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  • Updated
    3
    May
    2013
    1:09pm, EDT

    Feds say they will reform student visa system to get officers updated information

    By Pete Williams and Erin McClam, NBC News

    Department of Homeland Security officials said Friday that they are improving the student visa system after a friend of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev re-entered the country with an invalid visa.

    The officials said the department was “reforming the student visa system” to make sure customs and border officers get almost instant updates on visa information.

    Azamat Tazhayakov, a Kazakh student and friend of Tsarnaev, re-entered the United States in January with a visa that was no longer valid because he had stopped attending classes at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth. That information was apparently not relayed to customs officers.

    Tazhayakov, 19, was among three friends arrested earlier this week and charged with helping remove evidence from Tsarnaev’s dorm room or with lying about it to federal authorities.

    Tazhayakov had attended classes with Tsarnaev.

    Foreign students living in the United States to attend college must obtain a visa known as an F-1. The government issued 385,000 of them and denied 154,000 in 2010, the most recent year for which statistics are available, according to the State Department.

    This story was originally published on Fri May 3, 2013 12:26 PM EDT

    405 comments

    How about we just tell anyone trying to get in "NO SOUP FOR YOU!!"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: customs, department-of-homeland-security, dhs, updated, boston-marathon-tragedy, tsarnaev
  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    3:49am, EDT

    Carnival blames sequestration cuts for long lines at port

    Passengers aboard a Carnival cruise that returned to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Sunday said they spent hours in long lines waiting to get off the ship.

    The Carnival Freedom docked at Port Everglades early Sunday morning, but some passengers said they were still stuck on the ship by the afternoon, according to NBC affiliate WPTV.

    A sign posted at the port blamed the long lines on sequester cuts.

    "Due to Federal budget cuts, U.S. Customs and Border Protection staffing has been reduced and wait times may be longer than usual," the sign read. "Thank you for your understanding and patience."

    More from NBCMiami.com

    Carnival acknowledged the longer wait times and said they shouldn't affect the itinerary for the ship, which was scheduled to depart later Sunday.

    "The Customs and Immigration process for debarking guests has taken quite a bit longer than normal. It is our understanding that more than one cruise line at Port Everglades is experiencing similar circumstances," the company's statement said.

    "We do not anticipate any impact to the ship's itinerary for the next voyage which will depart later today. We regret the inconvenience our guests have experienced during today's debark and clearance process."

    NBCMiami.com

    Related:

    More trouble for Carnival: One ship stuck as a second limps home

    First suit filed after Carnival Triumph mishap

    Coast Guard finds fuel leak caused engine fire on Carnival Triumph

    72 comments

    SHUT IT Carnival! You pay LESS than 0.6% in taxes (federal, state, local, international) and you have had over 90 "events" that have required the Coast Guard to step up (at the US taxpayers expense) to save your A$$... You enslave your crew by paying them CRAP wages and yet if it weren't for your c …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, delay, customs, cruise, ship, border-protection, carnival, featured, sequestration, nbcmiami, sequester
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    11:22am, EDT

    California Governor Brown vetoes bill that allowed towns to release undocumented immigrants

    Damian Dovarganes / AP file

    High school student Claudia Rueda, 17, center, is arrested by Los Angeles Police officers for failing to disperse, as protesters blocked the intersection of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department Twin Tower Correctional Facility in Los Angeles Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012. Students demanded the passage of Assembly Bill 1081, also known as the Trust Act.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    California’s governor has vetoed a bill that would have allowed police and sheriffs to free undocumented immigrants from custody once they became eligible for release even if federal immigration authorities had asked to hold them for possible deportation proceedings.

    Immigration advocates say the federal requests, known as detainers or holds, cast a wide dragnet that has ensnared even those who had committed minor crimes or no offenses at all. But Immigration and Customs Enforcement had said the program was instrumental in helping enforce immigration laws and in getting violent offenders off the streets.


    Follow @mimileitsinger

    In his veto message late Sunday, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said he could not sign the bill because under it, “local officers would be prohibited from complying with an immigration detainer unless the person arrested was charged with, or has been previously convicted of, a serious or violent felony.

    “Unfortunately, the list of offenses codified in the bill is fatally flawed because it omits many serious crimes,” he said. “For example, the bill would bar local cooperation  even when the person arrested has been convicted of certain crimes involving child abuse, drug trafficking, selling weapons, using children to sell drugs, or gangs. I believe it's unwise to interfere with a sheriffs discretion  to comply with a detainer issued for people with these kinds of troubling criminal records.”

    Brown noted he would work with lawmakers to improve the legislation and said undocumented immigrants “play a major role in California's economy, with many performing low-wage jobs that others don't want.

    “Comprehensive immigration reform -- including a path to citizenship -- would provide tremendous economic benefits and is long overdue,” he wrote. “Until we have immigration reform, federal agents shouldn’t try to coerce local law enforcement officers into detaining people who’ve been picked up for minor offenses and pose no reasonable threat to their community.”

    Immigration activists denounced Brown’s veto, comparing it to Arizona’s controversial immigration law that includes a provision forcing those stopped by police to show their immigration papers. 

    "By vetoing the Trust Act Governor Brown has failed California's immigrant communities, imperiling civil rights and leaving us all less safe. The President's disastrous Secure Communities program is replicating Arizona's model of immigration enforcement nationally, causing a human rights crisis. Immigration and Customs Enforcement strong-armed the Governor to defend its deportation quota instead of defending Californian's rights,” Pablo Alvarado, executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said in a statement. “On this sad day, we renew our commitment to fight to keep our families together despite the Governor and the President's insistence on seeing them torn apart."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Alvarado was referring to ICE’s “Secure Communities” program, under which the FBI shares fingerprints of those arrested with federal immigration authorities who check to see if the person is not legally in the U.S. or if they can be deported due to a criminal conviction.

