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North Carolina Deportation Case Highlights Child Welfare Maze

Immigrants Lost Children

By MICHAEL BIESECKER and GOSIA WOZNIACKA   03/ 9/12 02:47 PM ET  AP

RALEIGH, N.C. -- When immigration agents deported Felipe Montes to Mexico two years ago, his three young sons were left in the care of their mentally ill, American-born mother in a small North Carolina mountain town.

Despite immigration policies that allow for the release of primary caregivers, federal authorities worked swiftly to expel Montes. Within two weeks, social workers placed the boys in foster care.

Child welfare officials are now asking a judge to strip Montes of his parental rights, reasoning it's better for the children to live with strangers in the country where they were born than with their father in Mexico. Such a ruling could clear the way for their adoption.

That would be unfathomable to Montes, whose only brushes with the law were a string of traffic violations.

"I don't drink, I don't smoke, I don't use drugs," said Montes, 32, who crossed the border illegally in 2003 to work on Christmas tree farms. "I have always taken care of my children, I have always loved them. And now, the social services people want to take away my rights and give my children away to strangers."

Montes' lawyer says the father is at risk of being deemed an unfit parent solely because of his immigration status.

Like thousands of deported parents whose children were taken in by the foster care system, Montes is barred from returning to visit his kids or attend court hearings on their future. He wants his boys to live with him in El Encino, a small village in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, but county officials have declined to allow it.

"I can't see them. I can't give them a hug. It's very depressing," Montes said by phone from Mexico.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials say their intent is not to break up families, but there's no system to allow detained parents to make decisions about their children or reunite with them. Legal experts say parents often lose custody solely due to immigration problems – and not abuse or neglect.

A 2011 report from the Applied Research Center, a New York-based racial justice think tank, found about 5,100 children in 22 states were in foster care after their parents were either detained or deported. The government doesn't compile national numbers on such separations.

The report – based on surveys with child welfare caseworkers, attorneys, judges and immigrants – concludes that immigration officers often refuse to allow parents to make arrangements for their children. Once in ICE custody, parents are often denied access to family court hearings, phones and attorneys. Many don't even know what happened to their children.

"Once parents are deported, they're considered fallen off the face of the earth," said Seth Wessler, the report's principal investigator. "Family reunification tends to go out the door."

Such separations are enough of a problem that immigration advocates urge parents to prepare kits with children's passports and medical records or to sign documents allowing others to care for the children.

Three years after Montes came to the U.S., he married a North Carolina native and the couple rented a trailer near Sparta, a town of about 2,000. The marriage made him eligible for legal immigration status, but he didn't undertake the lengthy, expensive process.

While he worked at a landscaping company, his wife stayed at home. Still, Montes was the primary caregiver for 4-year-old Isaiah and 2-year-old Adrian – and both were sent to daycare while he worked. His wife was eight months pregnant with their third baby, Angel, when Felipe was detained.

Drew Jackson, the court-appointed lawyer for the wife, said 31-year-old Marie Montes collects federal disability for a mental illness that prevents her from working. He declined to say what her diagnosis is.

"Felipe was the caregiver for the family, the one that supported everybody, made the money and took care of the kids," Jackson said. "Marie is from a very poor family, and they're not really in a position to help. Between that and her mental problems, she's just not in a position to support three children without her husband."

Felipe Montes' legal problems began in 2007 when the state passed a law requiring a valid Social Security number to get a driver's license. Previously, a federal taxpayer ID was accepted.

Unable to renew his license, Montes said he tried to avoid driving. But he had to get to work.

Soon, the town's seven-person police force knew him by sight.

"They would stop me simply because they knew me, they knew my face and knew that I didn't have a license," Montes said.

Police Chief Bob Lane confirmed that his officers sometimes pulled Montes solely because they recognized him. In little more than two years, court records show Montes was cited more than two dozen times for driving with an expired license, an expired registration and without insurance.

