lframerica.com Blog

April 4, 2008

Nacogdoches County District Court Clerk Charged With Theft

Filed under: Uncategorized, State & Local, Texas, CrimeMarch, United States News, Government Crimes — Administrator @ 2:55 am

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/nacogdoches_85631___article.html/county_court.html

April 3, 2008

NACOGDOCHES, Texas (AP) - The district court clerk for Nacogdoches County has been charged with felony theft by a public service.

Donna Phillips was arrested Thursday, was arraigned and freed on $8,500 bond.

The Nacogdoches Daily Sentinel reports the arrest affidavit says Phillips is accused of taking nearly $16,000 last year from the child support account she oversees.

The affidavit says some child support payments made in the office were never deposited into the official account.

April 2, 2008

Immigration Debate Focuses on $2M In Tax Money Going To Aid Group

http://www.immigrationwatchdog.com/?p=6175

http://www.casademaryland.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=246 

Mar 31, 2008, by Jason Flanagan, The Examiner

BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Walter Abbott lost his house, his drywall company – twice – and now his freedom.

When he discovered Maryland funds pro-immigration group CASA de Maryland, he fired off an angry letter to Gov. Martin O’Malley containing a threat on the governor’s life.

“It was out of frustration,” Abbott said.

Now is he on home detention awaiting a trial. “[CASA] helps find them a job – an American’s job that they help take away. They took away my job,” said Abbott, 44, of Parkville.

Abbott epitomizes part of the hotly contested immigration debate.

Many people are furious that governments from the General Assembly to the city of Baltimore give millions of dollars to CASA de Maryland, which assists legal and illegal immigrants in finding work, social services and legal aid.

“The state cuts [Chesapeake] Bay funding in half but found millions for CASA’s new headquarters? That’s bordering on criminal if it’s not already criminal,” said Brad Botwin, director of Help Save Maryland, a group opposing illegal immigration.

However, CASA officials said taxpayers’ money should help anyone in need, even if they are here illegally.

“The government should serve everybody – [immigrants] are the house cleaners, the kids going to school. They are part of the community, and part of government’s role is to help the poor and vulnerable,” said Jennifer Freedman, director of development for CASA.

Some state lawmakers tried to halt CASA’s funding and introduce bills to curb illegal immigration. But those bills failed, while bills to support CASA’s efforts passed.

Del. Ron George, R-Anne Arundel, said groups such as CASA make Maryland friendly to illegal immigrants who burden the state’s infrastructure, such as the Motor Vehicle Administration. MVA was processing 1,000 driver’s license a month last year; now it is processing 2,000 a week due to illegal immigrants’ ease of obtaining licenses.

WHAT CASA DOES

CASA does provide humanitarian work such as AIDS/HIV testing, youth counseling and financial education to low-income immigrants, and is considered the largest and most organized group reaching the immigrant community.

But the political and legal aspect of CASA has many questioning government support.

A pamphlet by CASA tells immigrants not to say anything, answer the door or provide identification to immigration and law enforcement officials. CASA asks its members to carry a card saying the person will not speak and demands a lawyer.

Each time Freedman was asked why CASA serves illegal immigrants, she referred to CASA’s mission statement of helping all low-income immigrants.

“We can do that without asking immigration status,” she said.

When asked if CASA would report its clients if they were found to be here illegally, Freedman again said, “We serve everyone in need who walks through our door.”

She added that CASA’s policy is no different from other nonprofits like Catholic Charities, which did not return calls for comment on its policies.

At CASA’s Baltimore center, where immigrants can find work, a man who identified himself as Ennrique said, “The community here is united, and [CASA has] been helping the community.”

About 2 percent of the city’s population is Hispanic, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, which does not ask for immigration status, just ethnicity and place of birth.

WHO PAYS?

More than $2 million in money from local governments this year went to fund CASA, mostly from Montgomery, which has the highest Hispanic concentration in the state, according to the Census Bureau.

Baltimore City gave much less, mainly for grants to promote job placement and AIDS health education.

