[cdn_abolition] [sos dfait] Digest Number 962

aicap-aifap@yahoogroups.ca aicap-aifap at yahoogroups.ca
Mon Oct 2 07:52:31 EDT 2006


There is 1 message in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

   1.  File -  clear the yankee record & fix yur website fraud, mi+az doc     
         From: "aicap-aifap at yahoogroups.ca" aicap-aifap at yahoogroups.ca

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Message: 1 
   Date: Sun Oct 1, 2006 9:33 pm (EST) 
   From: "aicap-aifap at yahoogroups.ca" aicap-aifap at yahoogroups.ca  
Subject: File -  clear the yankee record & fix yur website fraud, mi+az doc  
 


mi site relates to a fedrigucci's incorrect date of birth! 
what was the real reason for his death?
this is a canadian who should have had an ins detainer on file!
why was next of kin or consulate not notified of "discharge"
(which means 'death' - "execution" death or "natural" death?)
why did mi state [with a canadian governor!] think they had the
right to override federal transfer negotiations?
do not forget that the deal with canadian extradites means no
death penalty with life sentences!

aicap moderator

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re az site - incorrect info on legal maiden & married names!
blocking the sites with a tracker isn't going to solve your
fraud problem - it still gives you an excuse for unwarranted
monitors and harassment across the border - you have
absolutely no case with a twenty year+ deport and a canadian
pardon [same goes for florida financial institution entrapment
schemes on deported canadians] - let it go!!

ag moderator

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bill would let some expunge records

a bill that would permit certain offenders to seek
expungement of their criminal records has been referred to
the house subcommittee on crime, terrorism and homeland
security.

introduced by rep charles rangel (d-n.y.), the proposed
second chance for ex-offenders act of 2003 would authorize
an individual convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor to
file an expungement petition.  h.r. 1434 directs the court,
in ruling on expungement petitions after determining 
petitioner eligibility.  this allowsthe court to weigh the
petitioner's interests against the best interests of justice
and public safety.

the bill would allow an individual to file a petition to
expunge the record of conviction for a non-violent criminal
offense if the petitioner has: (1) never been convicted of
another violent offense; (2) fulfilled all requirements of
the sentence; (3) remained free from drug dependency on or
abuse of alcohol or drugs for at least one year and has met
any rehabilitation requirements of supervised release; (4)
obtained a high school diploma or completed a high school
equivalency program; and (5) completed at least one year of
community service.


bill to reduce prison time for some faces long road

a bill introduced by rep. sheila jackson-lee (d-texas) would
provide for early release of certain non-violent offenders
who have served one half or more of their terms; attained
the age of 45; have never been convicted of a crime and have
not engaged in any violation, involving violent conduct, of
institutional disciplinary regulations.

h.r. 3575 has been referred to the house judiciary
committee, the first step in the long legislative process.
h.r. 3575 will die unless enacted before congress adjourns
this fall.

the federal prison bureau nonviolent offender relief act of
2003 was introduced in november with 13 other sponsors:
john lewis (d-ga.), donna christian-christensen (d-vi),
william l. clay (d-mo.), raul grijalva (d-az), elijah
cummings (d-md.), donald my payne (d-n.j.), carolyn c.
kilpatrick (d-mich.), frank w. ballance jr. (d-n.c.),
major r. owens (d-n.y.), bobby rush (d-ill.), dannie k.davis
k(d-ill.), john conyers (d-mich.) and diane watson (d-calif.)


famm~gram
spring 2004
http://www.famm.org
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Democrats are flocking to McCain's immigration bill
By Peter Savodnik
The Hill, August 17, 2005
http://www.thehill.com/thehill/export/TheHill/News/Campaign/081705.html

A handful of Democratic House candidates in tight races near the Mexican border
are aligning themselves with Sen. John McCain, the Arizona Republican known for
his straight-talking, tough-guy persona.

Fearful of looking soft on illegal aliens — or simply eager to tap into McCain’s
star power, or both — Democrats in California and Arizona are endorsing the
Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act, introduced last spring by McCain and
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.).

The growing support on the campaign trail for the McCain-Kennedy bill comes as
Congress prepares to plunge into a debate about border security, terrorism and
an array of political, economic and defense-related interests.

It also could preview a major issue in the 2008 presidential race. One of the
five co-sponsors of the bill is Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), one of several
Senate GOP White House hopefuls. The immigration issue also has played a
prominent role in the gubernatorial contest in Virginia, home to Sen. George
Allen, another Republican presidential contender. And recently, New Mexico Gov.
Bill Richardson (D), who also may decide to make a presidential bid, last week
declared a state of emergency along the U.S.-Mexico border. Jumping onto
McCain’s immigration bandwagon makes political sense for Democrats running in
competitive races in the West, where McCain is particularly popular, Republicans
said.