In September 2009, a judge sentenced Montes to probation. A year later, he was detained by immigration agents after reporting for a probation meeting. A month after that, he was put on a plane to Mexico.

"They took me away and didn't let me say goodbye to my wife or to my kids," Montes said. "They didn't give me the opportunity to say anything or make any arrangements."

Federal authorities can release people for humanitarian reasons that include being the primary caregiver of minors. In Montes' case, ICE knew he had children and assumed his wife could care for them. The agency said it didn't communicate with Child Protective Services about him.

ICE officials said it's not their job to call child welfare officials every time they detain a parent. They don't have a formal policy for dealing with child welfare agencies, but they work with them as needed.

Two weeks after Montes' deportation, social workers took the children after his wife's electricity and heat were cut off. The older boys were sent to live with one foster family, the newborn with another.

John Blevins, director of Alleghany County Department of Social Services, said in a written statement that his agency's chief mission is to protect children from abuse, but reuniting families is also a priority.

But the agency balked at sending the Montes children to live in Mexico, where Montes works at a walnut farm and shares a house with his uncle, aunt and three nieces.

A home study by Mexican social services authorities shows the Montes family's cement block house in Mexico has a refrigerator, satellite television, microwave and plenty of space for children to play. There's a school a few minutes away.

But North Carolina officials are concerned it doesn't have running water. Officials also said Montes missed some scheduled calls with his children at their day care, or called on the wrong days. Montes has a cell phone, but service can be spotty in rural Mexico.

"I will argue to the judge that some of the things they've asked him to do are legally impossible," said Donna Shumate, Montes' court-appointed lawyer in Sparta. She recounted a conversation with a lawyer for Alleghany County who questioned why authorities would ever "exile" children to a foreign country when they can stay.

Efforts have shifted to terminating his parental rights – the main barrier to reunification with the children being Montes' current residence in another country, according to court documents. Legal experts say that once U.S.-born children of immigrants are in the child welfare system, the agencies often refuse to send them to live with deported parents in other countries.

The foster couple caring for the older boys has expressed an interest in adopting them, Shumate said.

She's working to obtain dual citizenship for the children, in case they're allowed to join their father in Mexico. Marie's lawyer said the mother also supports sending the kids to their father, and she hopes to join them and reunite with her husband.

A family court hearing is set for April 5.

"I don't know what the judge will decide, but I'm hoping for the best," Felipe Montes said. "I hope I can have my children back."

___

Follow AP writer Michael Biesecker at twitter.com/mbieseck

Follow AP writer Gosia Wozniacka at twitter.com/GosiaWozniacka

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RALEIGH, N.C. -- When immigration agents deported Felipe Montes to Mexico two years ago, his three young sons were left in the care of their mentally ill, American-born mother in a small North Carolin...
RALEIGH, N.C. -- When immigration agents deported Felipe Montes to Mexico two years ago, his three young sons were left in the care of their mentally ill, American-born mother in a small North Carolin...
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01:52 PM on 03/12/2012
When an American citizen is sent to jail, and the remaining parent cannot provide for them, this is the normal procedure. So why should illegals be any different? The guy broke numerous laws, and was kicked out. What should the US do simply tell the guy that all of our laws do NOT apply to him and that he is a privileged person who needs no license, can flout all the laws he doesn't like? Sorry, but it is his own fault. Don't do the crime if you cannot live with the consequences.
03:44 PM on 03/12/2012
Don't be so thick. He broke 1 law repeatedly, he didn't have a drivers' license because they wouldn't give him one. Would you rather he stay home & not support his kids? Is that what folks usually do in NC?

