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Under (d)(3)(A): the responsibility for ensuring the integrity of this process is going to be put in the hands of any number of radical ethnic-identity "labor" or "collective bargaining organizations," many with a political agenda that includes increasing both legal and illegal immigration.

This is to say, the responsibility for ensuring the integrity of this process is going to be put in the hands of organizations with an interest in "establishing" as many aliens as possible, both for membership reasons and, often, for racial reasons.

To take one example, the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) has a message from the president, Milton Rosado, posted on its website endorsing the "road to legalization" i.e., amnesty, and "will not rest until we see overall improved working conditions for all Latino workers here and throughout the Americas!"

The website promises:

"LCLAA will continue working with UNITE, the AFL-CIO and other international unions that adversely [sic] affect Latinos here and abroad."

In other words, this organization, a transnational race-identity group, with interests overtly indifferent (read their website) to the well-being of the people of the United States, is being given significant influence over the key "establishment" process by which an unlimited number of foreign nationals could be permanently rooted within the United States.

Some might object that it cannot be asumed that radical organizations of this nature will be designated to submit "establishment records" under this bill, but there is nothing in this bill to prevent it, and it is precisely what has happened in past amnesties. In fact, the bill's chief sponsor, Chris Cannon of Utah has this organization, along with many similar ones, listed on his website as a sponsor of the AgJOBS amnesty.

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TITLE I--ADJUSTMENT TO LAWFUL STATUS
Sec. 101. AGRICULTURAL WORKERS.
(a) TEMPORARY RESIDENT STATUS
  (b) RIGHTS OF ALIENS GRANTED TEMPORARY RESIDENT STATUS
  (c) ADJUSTMENT TO PERMANENT RESIDENCE
(d) APPLICATIONS
  (e) WAIVER OF NUMERICAL LIMITATIONS AND CERTAIN GROUNDS FOR INADMISSIBILITY
  (f) TEMPORARY STAY OF REMOVAL AND WORK AUTHORIZATION FOR CERTAIN APPLICANTS
  (g) ADMINISTRATIVE AND JUDICIAL REVIEW
  (h) DISSEMINATION OF INFORMATION ON ADJUSTMENT PROGRAM
  (i) REGULATIONS
  (j) EFFECTIVE DATE
  (k) FUNDING
 
SEC. 101. AGRICULTURAL WORKERS.

(d) APPLICATIONS-

(1) TO WHOM MAY BE MADE-

(A) WITHIN THE UNITED STATES- The Secretary shall provide that--

(i) applications for temporary resident status under subsection (a) may be filed--

(d)(1)(A)(i)(I) An enormous financial windfall for the American Immigration Lawyers' Association (AILA). .

Click here to listen to a 30 minute audio tape of the sponsor of this bill, Chris Cannon of Utah, giving a speech at an AILA event and draw your own conclusions.

(d)(1)(A)(i)(II):

Qualified designated entity will mean, if history serves as a lesson, an assortment of organizations hostile to limits on immigration.

(I) with the Secretary, but only if the applicant is represented by an attorney; or

(II) with a qualified designated entity (designated under paragraph (2)), but only if the applicant consents to the forwarding of the application to the Secretary; and

(ii) applications for adjustment of status under subsection (c) shall be filed directly with the Secretary.

(B) OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES- The Secretary, in cooperation with the Secretary of State, shall establish a procedure whereby an alien may apply for temporary resident status under subsection (a) at an appropriate consular office outside the United States. [see below on "outside the United States."

(C) PRELIMINARY APPLICATIONS-

(d)(1)(C)(i): a foreign national need only make the application and be granted admission, provided he enter through the border with Mexico. Anyone in the world may apply for admission to the United States.

(i) IN GENERAL- During the application period described in subsection (a)(1)(B), the Secretary may grant admission to the United States as a temporary resident and provide an `employment authorized' endorsement or other appropriate

work permit to any alien who presents a preliminary application for such status under subsection (a) at a designated port of entry on the southern land border of the United States. An alien who does not enter through a port of entry is subject to deportation and removal as otherwise provided in this Act.

(d)(1)(B)(ii) Documentary evidence: In the 1986 amnesty , documentary evidence included personal affidavits and utility bills. Since the bill allows leeway for assumed names, the potential for fraud under this bill is almost limitless.

(d)(1)(B)(iii): To be eligible to enter the United States, the alien must only have made the application.

