You are currently browsing the Blogger In Chief weblog archives for the day 6. January 2010.
| M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Dec | Feb » | |||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
- 2010 census (1)
- 2010 elections (30)
- 287g (7)
- 9.12 (1)
- ACORN (7)
- Afghanistan (1)
- amnesty (74)
- bailouts (5)
- birthers (2)
- Blogroll (184)
- border violence (38)
- ca-and-trade (6)
- censorship (3)
- corruption (3)
- crime (8)
- drug cartels (2)
- education (6)
- gun rights (4)
- health care (44)
- House of Death (12)
- immigration (54)
- LRAD (1)
- main stream media bias (4)
- Mason Weaver (1)
- national debt (2)
- national security (6)
- Obama citizenship (1)
- Second Amendment (3)
- senior citizens (2)
- stimulus (10)
- tea parties (18)
- terrorists (6)
- town hall meetings (9)
- turn on the water (3)
- Uncategorized (27)
- 31. May 2011: What I Learned From the Tea Party
- 7. June 2010: The Nation Stands with Arizona by Dawn Wildman
- 13. May 2010: Spend, spend, spend Boxer loves a good bailout
- 13. May 2010: San Diego School Board restricts travel to Arizona, but travel okay to Mexico
- 11. May 2010: Mexico's government cries foul over Arizona's new law
- 10. May 2010: Illegal immigration flares on both sides of the issue
- 10. May 2010: San Diego School Board moves to warn students about Arizona's new law
- 5. May 2010: May Day Rally videos show many are ill informed about illegal immigration
- 4. May 2010: San Diego City Council denaounces Arizona's immigration law
- 3. May 2010: No more taxes is the call from Americans when it comes to the deficit
Archive for 6. January 2010
Violence in Mexico unabated, entry into U.S. remains inconsistent
6. January 2010 by admin.
As the cycle of violence continues unabated in
“One of the Department of Homeland Security’s primary missions is to maintain and regularly update the systems that help red-flag applicants for admission with possible terrorist ties, as well as wanted persons and known smugglers. However, even the best state-of-the-art name-check system is only as good as the diligence of law enforcement officers using it,” says Julia Davis former CBP agent at San Ysidro border crossing.
“Thoroughly scanning and verifying the identity documents of every applicant for admission to the
To be fair another agent stated sometimes there are circumstances when the computer system “goes down” and it is up to the Customs and Border Patrol agent to use their judgment when letting citizens or Legal Permanent Residence (LPR) card users into the country.
“In many cases if the subject is questionable they should be sent to secondary where another agent can ask questions and determine the admissibility of said individuals,” he said. Keep reading
Posted in border violence, immigration, Blogroll | Print | No Comments »