He wasn't sent to prison, and wouldn't be. Your problem with him is that he's Mexican. My problem with you is that you're too thick to understand what the problem is, and yet you keep yammering about it. Just like the inbred town he fell into. All 7 cops knew him by name because they had nothing else to do. You gotta wonder if he wasn't their brother-in-law.
04:13 PM on 03/12/2012
NO he brokeMANY laws repeatedly. Let me list them for you. He smuggled himself and who knows what else into the US. THAT is a crime. He is guilty of that. In fact, if he showed up on Secure Com he is in FACT a felon since if he had been caught once before coming in illegally, he is a felon. Then he broke the law working here which is also a crime. He drove without a license of any kind which is crime. I don't know how many times it takes for doing this to become a felony, but I am sure it is not unlimited. If it is unlimited, I am sure the next legislature will remedy that loophole. Just because you live here does NOT mean you have a right to a drivers license. Driving is NOT a god given right and we deny it to lots of Americans too. Try getting a DUI a couple of times and see what happens. A teen in RI lost his right to drive for LIFE recently. So what should he do?

I would rather that he go home and not have kids here. He did a crime and has to pay for it like ALL of us.
01:21 PM on 03/12/2012
This is an outrage. The children should have been sent to Mexico with their father.
03:44 PM on 03/12/2012
Except that Momma has rights too. We don't know that much about her.
11:40 PM on 03/11/2012
So how long do illegals get to violate the laws and how many felonies do they get to commit before anything is done to them? This guy is a convicted felon which makes him ineligible for ever returning to the US. His slight crimes are multiple and he has commtted felonies for which he was deported.

This same situation applies to ALL criminals who are sent to prison too. Think that they get a break and their families taken into consideration? Take the kids and let them be adopted so that at least they will have a chance in life. Keeping them with their criminal father is the worst that could happen to them.
12:22 PM on 03/12/2012
What felony was he convicted of?
01:46 PM on 03/12/2012
The article did not say what felonies he is guilty of, which is the standard for such articles. As I have pointed out in many posts, the Mexican woman who sought refuge in a church in Chicago plead guitly to THREE felonies, yet NO left report on her EVER mentioned that FACT! I do point out that he is more than likely guilty of multiple felonies among which are ID theft, Social Security fraud, if he is working on the books as an employee, he has committed perjury which is a felony, he is working here illegally which is a violation of Federal law. If he was caught by Secure Communities he is in FACT guilty of a felony since he was arrested before, most likely having been caught once before illegally entering. That means his simple presence in the US is a felony. The list is long, and ICE usually rather than prosecuting him will simply deport rather than go to trial.

In any case, he is a PROVEN criminal which is why he spent time in jail and was deported. In virtually ALL countries on Earth, such a person is deported as a matter of course. I think that flouting all of our laws is more than enough reason for him to be gone and lose custody of his children.
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
11:21 PM on 03/11/2012
This "story" reads like an grotesque and aberrant exercise in one horrendously bad decision after another.

1. Man enters country illegally.
2. Marries mentally ill woman
3. Knowingly brings child after child into the cross hairs of our immigration laws.
4. Crazy wife gets crazier
5. "Father" gets deported for breaking our immigration laws
6. Professes to love the children he has always "cared" for.

C'mon! This is just another pathetic story of pathetically dysfunctional people inflicting irreparable damage on innocent children who are the REAL victims of their insane parents.

Release these children for adoption so that they can at least have a chance at a life that might resemble something more normal than the chaos their "parents" dumped on them.

Sadly the children placed in these disgraceful situations and their tears will not impress the people who make these children and make the horrific situations they then leave the children in.

There is NO pretty answer once a very ugly situation is created.
03:46 PM on 03/12/2012
Marries mentally ill woman who gets crazier. Now look me in the eye and tell me that hasn't happened to you.
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
04:26 PM on 03/12/2012
don't make me stop this bus!!!
09:57 PM on 03/11/2012
So I went to Mexico as an Illegal Alien and had a kid with a Mexican woman--and then they caught me. And I cried and complained about the inhumanity when they deported me. You know what the Mexican authorities said? They said, "Too bad gringo (That's raciiiiist! I said) we have laws and it's up to you to respect them, not our responsibility to make an exception for every sob story you Illegals come up with (Can you imagine! No translator was provided for me and my special needs)"

Enough's enough. NO country--except the U.S.--puts up with this ridiculous pandering to Illegals who no dam*well what the laws are BEFORE they break the laws and come here.