The only restrictions left after the INA is gutted by (e)(2) are health, criminal record, and the like (even welfare use is excused). Apparently, to establish the applicants claim of credibility under this clause, the applicant will have to convince a foreign consular officer that he was once an illegal alien in the United States. Any non-former illegal alien at an American consulate abroad who tells the truth will be prevented from applying.

To establish his former illegal status and thus gain entry to the United States, the alien will have to produce a document verifying that he was once illegal. That document can be provided under (3)(A) by a "collective bargaining organization" like LCLAA, which says on its website it "will not rest until we see overall improved working conditions for all Latino workers here and throughout the Americas!"

(ii) DEFINITION- For purposes of clause (i), the term `preliminary application' means a fully completed and signed application which contains specific information concerning the performance of qualifying employment in the United States, together with the payment of the appropriate fee and the submission of photographs and the documentary evidence which the applicant intends to submit as proof of such employment.

(iii) ELIGIBILITY- An applicant under clause (i) must be otherwise admissible to the United States under subsection (e)(2) and must establish to the satisfaction of the examining officer during an interview that the applicant's claim to eligibility for temporary resident status is credible.

(D) TRAVEL DOCUMENTATION- The Secretary shall provide each alien granted status under this section with a counterfeit-resistant document of authorization to enter or reenter the United States that meets the requirements established by the Secretary.

(2) DESIGNATION OF ENTITIES TO RECEIVE APPLICATIONS-

(A) IN GENERAL- For purposes of receiving applications under subsection (a), the Secretary--

(i) shall designate qualified farm labor organizations and associations of employers; and

One of the farm labor organizations listed on Chris Cannon's website as an endorser of the AgJOBS amnesty openly working with the government of Mexico to sue the United States:

FARMWORKER JUSTICE FUND (FJF)
From their website: The Government of Mexico, on September 5, 2003, agreed to review the treatment of Mexican citizens employed on H-2A visas in North Carolina. The Farmworker Justice Fund, Inc. (FJF) and Central Independiente de Obreros Agricolas y Campesinos (CIOAC) of Mexico City filed a petition seeking review under the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), also known as the "NAFTA labor side agreement."

OTHER RELIABLE DOCUMENTATION: The Treasury Department has already permitted official recognition of foreign issued ID cards, like the matricula consular, as sufficient identification for opening a bank account. What would stop DHS from doing the same? In other words, this bill could cede a significant level of control over our immigration policy to foreign nations.

UNITE: a "collective bargaining organization" that openly supports amnesty for illegal aliens and opposes the enforcement of immigration law by non-federal authorities. UNITE opposes the Bush amnesty plan as not going far enough. UNITE, however, does support the Cannon AgJOBS amnesty, and is listed as one of the sponsors of the bill on Cannon's House website.

(ii) may designate such other persons as the Secretary determines are qualified and have substantial experience, demonstrate competence, and have traditional long-term involvement in the preparation and submittal of applications for adjustment of status under section 209, 210, or 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, Public Law 89-732, Public Law 95-145, or the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986.

(B) REFERENCES- Organizations, associations, and persons designated under subparagraph (A) are referred to in this Act as `qualified designated entities'.

(3) PROOF OF ELIGIBILITY-

(A) IN GENERAL- An alien may establish that the alien meets the requirement of subsection (a)(1)(A) or subsection (c)(1)(A) through government employment records or records supplied by employers or collective bargaining organizations, and other reliable documentation as the alien may provide.

The Secretary shall establish special procedures to properly credit work in cases in which an alien was employed under an assumed name.

(B) DOCUMENTATION OF WORK HISTORY- (i) An alien applying for status under subsection (a)(1) or subsection (c)(1) has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the alien has worked the requisite number of hours or days (as required under subsection (a)(1)(A) or subsection (c)(1)(A)).

(ii) If an employer or farm labor contractor employing such an alien has kept proper and adequate records respecting such employment, the alien's burden of proof under clause (i) may be met by securing timely production of those records under regulations to be promulgated by the Secretary.

(iii) An alien can meet such burden of proof if the alien establishes that the alien has in fact performed the work described in subsection (a)(1)(A) or subsection (c)(1)(A) by producing sufficient evidence to show the extent of that employment as a matter of just and reasonable inference.

(4) TREATMENT OF APPLICATIONS BY QUALIFIED DESIGNATED ENTITIES- Each qualified designated entity must agree to forward to the Secretary applications filed with it in accordance with paragraph (1)(A)(i)(II) but not to forward to the Secretary applications filed with it unless the applicant has consented to such forwarding. No such entity may make a determination required by this section to be made by the Secretary. Upon the request of the alien, a qualified designated entity shall assist the alien in obtaining documentation of the work history of the alien.