    ICE says it prioritizes the deportation of those who present the most significant threats to public safety, and that it has deported more than 147,400 convicted criminal undocumented immigrants, including more than 54,200 individuals convicted of violent offenses such as murder, rape and the sexual abuse of children, under the program. 

    In a statement last week, ICE Deputy Press Secretary Gillian Christensen said the agency didn’t comment on pending state legislation.

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    “The identification and removal of criminal offenders is ICE’s highest priority and over the past three and half years, ICE has been dedicated to implementing smart, effective reforms to the immigration system that allow it to focus its resources on priority individuals,” she wrote in a statement, noting that the Department of Homeland Security would continue to exercise prosecutorial discretion for certain people who came to the U.S. as children and other individuals who were “low priorities.”

    “The federal government alone sets these priorities and places detainers on individuals arrested on criminal charges to ensure that dangerous criminal aliens and other priority individuals are not released from prisons and jails into our communities,” she added.

    Several counties and cities have enacted ordinances that limit police cooperation with federal immigration authorities, The New York Times has reported.

    Assemblymember Tom Ammiano, a San Francisco Democrat who sponsored the legislation, said late Monday that the California State Sheriff's Association, which had opposed the bill, called his office on Monday to negotiate on the issue, which he took as a "good sign."

    "Governors come and go, you know, but this issue is more than a political issue, it is a movement," he said.

    Some immigration rights' activists took Brown to task for also vetoing a bill requiring the creation of state regulations governing the working conditions of domestic workers but instead signing off on legislation that would allow some undocumented youth to get a driver's license.

    It is intended for those who qualify for the federal government's deferred action policy, which provides a two-year work permit and a reprieve from deportation for those who were brought to the U.S. as children. There are some 300,000 youth in California who are currently eligible for the policy, according to the Immigration Policy Center.

    “Brown waited until the 11th hour of his legislative cycle to … veto the most important and impactful bills that would have (brought) tremendous relief for the immigrant community in California and instead decided to sign a very symbolic and hollow bill,” Carlos Amador, of immigrant rights' group Dream Team Los Angeles, told NBC News by phone.

    But Assemblymember Gilbert Cedillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who introduced the driver’s license bill, said he’d received many messages from those who were elated by the passage of the law.

    “We don’t want this to be a decision made by a director of DMV or made by a judge. But we want this to be a matter of right, of duty and obligation,” he told NBC News. “We made it certain …we’re not going to leave this to chance.”

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    497 comments

    Toss their illegal asses back across the border. You think if we went into Mexico illegally they wouldn't throw us in jail?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: governor, immigration, customs, california, immigrant, brown, ice, enforcement, communities, secure, undocumented
  • 26
    Jul
    2012
    6:34am, EDT

    Three Calif. firms charged with dodging $10 million in customs fees

    Joe Klamar / AFP/Getty Images

    Containers wait to to shipped on Long Beach harbor, California, on April 26. Three firms have been charged with fraudulently processing container shipments that contained clothing from China, cigarettes from India and Germany and packages of the Mexican cactus dish nopalitos through the port.

    By NBC News and wire services

    SAN DIEGO -- Prosecutors have charged three California companies with seeking to avoid paying $10 million in customs fees by bringing containers of food and other items to port and claiming they were destined for other countries, then selling the goods in the United States.

    The criminal complaint unsealed by federal prosecutors in San Diego on Wednesday named eight people, including the president of the San Diego Customs Brokers Association, who are accused of being part of the scheme.


    Goods in over 90 fraudulently processed container shipments included clothing from China, cigarettes from India and Germany and packages of the Mexican cactus dish nopalitos, officials with the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

    It amounted to at least $100 million in products and $10 million in lost customs duties, they said. The complaint says the companies "facilitated" about $500 million in trade between the United States and other countries over the last five years.

    The investigation "pulled back the curtain on a potentially costly fraud scheme operating in one of the world's busiest commercial centers," U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton told United Press International.

    Cheaper prices
    Because the goods were reported as simply passing through the Long Beach Port on their way to other countries, they were exempt from U.S. customs fees, prosecutors said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The defendants "could sell more goods at cheaper prices and for greater profits than their law-abiding competitors, including domestic American manufacturers of these same products," the complaint read. 

    The charges were brought against International Trade Consultants LLC and Tecate Logistics, based in Tecate, Calif., about 35 miles east of San Diego and immediately north of the Mexican border. The third company, M Trade Inc., is based in Los Angeles.

    Complete US coverage from NBCNews.com

    Among the eight people charged -- including the owners or operators of the companies -- some lived in southern California and some were in Tijuana, Mexico.

    Local business leader among those charged
    One of the accused, Gerardo Chavez, is president of the San Diego Customs Brokers Association and the owner of Tecate Logistics and International Trade Consultants, prosecutors said.

    Calls to M Trade and International Trade Consultants were not answered, and an employee at Tecate Logistics declined to comment. The defendants will have their first court appearance on Thursday in federal court in San Diego.

    Messages left for the Customs Brokers Association late Wednesday evening were not immediately returned.

    Local news coverage from NBC affiliate NBC 7 San Diego

    All the defendants were charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison if convicted.

    Some of the defendants were also accused of importing goods by means of false statements and obstruction of justice.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    41 comments

    NBC (and the rest of the mainstream media) should do to wealthy, white-collar criminals what they routinely do to poor, blue-collar criminals: NAME THEM!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mexico, china, fraud, customs, california, san-diego, gerardo-chavez

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