Send the kids to live with their father--in Mexico.
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
11:29 PM on 03/11/2012
Just one problem, that's NOT how Mexico's NEW immigration laws work.

Mexico Reforms Its Immigratio­n Laws
1) Illegal entry into Mexican territory is de-criminalized. This means that it is no longer a criminal offense to enter Mexico illegally, and violators will merely be sent back to where they last came from.

2) Illegal migrants will no longer be jailed. They will be taken to a facility run by the Instituto Nacional de Migracion (INM) where they will be fed, clothed, given medical care and the ability to contact their families in their country of origin.

3) Illegal migrants will have the right to seek political asylum or refuge in Mexico and will have a right to a hearing before a judge.

4) Local police, the military, customs and even the Policia Federal will no longer have the authority to question any foreigner’s migratory status. They no longer have any authority to arrest or detain any person suspected of being in the country illegally. Only officials from the INM can do this.

5) Illegal migrants can be given the opportunity to regularize their status and obtain a work/residence permit.

6) Controls are loosened for citizens/nationals of Belize who find an employment in certain Mexican states (i.e. Quintana Roo) to ease the process of a work/residence permit.

http://lewrockwell.com/nestmann/nestmann28.1.html
12:23 PM on 03/12/2012
Except that your story is a fantasy.
04:12 PM on 03/11/2012
All you bigots are sickening! I always wonder why you come onto the latino voices page and spread your hate. People are not any less human because they are illegal. Everyone has human rights! If this father is the only person that is capable of raising his children then his kids should be sent to live with him, it doesn't make sense that they are put into the system to be jumping around home to home being raised by strangers, instead of being with their father. Being born here makes them American citizens, in the future if they choose to return, it's their perogitive! Would you people say the same bullshit if the father was illegal from Canada or Europe? It's funny how no one ever thinks about the illegal Canadians that are under the radar because they blend in. Not to mentio that if you people would actually do your research, it show that WHITE people have the highest numbers off people on the welfare system!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
09:08 PM on 03/11/2012
Do you think?

There aren't 11.2 million illegal Canadians running around the U-S-A, demanding the rights & benefits of U.S. Citizenship ~ without, becoming "vetted" Naturalized U.S. Citizens

Like the "vetted" legal immigrants that the USCIS grants entry into the U-S-A each & every 38 seconds, since 2001?

10 million "vetted" legal immigrants in 10 years on their "pathway" to the rights & benefits of Naturalized U.S. Citizenship.

Evidence ~ the U.S. Immigration Laws & Policies are NOT Broken ~ just, unenforced
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
11:30 PM on 03/11/2012
Viper,

Those 11.2 million ILLEGALS statistic is WAAAAAAYYYYYYY undercounted.

I travel around the country and I have personally observed that there is not a restaurant kitchen, car wash, landscape crew or cab company that is NOT over-run with illegals from all over the world.

But clearly the Mexican ILLEGAL is the most populous.

Enough with the apologist, escapist drones "splaining" and defending the indefensible.

US immigration policy has been reduced to politically incorrect and irrelevant and the US will NOT recover culturally from this catastrophe and our limp government is NOT doing enough to curtail this disastrous situation.

The US will have changed more in 50 years than in the previous 250.
We are seeing what the collapse of a cultural matrix looks like.
America, we barely knew you.
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
11:45 PM on 03/11/2012
How do you know there aren't 15 million illegals who are of European decent. No one knows and no one cares because they are the right color.