Mayor Sheila Dixon’s office did not return several calls for comment.

The state government doled out $628,000 in bonds and grants in 2005 and 2006, and is considering paying another $500,000 next fiscal year for CASA’s multicultural center in Prince George’s.

Since 2005 the project has received $4.2 million in tax credits for required renovations of the historic mansion the center will occupy.

“Why should we be taxed in order to fund groups of people who shouldn’t be eligible to be funded?” said Dee Hodges, president of the Baltimore-based Maryland Taxpayer’s Association.

No other Baltimore-area counties fund CASA, mainly because the group hasn’t solicited funding.

“Illegal means illegal, and citizens of [Anne Arundel] resent taxpayer dollars going to those who break the law,” said Anne Arundel County Executive John R. Leopold, who opposed funding CASA but supports aid for groups that help people here legally.

WHAT TO DO

To deny CASA funding would be a great disservice to the community, advocates say. Less than half of CASA’s funding comes from governments, but the group uses the money to leverage private donations, Freedman said.

Some have suggested requiring CASA to ask for immigration status from its clients as a reasonable solution.

But CASA will not do such a thing, as it would go against its policy as a humanitarian organization, Freedman said.

CASA’s remedy is to enforce current immigration laws, not create new ones that anti-immigration supporters say are needed to compensate for failing federal laws.

“We recognize it’s a broken system and we look to the federal government for comprehensive immigration reform,” Freedman said.

Others say no matter what CASA does, all of its funding should be cut.

“There should be no CASA de Maryland,” Abbott said.

jflanagan@baltimoreexmainer.com

March 29, 2008

Former Birmingham Councilman Gets 5 Years For Child Porn

http://www.enewscourier.com/statenews/local_story_087162316.html

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — A former Birmingham city councilman is headed to federal prison for five years for child pornography.

A judge handed down the sentence Thursday to Don MacDermott Jr. of Trussville. The 53-year-old former politician pleaded guilty to possessing child porn he bought off the Internet.

MacDermott’s arrest stemmed from a federal investigation in a ring that operated several for-profit Internet sites with sexually explicit photos of children. He was arrested after a raid at his home last August.

Besides the prison time, the judge ordered MacDermott to stay away from children after his release. He must register as a sex offender and spend 35 years on probation.

MacDermott served one four-year term on the Birmingham City Council ending in 2001.

Ex-Alabama Governor Approved For Release On Bond While He Appeals Bribery Convictions

http://www.enewscourier.com/statenews/local_story_088114213.html\

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman is expected to be released from a federal prison in Louisiana sometime Friday, officials said.

A federal appeals court on Thursday ordered Siegelman released pending the appeal of his corruption case. Prison spokeswoman Tammy Jarvis said he cannot be released until court documents are received, but the papers were expected sometime Friday.

In its ruling, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the former governor had raised “substantial questions of fact and law” in challenging his conviction.

The once-popular Democrat began serving a sentence of more than seven years last June on his conviction on six bribery-related counts and one obstruction count. Siegelman, 62, has been serving the sentence at a federal prison in Oakdale, La.

“It’s a sweet day. He’s an innocent man and he’s been in prison for nine months,” said Siegelman’s attorney, Vince Kilborn.

The House Judiciary Committee also announced that it wants to hear Siegelman’s views when it probes claims of selective prosecution by the Justice Department.

Siegelman has maintained that certain Republicans targeted him after he was elected governor in 1998. The House committee has begun reviewing his case as part of a broader investigation into allegations of political meddling in federal prosecutions.

The committee hopes to hear from Siegelman in May. Committee Chairman John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat, believes Siegelman “would have a lot to add to the committee’s investigation into selective prosecution,” committee spokeswoman Melanie Roussell said.

Federal prosecutors accused Siegelman of appointing then-HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy to a hospital regulatory board in exchange for Scrushy arranging $500,000 in contributions to Siegelman’s campaign for a statewide lottery.

