"Legal Immigration" Too Often Means Fraud—And Fraud Is Illegal
During the mid-1980s, just after the
Immigration
Reform and Control Act amnesty passed, I taught an
English as a second language class at the
Lodi
Adult School in
California's San Joaquin Valley. The American history and
civics curriculum was designed as the first of several mandatory
steps that would take illegal immigrants from alien status to
green card to citizenship.
To document the students' progress to the
INS,
teachers had to fill out and sign various forms. Needless to
say, the process involved significant amounts of paperwork.
At the time, I was
completely new to teaching. And I knew next to nothing about
immigration's pitfalls and complexities.
Now that I am aware of all the angles, I
look back twenty years and see how easily fraud could be—and
most likely was—perpetrated.
The most vital document in the amnesty process
was the coveted "Certificate of Completion".
When signed by the teacher or any other school
official, it served as evidence that the student attended forty
hours of English instruction.
The certificates probably should have been
kept under lock and key. But the adult school offered so many
ESL sections, taught by so many different teachers to so many
different students at so many different times of the day, that
we needed immediate access to them.
They were left out in full view, where
anyone who worked in another section of the school could easily
grab a few to distribute to friends or relatives—or possibly
sell on the street.
That was then—a small potatoes operation.
And this is now, when immigration fraud is more sophisticated
and much wider reaching.
What I have learned since my early adult
school experience is that the federal government cannot
administer to any immigration program.
Juan Mann,
among others, has written at length about government ineptitude.
Ditto for
non-immigrant visas. Read University
of California Davis'
Professor Norm
Matloff on the H-1B visa and
VDARE.COM's
Thomas Allen on the refugee visa scams.
As well versed on immigration fraud as I have become over the last two decades, nothing prepared me for the U. S. Department of State's "Fact Sheet" released last week. It revealed that as many as 80 percent of all "Priority-3" or "P-3" designation grants are fraudulent.
P-3 status is given to individuals of
certain nationalities (mostly African) who are claimed as a
parent, spouse, or minor child of legal residents in the United
States. Think
chain migration, refugee style.
If fraud was that rampant—and no credible
person disputes it—then
as reported by blogger Ann Corcoran (e-mail
her) of
Refugee Resettlement Watch, tens of thousands of
Africans—mostly Somalis—live in the U.S. illegally.
Persistent rumors about fraud encouraged
the State Department to investigate. And since 95 percent of
P-3s come from African countries, it began there by using
DNA testing.
The State Department started with a sample of
about five hundred refugees claiming family ties (primarily
Somali
and
Ethiopians) in
Nairobi, Kenya who were under consideration for U.S.
resettlement through the P-3 program.
Kenya had the highest level of P-3
"irregularities."
When that sample suggested extensive fraud,
the DNA testing was expanded to
Uganda,
Ghana, Guinea, Gambia and Cote d'Ivoire. Most of the
approximately 3,000 refugees tested are from Somalia, Ethiopia,
and Liberia.
According to a source formerly at the State
Department:
"Somalis have been entering the
US as refugees since the early 1990's and, looking back, I could
say with certainty that the figure of 80 percent being based on
fraudulent claims of family relationship is conservative.
"The recent (but ridiculously
late) State Department release on this problem completely
soft-pedaled the Somali involvement. The fraud among this
population was and still is widespread, and is in fact an
industry, involving not only the US anchors and overseas refugee
applicants, but overseas processing entities in charge of
registering and seeing refugees through the process.
"There were multitudes of
in-house corruption scandals, where local overseas staff were
simply replaced with other equally corrupt staff. I am pretty
sure that people made small fortunes."
The cleverness and determination of the Somalis is unlimited.
My source continued:
"The US stopped accepting any
document from Somalia at least a decade ago as proof of anything
(beyond the ability to purchase). The document market in Nairobi
(as well as everywhere else, it seems) is notorious.
"One long-standing trick was for Somali
refugees admitted to the US to travel to
Canada, sell their US documents to others, and
claim
asylum in Canada. In
the mid 1990's, their chances of getting Canadian asylum were
good.
"Purchasers of their old refugee documents
(usually persons already admitted as refugees
to Canada) would then enter the US under those bought
identities (keeping their Canadian immigration documents). These
folks then collected
public benefits both in the US and Canada, thus abusing two
countries at once!"
