Soldier4Christ
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« on: March 10, 2007, 06:08:45 PM » |
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Hazleton (PA) versus the ACLU
A U.S. trial that starts Monday will be the first to explore just how far local governments can go in trying to fight illegal immigration, a highly sensitive subject in the United States.
This city made national headlines when it tried to penalize the landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and the businesses who give them jobs.
An estimated 12 million illegal immigrants live in the U.S., and dozens of other communities have tried to find ways to contain them, including proposing English-only measures and working with immigration authorities to report illegal residents. Meanwhile, the U.S. Congress continues to debate the issue at large.
Republican Mayor Lou Barletta, who pushed through the laws, said illegal immigrants were joining gangs, dealing drugs, committing violent crimes and destroying the quality of life in this city of 31,000.
"We're not only fighting for Hazleton, we're fighting for cities all across America," he said.
But the American Civil Liberties Union and Hispanic groups, which filed suit against the city, call the measures divisive and racist and say they trample on the U.S. government's exclusive power to regulate immigration.
U.S. District Judge James Munley has barred enforcement of the laws pending trial, but even the threat of action has led many Hispanics to flee the city, and businesses that cater to them report plummeting sales.
"The city of Hazleton is promoting discrimination," said Anthony Romero, the ACLU's executive director. Yep, can't discriminate against law breakers.)
In court papers, Hazleton said illegal immigrants have committed at least 47 crimes since last spring — including the shooting death of a 29-year-old man — consuming much of the city's police overtime budget. Illegal immigrants were the subject of one-third of all drug arrests in 2005, and they have driven up the costs of health care and education, the city said.
The city's remedy, the Illegal Immigration Relief Act, would impose fines on landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and deny business permits to companies that employ them. The law empowers the city to investigate written complaints about a person's immigration status, using a federal database. Ethnicity may be used as a basis for making a complaint, as long as it is not the sole or primary factor.
A companion measure requires tenants to register with City Hall.
Critics say if the Hazleton measures are allowed to stand, white residents will be suspicious of every Hispanic they see.
"Every Latino will be a target," said Cesar A. Perales, president of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, one of the groups filing suit. "The significance of Hazleton is about stopping this anti-immigrant movement dead in its tracks." Notice it says anti-imigrant. They purposefully want everyone to overlook the fact that it is ILLEGAL immigrants that are being targeted by the government. It goes right along with their desire to have open borders, terrorists and criminals treated like citizens and law abiding citizens treated like criminals and terrorists.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has sided with the ACLU, arguing in a friend-of-the-court brief that if cities were permitted to enforce their own immigration laws, businesses would have to comply with a "patchwork of different and potentially inconsistent obligations."
But Judicial Watch, a Washington-based conservative legal group, said in its own brief that the ordinances "are in harmony with federal law, not at odds with it" because they rely on the federal government's own standards on who may be in the country.
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