IMMIGRATION
The Consequences Of Enforcement Without Reform
The public debate on immigration reform in the United States has tended to focus on a narrow set of factors: a porous border between the U.S. and Mexico, the large number of undocumented immigrants inside the United States, and the politics of comprehensive reform versus border security. Hidden beneath the surface of these debates, however, is a shadowy world of law enforcement mechanisms that not only exacerbate the immigration problem in the country, but also violate the due process and basic human rights of immigrants who get caught up in a "system of neglect" that can at times result in unnecessary death. These problems often begin at the front lines of enforcement. Last month, federal agents conducted the "biggest immigration raid in U.S. history" that nabbed nearly 400 workers at a meat-packing plant in Iowa. While most of the people arrested have been sentenced, "not one company official as yet faces any charges -- something critics say is typical of a federal government that is tough on employees but easy on owners." In fact, such raids tend to reinforce the Bush administration's public relations campaign designed to present the facade that "the federal government is cracking down on illegal immigration." As Frank Sharry, executive director of the immigration-reform group America's Voice, noted, "[T]hose who think enforcement is the answer can't seriously believe the 12 million to 20 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. can be arrested and deported."
OPERATION STREAMLINE: Last November, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said that "the days of treating employers who violate [immigration] laws by giving them the equivalent of a corporate parking ticket -- those days are gone. It's now felonies, jail time, fines, and forfeitures." But throughout 2007, just two percent of illegal immigration related arrests "involved criminal charges against those who hired the workers." In fact, the federal government's focus on employees rather than employers has "increased criminal prosecutions of immigration violators to record levels in part by filing minor charges against virtually every person caught illegally crossing some stretches of the U.S.-Mexico border." Piloted in 2005, "Operation Streamline," as the program is known, "requires that virtually everyone caught illegally crossing segments of the border be charged with at least a misdemeanor immigration count and jailed until they are brought to court and, if convicted, eventually deported." However, last February, Streamline cases outnumbered all other Department of Justice prosecutions combined. The program is "swamping federal courthouses" and "distorting the functions of law enforcement and the courts" as sex crimes, drug cases, murders, assault, and other crimes increasingly are ignored. "We're concerned about the misdirection of resources," said Heather Williams, first assistant to the federal public defender of Arizona, adding "this is taking on a life of its own."
'BETTER CARE IN THE DOG POUND': Since 2003, "when the Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] agency was created, 83 deaths reportedly have been linked to detention sites run by ICE or by private contractors and local governments." The ICE detention infrastructure holds more than 300,000 detainees per year and recent crackdowns have fueled a dramatic expansion, nearly doubling the number of beds (33,000) since 2004. A recent investigation of ICE detention centers by the Washington Post "found a hidden world of flawed medical judgments, faulty administrative practices, neglectful guards, ill-trained technicians, sloppy record-keeping, lost medical files and dangerous staff shortages." Detainees who are physically sick or mentally ill are caught up in ICE's "system of neglect" where "[t]hey are locked in a world of slow care, poor care and no care, with panic and coverups among employees watching it happen." One detainee, Yusif Osman, a native of Ghana, died in his cell of heart failure. It's likely the true cause of his death resulted from poor record keeping and neglect. Doctors who reviewed Osman's case said "he might have lived had he received timely treatment, perhaps as basic as an aspirin." One nurse at an Arizona detention facility -- who quit because of "scary medicine" practices -- concluded that "dogs get better care in the dog pound."
FEWER RIGHTS, MORE SMUGGLING: The Immigration Policy Center (IPC) has noted that "[r]ather than reducing undocumented immigration, the enforcement-without-reform strategy" pursues "undocumented immigrants who are not a threat to anyone, and who are drawn here by the labor needs of our own economy." But once swept up, in most cases these ICE detainees "are not guaranteed free legal representation" and as part of ICE's "expedited removal" program, many arriving immigrants are quickly deported "without the opportunity for a hearing before an immigration judge." In fact, most of the 30,000-plus detainees do not even face criminal charges; many are there for civil violations, some have overstayed a visa, while others are seeking asylum. Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) called the laws cracking down on undocumented immigrants "repugnant," adding that they are "violating due process and basic human rights of people." Moreover, the IPC notes that such immigration policies have "fueled the growth of increasingly profitable and sophisticated businesses in human smuggling." The "[i]ncreased corruption is linked, in part, to tougher enforcement, driving smugglers to recruit federal employees as accomplices." As the New York Times recently reported, "The pattern has become familiar: Customs officers wave in vehicles filled with illegal immigrants, drugs or other contraband. A Border Patrol agent acts as a scout for smugglers. Trusted officers fall prey to temptation and begin taking bribes."

