85 Illegal Aliens Arrested in Horse Trailer as Surge Continues
EDINBURG, TX – Rio Grande Valley Sector (RGV) Border Patrol agents disrupted two human smuggling events resulting in 60 arrests.
Monday, a La Joya Police Department (LJPD) requested McAllen Border Patrol (MCS) to assist with responding to a report from a concerned citizen regarding a male subject with a long arm guiding people through the brush to a residence in La Joya, Texas.
When agents arrived at the location, Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) were already on scene assisting La Joya PD. LJPD officers advised they had taken a male subject into custody outside the residence who was in possession of an unloaded shotgun, a female, and another male subject, all United States Citizens (USCs).
Jautājums par verdzības pieļaujamību vai aizliegšanu bija konflikta redzamākā daļa Kas aizsāka asiņaino ASV Pilsoņu karu?
la.lv - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from la.lv Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Pašmāju ekstrēmistu grupējumi rada arvien lielākus draudus ASV drošībai
lsm.lv - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lsm.lv Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Contributing Writer
There have been three major “Where were you whens…” in my life. I was born in 1948, making me 72 years young. The first, “Where were you when…,” happened while I was a sophomore in high school in Monroe, Iowa. The date was, November 22, 1963. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The high school principal, Mr. Gansky, came into our history class (what a history lesson!) and gave us the shocking news. At least one girl started crying. I could not believe, in that day and age (we’d just gotten dial telephones), a President of the United States could be shot. Something like that hadn’t happened since Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Gansky assured us that, yes, political assassinations were still in the realm of possibility.
Written And Submitted By D.A. King
Professional licenses are public benefits in Georgia. The Georgia Chamber of Commerce is well aware of that fact as they opposed the law that created it. I was there.
The people who run Georgia are tired of any delays involved in the process of verifying the lawful immigration status of applicants for public benefits.
Georgia law (OCGA 50-36-1) put in place in 2006 and improved several times after that says that applicants for public benefits must swear they are either U.S.citizens or eligible aliens on a notarized affidavit. They are supposed to show “Secure and Verifiable ID.” Then, that lawful presence status is supposed to be checked in a federal database called SAVE (SAVE is not doing their job correctly and we will expose that fact after the session). But the state law still stands.