(d)(5): the Secretary of Homeland Security, under whose authority the bill would be administered, will have no access to the internal records of the "collective bargaining organizations" who would be allowed, under AgJOBS, to assist foreign nationals apply for the AgJOBS program. This would make it extremely difficult to determine whether these organizations were working fraudulently with foreign governments or with associates in other countries to gain admission into the United States for an unlimited number of immigrants from anywhere in the world..

(5) LIMITATION ON ACCESS TO INFORMATION- Files and records prepared for purposes of this subsection by qualified designated entities operating under this subsection are confidential and the Secretary shall not have access to such files or records relating to an alien without the consent of the alien, except as allowed by a court order issued pursuant to paragraph (6).

(6) CONFIDENTIALITY OF INFORMATION-

(A) IN GENERAL- Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, neither the Secretary, nor any other official or employee of the Department of Homeland Security, or bureau or agency thereof, may--

(i) use the information furnished by the applicant pursuant to an application filed under this section, the information provided to the applicant by a person designated under paragraph (2)(A), or any information provided by an employer or former employer, for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application, or for enforcement of paragraph (7);

(ii) make any publication whereby the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified; or

(iii) permit anyone other than the sworn officers and employees of the Department of Homeland Security, or bureau or agency thereof, or, with respect to applications filed with a qualified designated entity, that qualified designated entity, to examine individual applications.

(B) CRIME- Whoever knowingly uses, publishes, or permits information to be examined in violation of this paragraph shall be fined not more than $10,000.

OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES:

If this bill is meant to bring illegal aliens already in the country "out of the shadows," as the sponsor insists, why is the State Depsrtment being directed to establish application procedures at consulates abroad?

Subsection (a) at (1)(C) requires that an alien applying for "temporary" status under this bill meet the requirements of admissibility already in law at 8 U.S.C. 1182 (e.g., he must not have any communicable diseases) except as otherwise provided under subsection (e)(2).

At subsection (e)(2), we find that several restrictions currently in law are waived; among them, the restriction on granting admission to aliens who have already been deported, or the restriction on granting visas to persons wishing to enter the United States simply to work.

Furthermore, all caps on the numbers have been removed for those who can "adjust" from illegal to legal status. Supporters of this bill might argue that since the waiver of the numerical limits applies only to those already in the country prior to Aug 31, 2003, and working in agriculture, that there is an effective cap.

However, since the responsibility for verifying that work history is turned over to transnational racial identity groups, it is not difficult to see, except for the willfully blind, what the outcome of this bill could be.

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(7) PENALTIES FOR FALSE STATEMENTS IN APPLICATIONS-

(A) CRIMINAL PENALTY- Whoever--

(i) files an application for status under subsection (a) or (c) and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry; or

(ii) creates or supplies a false writing or document for use in making such an application;

shall be fined in accordance with title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.

(B) INADMISSIBILITY- An alien who is convicted of a crime under subparagraph (A) shall be considered to be inadmissible to the United States on the ground described in section 212(a)(6)(C)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(6)(C)(i)).

(8) ELIGIBILITY FOR LEGAL SERVICES- Section 504(a)(11) of Public Law 104-134 (110 Stat. 1321-53 et seq.) shall not be construed to prevent a recipient of funds under the Legal Services Corporation Act (42 U.S.C. 2996 et seq.) from providing legal assistance directly related to an application for adjustment of status under this section.

(9) APPLICATION FEES-

(A) FEE SCHEDULE- The Secretary shall provide for a schedule of fees that--

(i) shall be charged for the filing of applications for status under subsections (a) and (c); and

(ii) may be charged by qualified designated entities to help defray the costs of services provided to such applicants.

(B) PROHIBITION ON EXCESS FEES BY QUALIFIED DESIGNATED ENTITIES- A qualified designated entity may not charge any fee in excess of, or in addition to, the fees authorized under subparagraph (A)(ii) for services provided to applicants.

(C) DISPOSITION OF FEES-

(i) IN GENERAL- There is established in the general fund of the Treasury a separate account, which shall be known as the `Agricultural Worker Immigration Status Adjustment Account'. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, there shall be deposited as offsetting receipts into the account all fees collected under subparagraph (A)(i).

(ii) USE OF FEES FOR APPLICATION PROCESSING- Amounts deposited in the `Agricultural Worker Immigration Status Adjustment Account' shall remain available to the Secretary until expended for processing applications for status under subsections (a) and (c).

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