Scrushy, who was tried along with Siegelman, also was convicted on bribery counts and is serving a sentence of nearly seven years. The 11th Circuit, based in Atlanta, has ruled that the multimillionaire Birmingham businessman is a potential flight risk, but that Siegelman is not.

The court refused Thursday to reconsider an earlier ruling denying Scrushy’s request to be released on bond while his conviction is being appealed.

Scrushy attorney Art Leach said he is disappointed his client will have to remain in prison for at least another six months while the case is appealed.

“I am extremely disappointed, particularly after they said in the Siegelman case that there are substantial issues on appeal,” Leach said.

Siegelman also was convicted of a separate obstruction of justice charge concerning $9,200 he received from a lobbyist to help with the purchase of a motorcycle. His attorneys have said it was a legitimate transaction.

U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller had refused to allow Siegelman to remain free on appeal while challenging his conviction. But the 11th Circuit said Thursday he met the legal standard to be freed in the “complex and protracted” case.

Chief prosecutor Louis Franklin said he was “very disappointed” by the ruling, but still expects the appellate court will rule against Siegelman’s appeal.

“I don’t view this as a setback. The order is very short and concise and only deals with whether he is entitled to bond pending appeal,” Franklin said.

The appeals process had been delayed for months after the court reporter during the trial died and the transcript was not completed as it normally would have.

March 28, 2008

Outsourced Passports Netting Govt. Profits, Risking National Security

Filed under: Uncategorized, U.S. Security, United States News, Government Crimes — Administrator @ 2:28 am

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080326/NATION/840186493/1001

The United States has outsourced the manufacturing of its electronic passports to overseas companies — including one in Thailand that was victimized by Chinese espionage — raising concerns that cost savings are being put ahead of national security, an investigation by The Washington Times has found.
The Government Printing Office’s decision to export the work has proved lucrative, allowing the agency to book more than $100 million in recent profits by charging the State Department more money for blank passports than it actually costs to make them, according to interviews with federal officials and documents obtained by The Times.

The profits have raised questions both inside the agency and in Congress because the law that created GPO as the federal government’s official printer explicitly requires the agency to break even by charging only enough to recover its costs.
Lawmakers said they were alarmed by The Times’ findings and plan to investigate why U.S. companies weren’t used to produce the state-of-the-art passports, one of the crown jewels of American border security.

“I am not only troubled that there may be serious security concerns with the new passport production system, but also that GPO officials may have been profiting from producing them,” said Rep. John D. Dingell, the Michigan Democrat who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Officials at GPO, the Homeland Security Department and the State Department played down such concerns, saying they are confident that regular audits and other protections already in place will keep terrorists and foreign spies from stealing or copying the sensitive components to make fake passports.

“Aside from the fact that we have fully vetted and qualified vendors, we also note that the materials are moved via a secure transportation means, including armored vehicles,” GPO spokesman Gary Somerset said.
But GPO Inspector General J. Anthony Ogden, the agency’s internal watchdog, doesn’t share that confidence. He warned in an internal Oct. 12 report that there are “significant deficiencies with the manufacturing of blank passports, security of components, and the internal controls for the process.”

The inspector general’s report said GPO claimed it could not improve its security because of “monetary constraints.” But the inspector general recently told congressional investigators he was unaware that the agency had booked tens of millions of dollars in profits through passport sales that could have been used to improve security, congressional aides told The Times.
Decision to outsource

GPO is an agency little-known to most Americans, created by Congress almost two centuries ago as a virtual monopoly to print nearly all of the government’s documents, from federal agency reports to the president’s massive budget books that outline every penny of annual federal spending. Since 1926, it also has been charged with the job of printing the passports used by Americans to enter and leave the country.
When the government moved a few years ago to a new electronic passport designed to foil counterfeiting, GPO led the work of contracting with vendors to install the technology.

Each new e-passport contains a small computer chip inside the back cover that contains the passport number along with the photo and other personal data of the holder. The data is secured and is transmitted through a tiny wire antenna when it is scanned electronically at border entry points and compared to the actual traveler carrying it.
According to interviews and documents, GPO managers rejected limiting the contracts to U.S.-made computer chip makers and instead sought suppliers from several countries, including Israel, Germany and the Netherlands.