All European countries qualify for the VWP, including Japan and 2 other Asian countries, so it is a lot easier for them to get in and then stay if they want to.

quote:
How does a country qualify to participate in the Visa Waiver Program (VWP)? To be admitted to the Visa Waiver Program, a country must meet various security and other requirements, such as enhanced law enforcement and security-related data sharing with the United States and timely reporting of both blank and issued lost and stolen passports. VWP members are also required to maintain high counterterrorism, law enforcement, border control, and document security standards.
http://travel.state.gov/visa/temp/without/without_1990.html#countries
07:29 PM on 03/10/2012
His kids are legal citizens. He's not. If they choose to go to mexico to live with their father they should be allowed. If not then they can enter the human services system.

This isn't that hard.
09:46 PM on 03/10/2012
The kids are minors and an infant, that is why the State has authority over them.
"This isn't that hard"
03:48 PM on 03/12/2012
What isn't hard is understanding that minors don't have choices.

The unknown here is the mother. I don't have a lot of confidence in a town of 7 cops that have nothing better to do than look for license violations. You gotta wonder how many of them are related to momma.
06:50 PM on 03/10/2012
Sorry - The USA & England,etc. are already overburdened with the 'needy'. I'd rather our government pay to send them BACK to wherever they came from & fund Border Patrol to keep them OUT. If they stay, they have baby after baby who then become citizens. They burden Welfare, Medicaid, housing,education & on & on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winter Skye
Spiritual being not human doing
04:27 PM on 03/10/2012
I think it is very odd that the US government would be so unwilling to hand over children to their deported parent. Not right at all, unless there was proof of abuse.

HOWEVER...I wonder about the following: how does an illegal marry a citizen and is eligible to become a citizen? Why would he marry a mentally ill woman AND THEN make THREE KIDS! It's always THREE! Have you ever seen a Mexican family with one or TWO kids? Nope, at least three, whether or not they have two nickels to rub together!
07:18 PM on 03/10/2012
The children should be deported with the father. Clearly the mother is unable to provide for their care. NONE of these children should have been born in the USA anyway. I am NOT a radical - simply realistic.
BTW, I lived in Florida for over 30 years. These illegals generally have more like 6 children - not 3.I cannot express how many times I was shopping at Walmart(for tuna, bread)& stuck behind Mexicans with the red,white & blue card allowing them hundreds of dollars in groceries & able to get cash back. They'd bring a 10 yr.old(who should be in school) to translate.
12:07 AM on 03/11/2012
Except the children were born here. Unless you want the government to start deporting US citizens...
12:20 AM on 03/12/2012
Lazy, bigoted generalizations are not a valid argument.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winter Skye
Spiritual being not human doing
02:45 PM on 03/12/2012
So you never answered my question about your greedy, lazy contractor hubby.
03:30 PM on 03/10/2012
The sad true here is that the children are not "white", otherwise, people in this page would be conscientious, and immediately see that the children belong with their father.
But, instead people focus on race, working status of the father, MONEY, politics, and hatred.

And needless to say, only a few good souls worry about the other 5,000 children lost in foster care who are experiencing similar situations. Will God bless America?
07:08 PM on 03/10/2012
I agree the United States pays way too much for American citizens who are life long 'burdens' to society. OUR government needs to stand strong regarding how long a citizen may collect Welfare, Food stamps, Medicaid, Housing,Education ad nauseum. These benefits are supposed to be temporary. If these recipients continue to reproduce, our government NEEDS to set limits. Two children should be the absolute LIMIT. After that, the babies should be placed for adoption. There are many parents in the USA unable to reproduce who would love & provide for these babies. End the insanity of the blood suckers. Once the youngest child is 6 mo. old, the parent should be working & taking care of their own. Sadly, US taxpayers do NOT need/want illegal aliens taking advantage of OUR system in addition.
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
11:57 PM on 03/11/2012
You have no idea who is taking advantage of whom.

The Story of 500 Years of Global Greed and Misery

If you look at the flows of money from North to South, and then from South to North, what you find is that the South is financing the North to the tune of about 200 billion dollars every year."

