The Bush administration is planning to waive security checks
for tens of thousands of new immigrants, a move raising concerns
about national security.
Follow this link to the original source: "U.S.
to Skirt Green-Card Check"
While the Bush administration continues to insist that American
citizens must accept increased inconveniences at airports
and more privacy intrusions under the Real I.D. Act, it is
waiving security checks for tens of thousands of new immigrants,
including many who are being hired as Border Patrol officers.
"Facing a rapidly growing backlog of immigration cases,
the Bush administration will grant permanent residency to
tens of thousands of legal U.S. immigrants without first completing
required background checks against the FBI's investigative
files," the Washington Post reported on February 12.
The change, it said, applies to about 47,000 permanent residency,
or green-card, applicants whose FBI checks have been pending
for more than six months.
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Christopher S. Bentley, a spokesman for the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, told the Post the decision "just
seems like a very logical way to get people who deserve benefits
in a very fair and timely manner without compromising national
security or the integrity of the immigration system."
Mr. Bentley did not explain how the administration can speed
the process along by dispensing with the security checks 'without
compromising national security or the integrity of the immigration
system."
Even more disturbing is information that the administration
is using the same "wave them through" policy when
it comes to applicants for the Border Patrol, including applicants
who are "former" members of violent Mexican gangs
and Mexican drug cartels. "A lot of [Border Patrol] agents
are very upset by the big influx of Mexican gang-bangers"
into the service, a recently retired BP agent told me. "This
is insane, and is being done under the excuse of increasing
the number of ‘native Mexican speakers’"
in the Border Patrol.
According to the former agent, the admitted gang members
are merely asked to promise that they have broken with their
gangs and then are being allowed to continue the application
process. "Some of our [Border Patrol] background investigators
have brought up serious security concerns about many of these
guys, things that in the past would have weeded bad guys out.
But the investigators get over-ruled by higher-ups in the
administration. This will be disastrous if it is allowed to
continue."