Mr. Somerset, the GPO spokesman, said foreign suppliers were picked because “no domestic company produced those parts” when the e-passport production began a few years ago.
After the computer chips are inserted into the back cover of the passports in Europe, the blank covers are shipped to a factory in Ayutthaya, Thailand, north of Bangkok, to be fitted with a wire Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID, antenna. The blank passports eventually are transported to Washington for final binding, according to the documents and interviews.

The stop in Thailand raises its own security concerns. The Southeast Asian country has battled social instability and terror threats. Anti-government groups backed by Islamists, including al Qaeda, have carried out attacks in southern Thailand and the Thai military took over in a coup in September 2006.
The Netherlands-based company that assembles the U.S. e-passport covers in Thailand, Smartrac Technology Ltd., warned in its latest annual report that, in a worst-case scenario, social unrest in Thailand could lead to a halt in production.

Smartrac divulged in an October 2007 court filing in The Hague that China had stolen its patented technology for e-passport chips, raising additional questions about the security of America’s e-passports.
Transport concerns
A 2005 document obtained by The Times states that GPO was using unsecure FedEx courier services to send blank passports to State Department offices until security concerns were raised and forced GPO to use an armored car company. Even then, the agency proposed using a foreign armored car vendor before State Department diplomatic security officials objected.

Concerns that GPO has been lax in addressing security threats contrast with the very real danger that the new e-passports could be compromised and sold on the black market for use by terrorists or other foreign enemies, experts said.
“The most dangerous passports, and the ones we have to be most concerned about, are stolen blank passports,” said Ronald K. Noble, secretary general of Interpol, the Lyon, France-based international police organization. “They are the most dangerous because they are the most difficult to detect.”

Mr. Noble said no counterfeit e-passports have been found yet, but the potential is “a great weakness and an area that world governments are not paying enough attention to.”
Lukas Grunwald, a computer security expert, said U.S. e-passports, like their European counterparts, are vulnerable to copying and that their shipment overseas during production increases the risks. “You need a blank passport and a chip and once you do that, you can do anything, you can make a fake passport, you can change the data,” he said.

Separately, Rep. Robert A. Brady, chairman of the Joint Committee on Printing, has expressed “serious reservations” about GPO’s plan to use contract security guards to protect GPO facilities. In a Dec. 12 letter, Mr. Brady, a Pennsylvania Democrat, stated that GPO’s plan for conducting a security review of the printing office was ignored and he ordered GPO to undertake an outside review.
Questionable profits

GPO’s accounting adds another layer of concern.
The State Department is now charging Americans $100 or more for new e-passports produced by the GPO, depending on how quickly they are needed. That’s up from a cost of around just $60 in 1998.

Internal agency documents obtained by The Times show each blank passport costs GPO an average of just $7.97 to manufacture and that GPO then charges the State Department about $14.80 for each, a margin of more than 85 percent, the documents show.
The accounting allowed GPO to make gross profits of more than $90 million from Oct. 1, 2006, through Sept. 30, 2007, on the production of e-passports. The four subsequent months produced an additional $54 million in gross profits.

The agency set aside more than $40 million of those profits to help build a secure backup passport production facility in the South, still leaving a net profit of about $100 million in the last 16 months. GPO was initially authorized by Congress to make extra profits in order to fund a $41 million backup production facility at a rate of $1.84 per passport. The large surplus, however, went far beyond the targeted funding.
The large profits raised concerns within GPO because the law traditionally has mandated that the agency only charge enough to recoup its actual costs.

According to internal documents and interviews, GPO’s financial officers and even its outside accounting firm began to inquire about the legality of the e-passport profits.
To cut off the debate, GPO’s outgoing legal counsel signed a one-paragraph memo last fall declaring the agency was in compliance with the law prohibiting profits, but offering no legal authority to back up the conclusion. The large profits accelerated, according to the officials, after the opinion issued Oct. 12, 2007, by then-GPO General Counsel Gregory A. Brower. Mr. Brower, currently U.S. Attorney in Nevada, could not be reached and his spokeswoman had no immediate comment.