......"for us in the North to maintain this lifestyle, we have to plunge more people below the poverty line in the South." But if the South had cartels to raise the prices of their minerals and agricultur­al products, the economy of the North would collapse.

.... poverty is not an accident. It began with military conquest, slavery and colonization that resulted in the seizure of land, minerals and forced labor. Today, global poverty has reached new levels because of unfair debt, trade and tax policies -- in other words, wealthy countries exploiting the weaknesses of poor, developing countries such that today 20% of the planet's population uses 80% of its resources and consumes 30% more than the planet can regenerate.

Watch the video if you have the courage.
http://www.hulu.com/watch/151119/the-end-of-poverty

http://www­.alternet.­org/story/­144129/the­_story_of_­500_years_­of_global_­greed_and_­misery/?pa­ge=1
07:30 PM on 03/10/2012
You're blaming white people for something a mexican did to his kids?
09:42 PM on 03/10/2012
Is that the conclusion from your own conscience?. Please note that I did not assigned guilt to anyone. And most likely, you would not understand (as blame seems to be trigger automatically for you when you refer to a specific nationality), but it's not about blame, but about doing what is right, or how to fix the situation.
Peace to you soul.
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
12:00 AM on 03/12/2012
And you're blaiming the father for something Americans did to him.

Up for Grabs
[Mexico & 10 years of NAFTA]
by David Bacon
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/NAFTA_FTAA/Mexico_NAFTA_TenYears.html
02:31 PM on 03/10/2012
So Cruel. No one is thinking about the children. Like it or not they were born in the US. This gives them the opportunity to give back to the country of their birth when they grow up. I wonder what the difference would have been if, for instance, the father had been a US citizen who had relocated to Mexico. Would not the local social services have given him the opportunity to raise his children. Remember, no matter how we feel about the action of the parent, the children did no wrong.
Now lets consider one other thing: Did you know that it is practically impossible to adopt Mexican children? Just go and ask an adoption agency how many adoptions they have facilitated between Mexico and the US. These Mexican-American children are, therefore, a prime commodity on the adoption market. So one has to wonder: Is there is a financial impetus to the breaking up of this family? Who will make money if these children are placed for adoption, attorneys and social workers and other bureaucrats and the agencies they work for. Who will make money if the children are returned to their father's care in Mexico? Has anyone asked the children what they want???
07:32 PM on 03/10/2012
He didn't "relocate", he snuck in.

Mexico has very strict immigration laws. If he had tried this there he would have been immediately deported. If he tried it again he would have gone to jail and then been deported.
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
12:07 AM on 03/12/2012
NOT
Mexico Reforms Its Immigratio­n Laws
http://lewrockwell.com/nestmann/nestmann28.1.html

MEXICO CITY — Mexico will no longer jail illegal immigrants­.
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?articleID=20080722_11_A6_Ilglim153913

Digital Immigratio­n Card Shows Mexico's Progressiv­e Views on Immigratio­n
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=083e0b4728d31cd23a57533cf02c46c5
07:44 PM on 03/10/2012
Get real
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Bronson
America Unite, Export and Deport
11:38 AM on 03/10/2012
This story does not tell the hole truth, he was not the primary care taker, he did not provide health insurance for his children as do Americans, Medicaid did, he did not pay for their birth Medicaid did. Nor did he provide all the support, use the freedom of information act. What he is using is the anchor defense. I live in NC and will swear to that in court
07:46 PM on 03/10/2012
And the 'mother' did ? NO, the taxpayers paid. And on & on.........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Bronson
America Unite, Export and Deport
08:16 PM on 03/10/2012
I will not argue with you. You are right, so ICE was right in their call to deport this man, and put the children in a foster home. Where they will be treated li,e children not anchors
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Picosa
dedicated to FACTS & TRUTH
12:13 AM on 03/12/2012
The children are American citizens and as such are entitled to all benefits permitted by law.

Whet is it nativists dont understand about that law?