Francine Busby, a school official running in California’s GOP-leaning 50th
District, recently released a position paper hailing McCain’s “bipartisan
legislation.” Busby said it would bolster border security, the nation’s
healthcare system and the economy.
In Arizona’s 1st District, Democrat Jack Jackson, hoping to beat Rep. Rick Renzi
(R) next year, called the McCain-Kennedy bill a common-sense approach to
combating illegal immigration and dealing with the 11 million undocumented
immigrants who are currently in the country.

The McCain bill could cause problems for some Republicans in tough reelection
matches where conservative interest groups are deeply divided in their approach
to curbing the huge influx of Mexicans to the state. Such is the case in New
Mexico’s 1st District, home to Rep. Heather Wilson.

While businesses across the country benefit from the cheap labor immigrants
provide, angry voters such as the Minutemen, a band of vigilante border guards,
are fed up with cross-border violence and smuggling.

Democrats have yet to find a candidate to run against Wilson. But the Republican
congresswoman, who won her fifth term last year with 55 percent of the vote,
must walk a fine line on the issue, a senior aide to Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.)
said. While David Waid, the executive director of the Arizona Democratic Party,
did not explicitly throw his support behind the McCain-Kennedy bill, he praised
McCain for weighing in on the issue.

“Senator McCain is somebody who is widely, widely respected in Arizona, and
everybody knows this is a guy who gets things done,” he said. [yeah, if his
bloody infiltrates don't get in the way]

Waid also took aim at another Senate measure, which would overhaul the nation’s
immigration laws. Arizona’s junior senator, Jon Kyl (R), and Sen. John Cornyn
(R-Tex.) are sponsoring the bill, but Waid said it has little chance of passing.


Waid predicted immigration issues would figure prominently in every race in
Arizona next year, considering the growing immigration-related fear and anger
directed toward illegal aliens and, increasingly, toward a federal government
that seems impotent when it comes to patrolling its own borders.

Cornyn, in an interview, called his bill a comprehensive response to illegal
immigration. The senator said the bill addresses four broad areas: border
security, interior enforcement, employer accountability and the status of
temporary, or guest, workers.

Like many Republicans, Cornyn said, he believes the homeland-security issue has
brought a sense of urgency to the illegal-immigration debate. Before the Sept.
11 attacks, he said, the immigration debate was viewed as an employment and
resources issue, as Hispanics snatched up low-paying jobs and overburdened
schools and hospitals.

“There is a growing sense that immigration reform is the No. 1 homeland-security
issue out there because our inability or unwillingness to control our borders
obviously makes us vulnerable to people who want to come here to do us harm,”
Cornyn said.

A delegation of members of the House Homeland Security Committee was planning to
visit the U.S.-Mexico border this week.

Next month the House and Senate are expected to begin debate on Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff’s second-stage review of his department.

Congressional sources said the Chertoff would like to eliminate an
undersecretary position so that more officials report directly to him. While
members of the House and Senate Homeland Security committees do not necessarily
oppose this move, these sources said they would like to see a more fundamental,
bureaucratic restructuring of the sprawling, 186,000-person department.

The fact that the House Homeland Security Committee chairmanship is currently
vacant is another complication in the debate over the future of the department
and its approach to patrolling the nation’s borders. The House GOP Steering will
choose the next chairman when it meets in September.

But the 2008 presidential race will likely provide the best opportunity for a
national immigration debate.

Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), who is known for taking a hard-line stance on
immigration, has said he may run for president as a way to inject the issue into
the race.


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AICAP/AIFAP ~Bookmark:
http://collection.nlc-bnc.ca/100/201/300/aicap_inmates_newsletter/index.html
http://epe.lac-bac.ca/100/201/300/aicap_inmates_newsletter/PDF/2005

Foreign Nationals, Consular Rights & The Death Penalty
http://www3.sympatico.ca/aiwarren
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/can-am/menu-en.asp?mid=9&cat=144

A Guide to Canadians Imprisoned Abroad
http://www.voyage.gc.ca/main/problems/arrest-en.asp
http://www.voyage.gc.ca/main/pubs/imprisoned_abroad-en.asp

CSC International Transfer of Offenders
http://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/test/prgrm/inttransfer/trans_e.shtml

Criminal Alien Removal Act (CLEAR) - Bill H.R.2671
The National Sheriffs Association, the Southern States Police Benevolent Association, and the Law Enforcement Alliance of America have endorsed the bill.

Bill C-15 - International Transfer of Offenders Act
http://decisions.fct-cf.gc.ca/fct/2004/2004fc1054.shtml

Immigration Law News
http://news.findlaw.com/legalnews/us/im 

Bookmark
http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/
search aicap-aifap and/or angelgoddess-newsmuse

The information provided (in this moderated weekly digest) is not legal advice. Transmission of this information is not intended to create, and receipt by you does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. Do not act upon any information without first seeking advice from a qualified attorney.[ILW]

Exercising Our First Amendment Rights!
Any attempts to intercept this message are in violation of Title 18 U.S.C. 2511(1) of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA). All violators are subject to fines, imprisonment or civil damages, or both.

~In commemoration of the Estate of the late Al FedriGucci, founder of AICAP (Alliance of Incarcerated Canadians in American Prisons)~ 

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