RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 01:56 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:49 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:44 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:41 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote: I'm not surprised... The way the lefts hate immigrants and women who don't "Toe the line" has always been pretty intense.
Well if we can't have compassion, then lets just have equal application.
Is she here illegally? Or is it just that you have to hate all immigrants because some don't want illegal immigration.
In 2001, she obtained a green card and became a lawful permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006.[5]
She is the first naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.[6]
She is a citizen, best of luck deporting her leftists because she is married to Trump.
Exactly, she had access to millions of dollars in legal help and she's married to a hero of the white nationalists....so the rules don't apply to her.
Again, she's white, I suppose.
Before he became a Republican candidate for President of the USA, he was a hero to people of all colors.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 01:56 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:49 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:44 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:41 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote: I'm not surprised... The way the lefts hate immigrants and women who don't "Toe the line" has always been pretty intense.
Well if we can't have compassion, then lets just have equal application.
Is she here illegally? Or is it just that you have to hate all immigrants because some don't want illegal immigration.
In 2001, she obtained a green card and became a lawful permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006.[5]
She is the first naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.[6]
She is a citizen, best of luck deporting her leftists because she is married to Trump.
Exactly, she had access to millions of dollars in legal help and she's married to a hero of the white nationalists....so the rules don't apply to her.
Again, she's white, I suppose.
And the USA gave amnesty 2 times to mostly poor Mexicans, millions of them. Virtually all immigration to the US has been brown, black and asian since 65'. We have 15 Million illegals here, that is plenty. Do you whites people here ***** and moan when an Irish or Polish illegals gets deported, nope. Keep tossing that race card around, not working.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 02:02 PM)Paul M Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:56 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:49 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:44 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote: Well if we can't have compassion, then lets just have equal application.
Is she here illegally? Or is it just that you have to hate all immigrants because some don't want illegal immigration.
In 2001, she obtained a green card and became a lawful permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006.[5]
She is the first naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.[6]
She is a citizen, best of luck deporting her leftists because she is married to Trump.
Exactly, she had access to millions of dollars in legal help and she's married to a hero of the white nationalists....so the rules don't apply to her.
Again, she's white, I suppose.
She's a US citizen. Good luck to anyone trying to throw out any brown US citizens who's parents came from some **** hole too.
Yep...Because Melania is white, she gets to stay even though she broke our immigration laws on the way in.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 02:26 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 02:02 PM)Paul M Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:56 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:49 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote: Is she here illegally? Or is it just that you have to hate all immigrants because some don't want illegal immigration.
In 2001, she obtained a green card and became a lawful permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006.[5]
She is the first naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.[6]
She is a citizen, best of luck deporting her leftists because she is married to Trump.
Exactly, she had access to millions of dollars in legal help and she's married to a hero of the white nationalists....so the rules don't apply to her.
Again, she's white, I suppose.
She's a US citizen. Good luck to anyone trying to throw out any brown US citizens who's parents came from some **** hole too.
Yep...Because Melania is white, she gets to stay even though she broke our immigration laws on the way in.
Did I miss something? Is Trump trying to launch millions of investigations into legal immigrants to see if they worked before they were legal so he could revoke their citizenship? This example really isn't relevant at all. Trump is not trying to overturn any legal citizens status which is what you would have to do in this case. If you read the article you'd also see this is rarely, if ever done, only in instances of war crimes and terrorism. It's not his fault the Clinton admin let her in and didn't catch her, then granted her legal status even though she technically worked illegal. Hell at least taxes were taken out of her pay.
You liberals are an ornery bunch these days and really don't know your own parties history too well. I've heard many clips where some of the most prominent Dem figures almost said word for word what Trump has said on immigration but they somehow forget that and are now social warriors for the illegals.
If this dude lives here three decades and isn't smart enough to get legal citizenship then he got what he had coming.
(This post was last modified: 01-16-2018 03:00 PM by DownEastPirate.)
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote: In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
Sounds like something that can be reconciled while the dude is living back in his country of current citizenship.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
This is utter BS. There is no paperwork to file, right or wrong. If you are here illegally, even if you get married while here illegally, no green card, no legal path to citizenship, no soup for you
If you are here illegally for more than 120 days, there is a 3 year wait period while you are out of the country.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
I remember a friend of mine years ago started an affair with a married woman. All people involved were US citizens, so it didn't involve those issues, but it shows what ignorance of the law implies. Anyway she decided to leave her husband for my friend. She moved in with him, they bought a house, had a kid. Several years later, they decided actually to get married. He calls me and says, "We have a problem. She apparently isn't divorced from (first husband). I don't see how that can be possible. I mean, it was very amicable, and the three of us went over to the UH law library and copied all the forms and turned them in. How could she not be divorced?"
They're also the couple that lived down the street, and I was over one Saturday morning when they had this conversation. He, "I'm going out of town next week. I'm taking so-and-so with me. I love traveling with her because when the wheels come off the ground, her wedding ring comes off." To which she replied, "I always leave my ring on. I want them to know what they are getting into." He, "Well that doesn't stop that partner from Chicago. He keeps calling all the damn time." She, "I know, I know. I keep telling him, 'Call me at work, not at home.'"