Fred Antoun, a lawyer who specializes in GPO funding issues, said the agency was set up by Congress to operate basically on a break-even financial basis.
“The whole concept of GPO is eat what you kill,” Mr. Antoun said. “For the average taxpayer, for them to make large profits is kind of reprehensible.”

Likewise, a 1990 report by Congress’ General Accounting Office stated that “by law, GPO must charge actual costs to customers,” meaning it can’t mark up products for a profit.
Like the security concerns, GPO officials brush aside questions about the profits. Agency officials declined a request from The Times to provide an exact accounting of its e-passport costs and revenues, saying only it would not be accurate to claim it has earned the large profits indicated by the documents showing the difference between the manufacturing costs and the State Department fees.

Questioned about its own annual report showing a $90 million-plus profit on e-passports in fiscal year 2007 alone, the GPO spokesman Mr. Somerset would only say that he thinks the agency is in legal compliance and that “GPO is not overcharging the State Department.”
Mr. Somerset said 66 different budget line items are used to price new passports and “we periodically review our pricing structure with the State Department.”

Public Printer Robert Tapella, the GPO’s top executive, faced similar questions during a House subcommittee hearing on March 6. Mr. Tapella told lawmakers that increased demand for passports — especially from Americans who now need them to cross into Mexico and Canada — produced “accelerated revenue recognition,” and “not necessarily excess profits.”
GPO plans to produce 28 million blank passports this year up from about 9 million five years ago.

A State Department consular affairs spokesman, Steve Royster referred questions to GPO on e-passports costs.
Congress to weigh in

GPO’s explanations have not satisfied lawmakers, who are poised to dig deeper.
Mr. Dingell, the House Commerce chairman, said The Times’ findings are “extremely serious to both the integrity of the e-passport program and to U.S. national security” and he has asked an investigative subcommittee chaired by Rep. Bart Stupak, Michigan Democrat, to begin an investigation.

“Our initial inquiry suggests that more needs to be done to understand whether the supply chain is secure and fully capable of protecting the manufacturing of this critical document,” Mr. Dingell told The Times.
Mr. Stupak said that considering the personal information contained on e-passports, “it is essential that the entire production chain be secure and free from potential tampering.” He added: “The GPO needs to make every effort to ensure that future passport components are made in America under the tightest security possible.”

Michelle Van Cleave, a former National Counterintelligence Executive, said outsourcing passport work and components creates new security vulnerabilities, not just for passports.
“Protecting the acquisition stream is a serious concern in many sensitive areas of government activity, but the process for assessing the risk to national security is at best loose and in some cases missing altogether,” she told The Times.

“A U.S. passport has the full faith and credit of the U.S. government behind the citizenship and identity of the bearer,” she said.
“What foreign intelligence service or international terrorist group wouldn’t like to be able to masquerade as U.S. citizens? It would be a profound liability for U.S. intelligence and law enforcement if we lost confidence in the integrity of our passports.”

March 26, 2008

Placentia Official In Hot Water Over Day Labor Incident

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/hubble-city-property-2005239-laborers-placentia

Public Works Director Gerry Hubble Cited For Allegedly Hiring Two Illegal Immigrants

PLACENTIA – Public Works Director Gerry Hubble is facing trespassing charges for allegedly driving into a Lake Forest strip mall and hiring two immigrants as day laborers.

A sheriff’s report alleges that Hubble stopped his truck on private property at 25252 Jeronimo Road in Lake Forest Sept. 15 and “made no attempt to patronize any of the business on the property.”

A security guard hired by the property owner called sheriff’s deputies, who pulled over Hubble’s truck and arrested him and two men described as illegal immigrants.

Hubble, a Modjeska Canyon resident, has pled not guilty to the trespassing charge. A pre-trial date has been set for April 2. A conviction carries a maximum sentence of six months in prison and a $1,000 fine.