Nativists cannot pick and choose which laws they want to support while completely ignoring others.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BeasTT
11:27 AM on 03/10/2012
UNDO THE 14TH AMENDMENT !!!

This very case highlights why Birthright Citizenship should be rescinded. Very few countries grant Birthright Citizenship for this very reason, time for us to follow suit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JB frm NC
"And who is my neighbor?"
07:43 AM on 03/11/2012
Bring back Dred Scott? That is your solution?

Wow.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vicky Valentine Proud
It is what it is.
01:52 PM on 03/11/2012
No, but amend it so that citizenship can only be claim after the US born child is 18 years of age, an age that HE can make the decison himself, and only if said person has no sort of criminal record, as we do not need anymore criminals either. It is shameful for these illegal parents to hide behind their US born children and use them for their benefit, it has to stop. Take the baby back to WHEREVER (as not all illegal aliens are from south of the border) they came from and raise it there. Oh and by the way, there is a thing about the medical bill incurred. Send it to both the parents and to their respective governments, somebody has got to pay and it should not have to be the US taxpayers. Then, in the future, that US born child can be afforded the opportunity to sponsor his parents, caretakers, whomever, to come here to live legally, but again barring if they have means to support them and/or they are able to find employment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dtairtime
It is what it is
11:59 PM on 03/11/2012
It doesn't need to be changed - it only needs to be clarified from a SCOTUS challenge to remove the current "policy" of granting anchors citizenship.

http://www.14thamendment.us/articles/anchor_babies_unconstitutionality.html

Even if the challenge fails due to the judges trying to write law from the bench, congress can still define what "under the jurisdiction" means. It is quite simple really to define all non-citizens as not being under our jurisdiction. They can't vote, can't be drafted, don't have to register with selective service, can be deported, can be represented by their country in legal matters, etc.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Emma2011
08:52 AM on 03/10/2012
Unfortunately, this story is not unique. However, Obama is in no hurry to pass comprehensive immigration reform despite his broken promise. In fact, just the other week, Obama told Univison Radio that he has five more years to pass CIR, which is not only disengenuous but also insensitive. (The clock is ticking and by the end of 2013 the game will be over in terms of CIR because Congress will gear up for the 2014 elections and then Obama will be a lame duck for the rest of his presidency.)

Meanwhile, immigrant families like the Montes are suffering or live in fear of being caught in Obama's immigration dragnet.
09:59 AM on 03/10/2012
Can you tell me how passing only legislation that will encourage more ill. imm. will stop future ill. imm?
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mexicadream
Want to change something...look in the mirror..
11:20 AM on 03/10/2012
It's not just Obama that is preventing solutions. This has been an issue for decades! One would think that after over a century of sharing a border with Mexico that SOMEONE would consider the issue of the children and could find a solution. Think it just so happens that they still haven't? The government Especially the Republicans will NEVER agree to anything that will take away from their "bag of tricks" when they need election time thunder! It is and always will be just a political hot button and what happens to the kids left behind from their games really doesn't matter. PERIOD.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
txmarylin
07:46 PM on 03/10/2012
WHO LOVES THE KIDS SHOULD HAVE THEM, AND THIS SHOULD START WITH THE PARENTS. PERIOD
07:49 AM on 03/10/2012
For those crazy comments,rememver that "illegals"are human like you and I.and if they fall in love and have"children"their situation here,it doesn't matter.americans are becoming so mechanical and materialistic.
07:36 PM on 03/10/2012
Hey Jorgelzorro, all these supposedly "in love" illegal aliens should be conscientious enough to take their kids with them when they are asked to leave. The truth is that these kids are being used as ANCHORS in the parents' mistaken belief that the US birth of the kids will give the parents immediate immigration benefits.
There is no hatred in telling people who know that there are here in violation of our laws that they must remove themselves. They are ILLEGALLY PRESENT in this country!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
txmarylin
07:48 PM on 03/10/2012
AMERICANS ARE SUPPORTING THE ILLEGALS