He passed away prematurely. The wife he enjoyed traveling with is still married to the same husband. I wonder how that would work in today's "me too" environment.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:09 PM)rath v2.0 Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
This is utter BS. There is no paperwork to file, right or wrong. If you are here illegally, even if you get married while here illegally, no green card, no legal path to citizenship, no soup for you
If you are here illegally for more than 120 days, there is a 3 year wait period while you are out of the country.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:12 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:09 PM)rath v2.0 Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
This is utter BS. There is no paperwork to file, right or wrong. If you are here illegally, even if you get married while here illegally, no green card, no legal path to citizenship, no soup for you
If you are here illegally for more than 120 days, there is a 3 year wait period while you are out of the country.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:12 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:09 PM)rath v2.0 Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
This is utter BS. There is no paperwork to file, right or wrong. If you are here illegally, even if you get married while here illegally, no green card, no legal path to citizenship, no soup for you
If you are here illegally for more than 120 days, there is a 3 year wait period while you are out of the country.
Unless you're Melania Trump, I suppose.
lol it was your favorite politician who allowed her to do that. She was allowed into the country, worked illegally, then was given citizenship under your man Slick Willie's admin so who's to blame for that one?
(This post was last modified: 01-16-2018 03:20 PM by DownEastPirate.)
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
See, that's a whole separate issue. They should have led with that. This is manufactured drama. Daca vote, they parade out a deportee. It's all too convenient
He should be allowed to sue his lawyer
(This post was last modified: 01-16-2018 03:23 PM by shere khan.)
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:21 PM)shere khan Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
See, that's a whole separate issue. They should have led with that. This is manufactured drama. Daca vote, they parade out a deportee. It's all too convenient
He should be allowed to sue his lawyer
If they really think that is true, the lawyer robbed them. Unless there is a magic wand I am unaware of which certainly could be the case, there is no paperwork to become a citizen if you are are already here illegally unless you get granted asylum, are working to help law enforcement, or one of the other limited exceptions that did not apply in this case.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 02:26 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 02:02 PM)Paul M Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:56 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:
(01-16-2018 01:49 PM)Bull_Is_Back Wrote: Is she here illegally? Or is it just that you have to hate all immigrants because some don't want illegal immigration.
In 2001, she obtained a green card and became a lawful permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006.[5]
She is the first naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.[6]
She is a citizen, best of luck deporting her leftists because she is married to Trump.
Exactly, she had access to millions of dollars in legal help and she's married to a hero of the white nationalists....so the rules don't apply to her.
Again, she's white, I suppose.
She's a US citizen. Good luck to anyone trying to throw out any brown US citizens who's parents came from some **** hole too.
Yep...Because Melania is white, she gets to stay even though she broke our immigration laws on the way in.
No...but you already know that. In case you really are being ignorant, it's her access to money that allowed her to secure that green card and then citizenship. Plenty of people from various demographics have the same opportunities; however, it makes it A LOT easier when you have large sums of money.
Unlike most, I have little regard for Melania. It's blatantly obvious that she fell in love with Donald because of money. Perhaps she developed true feelings for Donald and genuine love for him as her husband; however, it was his millions (if not billions) that gave him access to her in the first place. If he was a plumber living in Queens, Melania never gives him the time of day.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:21 PM)shere khan Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
See, that's a whole separate issue. They should have led with that. This is manufactured drama. Daca vote, they parade out a deportee. It's all too convenient
He should be allowed to sue his lawyer
Exactly, these folks are being used to inject a left wing talking point. Never mind the fact that some of the most prominent figures of the Democratic party have made speeches with literally almost word for word the same opinion on illegal immigration as Trump's remarks.
Bottom line is this man has been a legal adult for over two decades and he couldn't get his **** together between that time period? Instead of getting it straight he chose to keep getting continuations of stay as a band-aid? He should be ashamed he put his kids and wife in this position and has no one to blame but himself.
RE: 39 year old man deported after 30 years in U.S.
(01-16-2018 03:13 PM)UTSAMarineVet09 Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:12 PM)Tom in Lazybrook Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:09 PM)rath v2.0 Wrote:
(01-16-2018 03:03 PM)DavidSt Wrote:
(01-16-2018 12:54 PM)UofMTigerTim Wrote: Option 3 – Cancellation of Removal
If you are arrested by the immigration authorities, you might be able to avoid removal, and receive a U.S. green card, if you can prove all of the below:
1. You have already been physically present in the United States for at least ten years.
2. You have been a person of good moral character during those ten years.
3. Your removal from the U.S. would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to your spouse, parent, or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
4. You aren’t disqualified from cancellation for one of a variety of reasons, such as that you have committed one of various types of crimes or immigration violations, have persecuted others, have been a member of a totalitarian or communist party, and so on.
Don’t attempt to apply for cancellation of removal on your own – it is only available if you are already in immigration court proceedings. You’ll definitely need a lawyer’s help in this situation.
Apparently he did not meet these standards.
In 2005, his lawyer filed paperwork for him to become a citizen, but the lawyer filed the wrong paperwork for him. So, since 2005, he thought he was fine after having the paperwork filed and all that. It was a mixed up on the lawyer's part in this case.
This is utter BS. There is no paperwork to file, right or wrong. If you are here illegally, even if you get married while here illegally, no green card, no legal path to citizenship, no soup for you
If you are here illegally for more than 120 days, there is a 3 year wait period while you are out of the country.