Many of these illegal aliens bought their way into the US by
purchasing
"Affidavits of Relationship" on
Nairobi streets.
Another source, insisting on anonymity, said:
"Knowing that tens of thousands
of Somalis are in the US illegally, I must speak up. I am sorry
I must speak anonymously. Unfortunately, the intimidation factor
is keeping most of us who know what is happening silent. Having
worked with refugees for many years, I have firsthand knowledge
of the systematic abuse, fraud and corruption of our legal
'humanitarian' immigration system by Somalis.
"In my experience, the
Somali Centers have figured out an efficient way of
'proving' eligibility for P-3 (family reunification) status.
They have the forms and procedures worked out and submit one
application after another. The process moves fast.
"The so-called 'anchors' in the
US are mostly men. Exposure of wrongdoing on part of these
'anchors' is virtually impossible. It threatens the very heart
of the Somali Center industry. You need to know that filing
immigration papers is the main industry of the Somali Centers.
Other projects are primarily for decoration and PR.
"Those other projects, funded
through grants no less, were supposedly for addressing health
issues, childcare, or family violence. These grants are often
not being used for the stated purposes."
Because of its recent discoveries, the State Department
suspended the P-3 program.
Thomas Allen,
one of the nation's leading experts in
refugee
fraud, is not surprised by the abuse revelations.
Reiterating what's obvious to our readers but not to the
federal government, Allen told me:
"The temptation to fraud is great
in refugee programs, because resettlement often represents such
a highly valued solution for persons in desperate situations. In
today's conditions, the fraud problem has probably worsened,
owing to modern communications and the growth of organized crime
or other enterprises trying to make money from facilitating a
person's inclusion in a resettlement program.
"The United States now has State Department
personnel or federal contractors in 40 different locations
considering 60 different nationalities for the refugee program.
In recent years, the main refugee sending-regions have been
Africa (Somalia, Liberia, Sudan, Ethiopia), at nearly half of
overall arrivals, followed by the
former USSR
and East
Asia (Laos, Vietnam, Burma)."
"Self-interest," said
Allen, "drives
the refugee industry."
Even the
United
Nations —or perhaps especially the U.N.—needs
oversight.
Allen reminded me that in 2002 the United
Nations
announced that about 70 of its people were implicated in a
long-running bribery and extortion scheme involving the
selection of refugees bound for Western countries.
That total included three ringleaders at the
UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, the main UN organization charged
with protecting refugees around the world.
António Guterres, the UNHCR's High Commissioner, oversees 6,300 employees working in over 110 countries "providing protection and assistance to nearly 33 million refugees and others of concern."
Certainly, all 33 million would love to live in the U.S. and
submitting fraudulent documents to get here would be a minor
consideration—if even that.
In another related and troubling development
in the scandalous increase in visa issuance, effective November
17
visas are no longer needed for most visitors from the Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
South Korea,
Latvia, Lithuania, and Slovakia.
The Department of Homeland Security doesn't share our worry
that any of them may overstay their visas and settle as illegal
aliens.
Obviously, DHS is unaware that more than 5 million temporary
visas holders over the last ten years changed their status to "permanent
resident" and will likely remain in the U.S. for the rest of
their lives. I addressed this problem at length in May 9th
column:
It's Official: Legal Immigration Is A Bigger Problem Than
Illegal Immigration.
That title sums it up.
Awareness about the porous border that we
share with Mexico is high. Workplace enforcement, at least until
president-elect
Barack
Obama takes office, serves as an illegal immigration
deterrent.
But with legal immigration, the myriad visas,
with their vagaries and loopholes, present a frightening threat.
Under the blanket of "legal immigration," anything goes.
Only
Brian Mosley, a reporter for a local Tennessee newspaper,
covered the P-3 disgrace. The mainstream media ignored it.[
Refugee Status
Stayed After Feds Confirm Fraud, by Brian Mosley,
Shelbyville Times-Gazette, November 16, 2008]
When citizens mount the same vigorous battle
against visa abuse that we have fought against illegal
immigration, we'll make similar progess.
To help you get fired up our new cause, try this: the next
time that you hear "visa,"
you should automatically think "fraud."
You'll be right more often than not.
Joe [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.