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Police should be hands-off on immigra... - New York Daily News
Sunday, 30 August 2009

Police should be hands-off on immigration
New York Daily News
The most notorious abuser of the program - but not the only - is the infamous Sheriff Joe Arpaio, of Maricopa County, Ariz. Arpaio operates the largest ...

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Bloggings On Immigration Law And Policy - ILW.com
Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Bloggings On Immigration Law And Policy
ILW.com
"Sheriff Joe Arpaio's deputies had absolutely no reason to stop these two men and drag them off to a worksite raid. This is yet another example of MCSO ...

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Sonia Sotomayor sworn in as Supreme Court justice
Contributed by Administrator   
Sunday, 09 August 2009

from the L.A. Times

By David G. Savage
August 9, 2009

Justice Sonia SotomayorReporting from Washington -- Sonia Sotomayor became the 111th Supreme Court justice in the nation's history on Saturday, taking an oath to "administer justice without respect to persons, and do equal right to the poor and to the rich."

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. administered the oath in a ceremonial conference room at the Supreme Court before a small gathering of Sotomayor's family and friends and several White House aides who had worked for her confirmation.

Roberts said the special swearing-in was arranged for a quiet morning so that Sotomayor could "begin her work as an associate justice without delay."

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy was the only other member of the court in attendance.

The new justice hugged her mother, Celina, who held the Bible for her, and then her brother, Juan Sotomayor.

Sotomayor actually took two oaths Saturday, both of which are required of federal judges.

She first took the constitutional oath required of all federal officers. She pledged to "support and defend the Constitution" and to "well and faithfully discharge the duties" of her office. This oath was given in a private ceremony in the justices' conference room before the chief justice, Justice Kennedy and Sotomayor's immediate family members.

The judicial oath was taken before the larger gathering in the East Conference Room, and, in a Supreme Court first, television cameras were there to broadcast it.

White House Counsel Greg Craig and Assistant Counsel Cynthia Hogan witnessed the swearing-in, along with Judge Robert Katzmann of the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals -- on which Sotomayor served -- and Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez (D-N.Y.).

The judicial oath is familiar to Sotomayor. She had taken it twice before, as a federal district judge in 1992 and as a U.S. Court of Appeals judge in 1998. In her Senate hearings, several of her Republican critics recited passages of the oath that call for doing "justice without respect to persons." They suggested, using President Obama's word, that she might feel "empathy" for certain people and might rule in their favor on that basis.

Sotomayor replied that she had always been guided by the law, not personal sympathies.

In the past, some justices have taken the oaths at the White House, rather than at the court. Roberts took both oaths at the White House from senior Justice John Paul Stevens on Sept. 29, 2005.

Later, Stevens was quoted as saying that he thought it was inappropriate for justices to take the oaths at the White House standing before the president, because it suggested a link to the executive branch, rather than emphasizing the judicial branch's autonomy.

Sotomayor is not done with ceremonial welcomes. She is to be introduced at a White House reception Wednesday, and the Supreme Court plans an investiture ceremony Sept. 8.

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Officers, mayor square off over immigration policy
Contributed by Tony Cheek   
Sunday, 05 July 2009

from Chron.com :

By JAMES PINKERTON
Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
July 3, 2009, 2:47PM

ImageHouston’s largest police union, citing the death of six officers during Mayor Bill White’s tenure, called on the mayor and City Council this week to hire more officers, restore $14 million in overtime pay and overturn the long-standing policy of not questioning residents about their immigration status.

In a letter to White, Gary Blankinship, president of the Houston Police Officers Union, called last week’s slaying of veteran officer Henry Canales a “trifeca failure” of federal, state and city government to protect citizens and police officers from criminal illegal immigrants.

White responded with a news conference Thursday to make clear there would be no change in the department’s policy on illegal immigrants.

 

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Solidarity needed to stop war on immigrants
Contributed by Tony Cheek   
Saturday, 04 July 2009

from Worker's World:

By Teresa Gutierrez
Published Jul 2, 2009 7:52 PM

ImageThere is a war going on inside this country—a war against immigrants, especially undocumented immigrants. This war is escalating, and like most wars, it is taking many casualties. The casualties are innocent children, women and men whose only crime is the need to survive, to find a way to live and work in the United States.

This unrelenting war demands that the progressive and working-class movements pay close attention as it has great bearing on the class struggle. Current developments regarding immigration policy in the U.S. are both encouraging and ominous.

Phoenix Sheriff Joe Arpaio is nationally and internationally infamous for what can only be described as a reign of terror against not only immigrants but against people of color and the poor. Inmates of all nationalities are treated brutally and constantly humiliated in Arpaio’s jails. The sheriff’s practices have become so appalling that a national outcry has forced the Justice Department to investigate Arpaio’s conduct as well as that of his deputies.

On June 19, well-known civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton traveled to Phoenix. His trip shed much-needed light on what is going on in this region of the country. Meeting in a predominantly African-American church, it also helped build unity between the Black and Latina/o communities around the immigration issue.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 04 July 2009 )
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Petition Drive On Illegal Immigrants Succeeds In Fremont - Court Test Pending
Contributed by Administrator   
Thursday, 26 March 2009

from Nebraska Statepaper.com:

Depending on the outcome of a court battle, Fremont voters might get to vote on a proposed ordinance that would make it illegal to hire or rent housing to people who are in the country illegally.

The city attorney previously filed a motion in district court, arguing that the ordinance cannot be submitted to voters because it runs afoul of federal law and would violate the constitutional rights of those affected.

 

On Wednesday, the Dodge County Clerk certified that a petition drive had succeeded in gathering more than enough qualified signatures to put the ordinance on a special election ballot.

Regardless of the decision by the district court, the losing side could appeal the ruling to the state’s appellate courts. 

The Fremont City Council considered and narrowly rejected a similar ordinance last year. The initiative petition to put the issue before voters soon followed.

In seeking a declaratory judgment from the district court, the city said: The ordinance would violate the Supreme Clause of the U.S. Constitution and is pre-empted by federal law; The ordinance doesn’t provide sufficient substantive and procedural due process safeguards; It would violate the federal Fahir Housing Act and lead to federal and state claims of violations of the act.

The city also argues that the ordinance improperly addresses more than one topic.


 

 
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