Activists associated with the Minuteman Project verbally confronted Hubble at Placentia’s most recent City Council meeting and have posted pictures of Hubble trying to hire the workers on their website.

Hubble sat quietly shaking his head as six activists took turns criticizing him during the public comments portion of the meeting, calling him a “criminal,” “pathetic” and a “piss-poor American.”

A woman sat in the back of the chambers holding a sign, “Gerry Hubble Law Breaker,” and Minuteman bloggers posted photos of the scene online.

“It was kind of tough having to sit there and listen without being able to respond,” Hubble said.

Activists organized the protests after Hubble appeared in front of Lake Forest’s City Council March 4 to protest the city’s decision to prosecute.

Lake Forest has been trying to halt day laborer hires at the Jeronimo site, arresting workers and residents for trespassing and some workers for having illegal documents.  The American Civil Liberties Union is suing the city on behalf of the workers.

“I think it would be a great time to hold a rally in front of Placentia City Hall and let Mr. Hubble know what you think about his actions in front of his peers at the City Council meeting,” read a message board entry on saveourstate.org. “If this man gets away with this, we have lost.”

According to transcripts from the Lake Forest council meeting, Hubble said that he was on the property “to hire a couple of day laborers but second to pick up a couple bottles of water,” debating the sheriff’s claim that he did not attempt to patronize any of the business.

“I kind of liken it to shopping at Mervyn’s or Macy’s where you go to look for a shirt, you don’t see what you want so you don’t buy it,” the transcript reads. He also stated that he was hiring the laborers to help “load a couple units of railroad ties.” The truck that was pulled over was registered to Hubble.

After getting pulled over and questioned, Hubble allegedly told the deputy: “My intent was to hire day laborers.”

According to the sheriff’s report, two men that Hubble had picked up on the property were arrested for trespassing and having counterfeit Matrícula Consular cards, an identification card issued by the Mexican government.

Hubble declined comment on the allegations themselves, only pointing out that he had not been read his Miranda rights before talking with the officer.

Placentia Mayor Scott Nelson thanked the activists for their input and said that further investigation was needed before the city made any sort of comment. City Administrator Bob Dominguez declined to comment on any potential actions taken by the city.

March 24, 2008

Jan Reynolds, Former Hanford, CA Manager Facing Felony Perjury Charges

Jan Reynolds, the former Hanford, CA manager, is facing two counts of felony perjury charges for allegedly lying about the existence of an original 1990 employment agreement so he could negotiate a more lucrative severance package for himself in 2005.

March 15, 2008

Obama’s Earmarks: $1 Million for Wife’s Hospital

March 14, 2008

There is nothing wrong with Obama making a donation out of his own checkbook, but when he uses tax payer money to make his donations, then there is a problem. 

It also seems Mrs. Obama has made out very well, with a pay increase that doubled her already enormous salary. For being a not-for-profit it sure seems that Mrs. Obama makes a good profit.  It would be wonderful if all those vice-presidents salaries would be cut in half and put back into the hospital.  Think of all the aid and research they could provide for American citizens then.  

American’s can be sure of one thing if they elect Obama President, he will bring home the bacon to his own family.

Newsmax 

Presidential hopeful Barack Obama has released a list of $740 million in earmark requests he made in the past three years, and it includes $1 million for the hospital where his wife Michelle is a vice president.

The request for $1 million for the University of Chicago Medical Center was to help pay for construction of a new pavilion.

“I can tell you with 100 percent certainty that Michelle Obama was not part of our lobbying over the request, not in any way,” Kelly Sullivan, another vice president at the medical center, told the New York Times.

In any case, the 2006 request for the hospital was not approved by the Senate, as was about $7 out of every $10 the Illinois senator asked for in earmarks.

Bud he did manage to secure $1.3 million for a high-explosive technology program for the Army’s Bradley Fighting Vehicle. The program was overseen by General Dynamics, and one of Obama’s top supporters, James Crown — a member of Obama’s national finance committee — serves on the board of General Dynamics.

