Responses: 4
I sense there's still a piece missing. I worked for ICE in D.C. for eight years, and fielded calls like this all the time. "Long-term undocumented alien, pillar of his community, and he was arrested for *no reason.*" There's always a reason. In one case, he was pulled over and arrested "for no reason"--according to the activists. In real life, he was spotted (at night) running a stop sign. When pulled over, he was arrested for DUI and driving without a license. He had no license because...he can't obtain one legally. People calling in support of him, who knew him personally, were in shock that he'd driven drunk--because it conflicted with the handy flier or Facebook plea that they'd been handed. What this article is saying is, "If a white Irishman can't break the law, what is this country coming to??" The underlying idea being, "This would have been okay if it were a dirty [insert minority group here], but this is a white guy from Ireland! These policies are out of control!" ...So the *pre-existing* laws which dictate a deportable alien were actually okay, as long as they weren't enforced? But now that we're enforcing a law, it's out of control? The present version of the Immigration and Nationality Act was passed in 1990 (and modified by Congress yearly). Where was the furor while it was still a bill? Are we truly saying that it's a fair law, as long as the *correct* aliens are arrested, to the exclusion of the the white ones?
(0)
(0)
He had a complaint filed against him because he took somebody's $1000 and didn't do the electrical work. Do the work or give the money back.
(0)
(0)
He was a common criminal before "Donald Trump's America". He didn't have the proper documentation as required by LAW and so he's a CRIMINAL. I'm surprised liberals are even making any mention of this considering he's a white male of European descent and they're the devil.
(0)
(0)
Read This Next