Kevyn wrote:
So you think that feeding refugees while they are in custody will harm the administration?
Get them out of custody and back to where they came from , and tell them to take their fentanyl with them. They can go back an apply for Immigration like the rest of the world has to do. They , along with biden are breaking US law
1996 Laws - the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRAIRA) and the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA)
Together these laws:
Significantly expanded the categories of offenses (including non-violent crimes) for which an immigrant could be deported. The immigration definition of "aggravated felony" now includes more than 30 crimes, including such offenses as shoplifting and check kiting.
Allowed criminal deportation provisions to be applied retroactively, causing long-term legal residents to be deported for minor crimes committed decades ago.
Eliminated certain waivers of deportation and curtailed the ability of long-term residents to show community ties and extreme hardship to obtain relief from deportation.
Established a summary removal procedure, without review, for persons arriving to the United States without documents or with fraudulent documents, or who an immigration inspector believes is attempting to enter the United States by misrepresentation. This provision allows for limited screening of persons who claim a credible fear of persecution if returned to their country.
Created special deportation provisions and courts to hear "secret evidence" against foreign nationals deemed to be terrorists.
Eliminated judicial review of most deportations for persons convicted of criminal offenses.
Required creation of an automated entry-exit control system at all land, sea and air ports-of-entry to track all non-U.S. citizens.
Significantly revised the administrative judicial process for removal of aliens from the United States.
Created new and far-reaching grounds of inadmissibility, including a 3 year or 10 year bar to readmission for persons "unlawfully present" in the United States for lengthy periods of time, for persons who have not received vaccinations against vaccine-preventable diseases, for health care workers who do not have appropriate certifications, for persons who falsely claim U.S. citizenship or vote in an election, for persons who renounce their U.S. citizenship for tax reasons, for foreign students who attend public school without permission, and others.