Obama also secured a $750,000 earmark for renovation of a space center named for Crown’s grandfather, Henry Crown, at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.

And Obama secured several million dollars for a project at Chicago State University. Illinois State Senate President Emil Jones Jr., a close personal friend of Obama and one of his benefactors, has been a strong supporter of Chicago State, according to the Times.

Other earmarks sought and secured by Obama include more than $10 million for a military arsenal in Rock Island, several million dollars for research on soybean disease and livestock genes, and $100,000 for after-school programs at the Chicago Jesuit Academy.

Michelle Obama is on leave from her job while her husband campaigns for president, but after Barack was elected to congress, she received a big raise.

USA Today reports that officials at the University of Chicago Hospitals told the Chicago Tribune that Michelle is “worth her weight in gold.”

“She’s terrific,” added Michael Riordan, who was president of the hospital in March 2005, when Michelle Obama was promoted to vice president for external affairs and had her annual salary increased from $121,910 to $316,962.

Hospitals spokesman John Easton told the Tribune that Michelle Obama’s salary is in line with those of the 16 other vice presidents at the not-for-profit medical center.

Eight Charged In Fake ID Scheme in Two States

Washington Times

HARRISONBURG, Va. (AP) — Eight persons are charged with conspiring to obtain bogus Ohio identification cards for illegal immigrants in Virginia and elsewhere, a federal prosecutor said yesterday.

U.S. Attorney John L. Brownlee said the fraudulent IDs apparently were intended to help the illegal immigrants obtain employment and avoid deportation.
“There is no terrorism at all,” Mr. Brownlee said. “This is an immigration case.”

Four defendants are from Ohio: two employees of a state Bureau of Motor Vehicles office in Columbus and two interpreters who served as brokers for the conspiracy, according to an indictment handed up by a federal grand jury in Harrisonburg.
Three defendants from Virginia recruited illegals who were looking to purchase Puerto Rican birth certificates and matching Social Security cards, which were provided by defendant Luis M. Rosado-Rodriguez, 29, of Ponce, Puerto Rico, according to the indictment.

The recruiters sold the documents to the illegal immigrants and made arrangements for their travel to Ohio to obtain the illegal state IDs, the indictment says.
Mr. Brownlee said Ohio was chosen because Virginia has tightened procedures for obtaining IDs at its state-operated Department of Motor Vehicles offices since the 2001 terrorist attacks. Ohio’s departments, in contrast, are franchises that can be obtained by individual state contractors.

The Ohio BMV in this case was managed by Nekeia Mack-Fuller, 29, of Reynoldsburg, Ohio. She was charged along with a clerk, Michelle Eckerman, 27, of Canal Winchester, Ohio.Authorities identified the interpreters as Christina Dawn Cheatham, 23, and Jose Antonio Gutierrez-Ramirez, 34, both of Columbus. Those two also operated a “staging area” and provided information and transportation to the illegal immigrants, according to the indictment.

The recruiters were Edwin Roberto Mendez, 32; Jairo Gomez, 32; and a man identified only as Juan, age and last name unknown, all of Harrisonburg.
Mr. Brownlee said Mr. Rosado-Rodriguez is thought to be in Puerto Rico, and authorities were searching for him. They also were attempting to identify and locate Juan. The others are in custody or have dates to appear in U.S. District Court.

The offenses occurred from January 2004 through last month. Mr. Brownlee said the investigation began after four Guatemalan nationals possessing Puerto Rican documents and Ohio IDs were detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in August. They said they had purchased the Puerto Rican documents from Mr. Mendez.

Wisconsin Highway Commissioner Ticketed For Drunk Driving

March 4, 2008

ELLSWORTH, Wis –  Ross Christopherson, the Pierce County Highway Commissioner has been ticketed for drunk driving but he won’t lose his job.  He will instead be given a 30 day unpaid suspension and have his county car privileges taken away for six months.

This seems a truly gentle slap on the wrist for what could have been a fatal situation had he struck another vehicle while intoxicated and behind the wheel.

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