ETHICS
-- GOP REP. HOBSON EARMARKED
MILLIONS FOR PROJECTS NEAR HIS OWN PROPERTIES: Since
2001, Rep.
David Hobson (R-OH) "has
directed millions of taxpayer dollars to two Ohio projects near
real estate he owned," according to an investigation by the Cleveland
Plain Dealer. A senior member of the House Appropriations Committee,
Hobson has secured roughly
$32 million for the two projects,
which include a freight transfer
station at Rickenbacker Air Force Base near Columbus, OH. Hobson says
"he didn't personally benefit from either project" and that
the Plain Dealer is "trying to find something evil somewhere." But
other companies who own land near the Air Force base say "there
has been a real boom" since
Hobson secured the federal funds. One
company executive, Duke Realty Vice President Jim Clark, said that "the
values of properties near the airport quadrupled over the past decade,"
much of which he attributed to the "anticipated demand from the
airport's new freight transfer station." Though Hobson's
earmarking is not illegal, watchdog groups say his use
of tax dollars for projects near his real estate is a "terrible
conflict of interest." But Hobson is not alone in Congress
when it
comes to raking in big bucks off their legislative earmarks. Lawmakers
like former House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) and Rep. Ken Calvert
(R-CA) have also
profited from earmarked projects
near property they owned.
CLIMATE
CHANGE -- NASA IG REPORT FINDS
'PATTERN OF DISTORTION AND SUPPRESSION OF CLIMATE SCIENCE': Two
years after 14 senators requested an investigation, NASA's inspector
general has released a report finding "a
pattern of distortion and suppression of climate science
by political appointees" at the agency. The report, released yesterday,
"criticized what it said was a sustained pattern of activities, largely
supervised by senior political appointees, that included muting or
withholding news released on global warming and...limiting a
scientist's interactions with reporters." Dean Acosta, former deputy
assistant administrator for public affairs at NASA, sharply attacked
the report, saying, "The inspector general's assertions are patently
false," and claiming it uncovered "nothing but flimsy allegations aimed
at hard-working public servants." James Hansen, NASA's leading climate
scientist, first raised complaints about political interference in
2006, saying that the White House tried to prevent
him from discussing global warming
with the media. As recently as
this past January, Hansen said that the White
House
"reviews and edits" all testimony
by government scientists.
RADICAL
RIGHT -- McCLELLAN SAYS
CRITICS ARE TRYING TO 'TAKE THE FOCUS AWAY' FROM BOOK'S KEY THEMES':
Last week, in response to Scott McClellan's explosive
memoir, former senator Bob Dole
sent a vitriolic personal e-mail to
McClellan, calling him a "miserable
creature." "[Y]our type soaks up
the benefits of power, revels in
the limelight
for years, then quits, and spurred on by greed, cashes in with a
scathing critique," Dole charged. On CBS's Early Show yesterday,
McClellan shrugged off Dole's and the right
wing's
attacks on him. "[N]o one is
really
refuting the key
themes and perspectives in the
book. What
they are doing is taking some of these personal attacks and
misrepresentations and trying to
shift this focus away from what this book talks about,"
he
said. Indeed, it's difficult to find a right-wing personality directly
taking
issue with the substance of McClellan's book. For example, former
White
House deputy press secretary Trent Duffy wrote yesterday, "Please
forgive
me, Scott, if this sounds personal, but you've just filleted
me and everyone who worked with
you." "I mean my lack of interest
in Scott McClellan's personal
odyssey of self-discovery is a
negative," said former House speaker Newt Gingrich.
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At Fort Benning in Georgia, the
Army has assigned soldiers suffering
from PTSD to housing located
just 200 yards away from firing ranges.
The "barrages from rifles
and machine guns" make these wounded soldiers "cringe" and "stay
awake and on edge," and recently "sent
one soldier to the
emergency room with an anxiety attack."
Complaints to medical
personnel and officers have brought no relief.
55
percent: Americans surveyed
who said their
families were financially worse off
than they were a year ago. The USA Today/Gallup poll finds that
"Americans are more downbeat about their personal financial situations
now than they’ve been in decades."
CQ reports that in just the
first three months of this year, "three
of the nation's biggest telecommunications companies have employed
37 lobbying firms to urge lawmakers to include such immunity
in any overhaul of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act." These
companies and their allies spent
more than $14 million lobbying
during this time.
"We have the first global
warming bill in history that is
comprehensive, bipartisan
and that enjoys support across the
country," said Al Gore of Senate climate
change legislation being debated
this week. "While it's important
that people change their light bulbs, it's even more important
that we change
the laws."
John Albaugh, chief of staff to
former Republican congressman Ernest
Istook, "has pleaded guilty to a conspiracy to defraud the House as part
of the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal.
Albaugh, who faces up
to two years in prison, "told a federal judge that he was guilty of accepting
gifts in return for official
favors."
And finally: In addition to his Emmy, Stephen Colbert has another award
to add to his mantle: "The
Great Princeton Class of 2008 Understandable Vanity Award."
The award was mounted on a mirror. "I have to say, I've never seen
anything more beautiful," Colbert said to Princeton's graduating class
of
'08 on
Monday. Instead of offering motivational advice, he also told the
students, "I'm scared of you. I
can tell you are go-getters. ...
When you leave here, no one will
ever, ever want to hear you sing
a capella."
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OHIO:
"Gov. Ted Strickland (D) signed a measure capping payday lending rates
at 28 percent."
CALIFORNIA:
"An
initiative defining marriage as 'between a man and a woman' in the
state constitution qualified Monday for the November ballot."
MASSACHUSETTS:
"Massachusetts reduced
its proportion of uninsured adults by nearly
half in the first year of mandatory health coverage," a new study shows.

THINK
PROGRESS: Vice President Cheney
offers false excuse for his "So?"
comment: I meant, "What's the question, Martha?"
WONK
ROOM: The essentially deceptive
rhetoric of the Washington Post's
Robert J. Samuelson.
FEMINISTING:
Kmart promotes abstinence pants
YEAS
AND NAYS: Spelling bee
contestants: President Bush is
"embarrassing."

"[T]he vice president noted that he had Cheneys on both sides of his
family. 'And we don't even live in West Virginia. ... You can
say
those things when you're not running for re-election.'"
-- AP, 6/2/08
VERSUS
"On reflection, he concluded that it was an inappropriate attempt at
humor that he should not have made. The Vice President apologizes to
the people of West Virginia for the inappropriate remark."
-- Cheney spokeswoman Lea Ann McBride, 6/2/08
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