http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/71294

 

Nearly Half of United States Considering Arizona-Style Immigration
Legislation
Thursday, August 19, 2010
By Fred Lucas, Staff Writer 




(CNSNews.com) - Twenty-two states are now in the process of drafting or
seeking to pass legislation similar to Arizona's law against illegal
immigration. This is occurring despite the fact that the Obama
administration has filed a lawsuit against the Arizona law and a federal
judge has ruled against portions of that law - a ruling that is now being
appealed.
 
Next month, two Rhode Island state lawmakers, a Democrat and a Republican,
will travel to Arizona to speak with Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, local
sheriffs, and other officials about how to better craft their own bipartisan
immigration bill for Rhode Island, which already has been enforcing some
federal immigration laws. 
 
Meanwhile, 11 Republican state lawmakers from Colorado traveled to Arizona
this week to meet with officials there on how to craft legislation for the
Mile High state. 
 
In addition, Alabama House Republicans announced this week that they would
seek to "push an illegal immigration bill similar to the recently approved
Arizona law." This law would "create a new criminal trespass statute that
allows local law enforcement to arrest illegal immigrants for simply setting
foot in Alabama," said Alabama's House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard. 
 
In Florida, proposed legislation against illegal immigration has been
retooled to address some concerns raised by a federal judge who blocked the
proposed bill, though it would still allow Florida state police to enforce
immigration law. 
 
In all, there are 22 states considering copycat legislation from the Arizona
law against illegal immigration, according to the  <http://www.alipac.us/>
Americans for Legal Immigration Political Action Committee (ALIPAC), a group
that advocates for stricter immigration enforcement.

http://media.cnsnews.com/resources/70174.jpg
These illegal immigrants, deported to Mexico on Wednesday, July 28, 2010,
are shown near the Nogales Port of Entry in Sonora, Mexico. (AP Photo/Jae C.
Hong)

Arizona's law mirrors federal law. It requires local law enforcement
officers during a lawful stop to determine the immigration status of an
individual by asking the person to show identification that residents are
already required to carry by law; and it authorizes law enforcement to
securely transfer verified illegal aliens to federal custody. 
 
The law prohibits racial profiling and gives state residents the right to
sue local agencies for not complying with the state law.
 
In the lawsuit challenging the Arizona law, the Obama administration said
the United States should not have a "patchwork" of 50 different immigration
laws. In late July, U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton ruled against most of
the major elements of the Arizona law, halting their implementation.  That
ruling is now in the appeals process. 
 
"We do not expand on federal law," Florida state Rep. William Snyder, the
sponsor of the bill in his state, told CNSNews.com. "We do not change
penalties. The goal is not to create a new immigration framework at the
state level."
 
Snyder, the chairman of the Florida House Criminal Justice Committee, said
his staff attorneys have taken the decision by U.S. District Judge Susan
Bolton into consideration in re-crafting their bill for the next state
legislative session. 
 
Snyder said the office of state Attorney General Bill McCollum has reviewed
the legislation, as have committee attorneys, and they believe it will
withstand a potential legal challenge from the Obama administration. 
 
McCollum, a GOP candidate for governor, supports the legislation. However,
Gov. Charlie Crist, a Republican-turned-Independent candidate for U.S.
Senate, opposes the proposal. 

http://media.cnsnews.com/resources/70306.jpg
Alfredo Salas, 28, shows his license Thursday shortly after being pulled
over and let off with a warning for a cracked windshield by the Maricopa
County Sheriff's Office during a crime and immigration sweep. (AP
Photo/Amanda Lee Myers)

"We will continue to work with the language," Snyder said. 
 
In Rhode Island, a bill that was introduced late in the session last year,
and thus never reached a vote, is expected to be reintroduced in the 2011
session. Its two lead co-sponsors hope to have a bipartisan bill that will
withstand a legal challenge after they meet with Arizona officials. 
 
"It exactly mirrors the Arizona law," Rhode Island state Rep. Peter Palumbo,
a Democrat, told CNSNews.com. "We will tweak the bill."
 
Palumbo will be going to Arizona with Rhode Island state Rep. Joseph Trillo,
a Republican. 
 
Their legislation would essentially codify an existing executive order
signed in 2008 by Gov. Donald Carcieri, a Republican, mandating immigration
checks on all new state workers and ordering state police to assist federal
immigration officials.
 
This is Carcieri's final year in office, so Palumbo said it is important to
put the force of law behind what has already been Rhode Island policy. State
troopers report illegal immigrants they encounter for speeding and other
offenses to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office.
 
Because of the executive order in 2008, corruption was discovered in the
Department of Motor Vehicles, with drivers licenses being sold to illegal
aliens,  <http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/65245> Palumbo said. 
 
In New Jersey, state Rep. Allison Little McHose, a Republican, introduced a
series of proposals that focused primarily on requiring employers to verify
the legality of workers, and preventing state benefits from going to illegal
aliens. 
 
"New Jersey continues to be a sanctuary state for illegals because they know
they can come to the state and receive many free benefits, like medical
care," McHose said in a statement. "The benefits may be free for those
receiving them, but not the rest of the public because these costs are borne
by the taxpayers."
 
Other states with proposals that mirror the Arizona law are Arkansas, Idaho,
Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, North
Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and
Utah.
 
"We are very pleased to announce 22 states are now following Arizona's lead
to pass versions of a law that has the support of 60 percent to 81 percent
of Americans according to polls," said ALIPAC President William Gheen in a
statement. "State and federal candidates are rushing to display their
support for Arizona's law and immigration enforcement. We will not stop
until all American states are protected from this invasion as mandated by
the Constitution of the United States."

 



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