labor center for immigrant workers in a contest that emerged as a mini-referendum on the turbulent national issue of illegal immigration.

Residents replaced the incumbents with a group of challengers who immediately called for significant changes at the center. Some want to bar public funds from being spent on the facility or restrict it to workers residing in the country legally. Others want it moved to an industrial site away from the residential neighborhood where it is located.

The day-labor center thrust the western Fairfax County town into the national spotlight as the issue of illegal immigration became emotional. Even though fewer than 3,000 people voted yesterday, advocates on both sides of the issue looked at the election as a test case of public sentiment. Outside groups such as the Minutemen Project, which favors sharp curbs on illegal immigration, intervened in the town debate. Judicial Watch, a conservative legal group, is suing the town over establishment of the center.

Steve J. DeBenedittis, 38, a health club operator and political newcomer, defeated Mayor Michael L. O'Reilly with 52 percent of the vote. Council members Carol A. Bruce and Steven D. Mitchell, who voted for the center, were turned out of office. Jorge Rochac, a Salvadoran businessman who supported the center and was seeking to become the town's first Hispanic council member, was also defeated. About one in four town residents is Hispanic.

The incumbents were replaced by William B. Tirrell, Charlie D. Waddell, Connie Haines Hutchinson and David A. Kirby, all opponents of the day-labor center, which is designed to help immigrants find work each day.

Two incumbents were reelected. Dennis D. Husch was one of two council members to vote against the center when it was approved by the panel in August. He received more votes than any of the eight other council candidates. J. Harlon Reece was the lone supporter of the center who was reelected. He received the fewest number of votes among the winners.

Twenty-six percent of the town's 10,203 registered voters came to the polls, according to Fairfax County figures, up from 20 percent when O'Reilly was elected two years ago.

DeBenedittis, the son of a popular former high school art teacher in Herndon, said his victory was the product of intense door-to-door campaigning and deep discontent over how the labor center issue was handled by the mayor and council in the town of 23,000 residents.

"They didn't like the way the debate went down, and there was the feeling that they were not heard," he said.

A lot of immigration enforcement supporters feel that way.

Comprende, Washington?

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Background:

National backlash
Herndon approves day labor center
Cities tackle day-labor dilemma

Related:

Hypocrisy, thy name is Rockefeller
End sanctuary for illegal immigrants

ON ENERGY, THIS CARTOON PRETTY MUCH SAYS IT ALL

On Energy, This Cartoon Pretty Much Says It All

content.todayscartoons.ucli.jpg Source: Glen McCoy, Slate