LOS ANGELES IS LA RAZA-OCCUPIED –
ILLEGALS ABOVE THE LAW.
AND THEY KNOW IT!
OF THE TOP 200 MOST WANTED
CRIMINALS IN L.A., 183 ARE MEXICANS. MOST OF THE REST ARE RUSSIANS.
LOS ANGELES COUNTY PUTS OUT $600
MILLION PER YEAR IN WELFARE TO ILLEGALS, PRIMARILY ANCHOR BABY BREEDERS
(source: JUDICIAL WATCH).
THE COUNTY of LOS ANGELES HAS A
MEXICAN TAX-FREE UNDERGROUND ECONOMY CALCULATED TO BE IN EXCESS OF $2 BILLION
PER YEAR.
THE CITY of LOS ANGELES PUTS OUT
$10 MILLION PER YEAR JUST FOR MEXICAN GRAFFITI ABATEMENT.
THE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR CHARACTERIZES LOS ANGELES AS THE MEXICAN GANG
CAPITAL OF AMERICA. IT IS ALSO THE CA GATEWAY TO AMERICA FOR THE MEXICAN DRUG
CARTELS.
THE MAYOR OF LOS ANGELES, IS LA
RAZA SUPREMACIST AND M.E.Ch.A. (MEX FASCIST SEPARATIST MOVEMENT) MEMBER ANTONIO
VILLARAIGOSA, WHO BELIEVES HE CAN GET AS MANY OF THE ILLEGALS’ VOTES AS
HISPANDERING OBAMA AND WIN THE GOVERNORSHIP OF MEXIFORNIA.
THERE ARE ONLY EIGHT (8) STATES
WITH A POPULATION GREATER THAN LOS ANGELES COUNTY WHERE 90% OF ALL SERVICE AND
CONSTRUCTION SECTOR JOBS ARE HELD BY ILLEGAL USING STOLEN SOCIAL SECURITY
NUMBERS. THE LA RAZA-CONTROLLED STATE LEGISLATURE PASSED A LAW MAKING IT
ILLEGAL FOR EMPLOYERS TO USE E-VERIFY.
THE STATE OF CA HAS THE LARGEST AND
MOST EXPENSIVE PRISON SYSTEM IN THE NATION. HALF THE INMATES ARE MEXICANS.
THE STATE OF CA PUTS OUT $22
BILLION IN SOCIAL SERVICES TO ILLEGALS… ERGO THEY ARE VOTING IN DROVES FOR
MORE!
Baca will no longer turn over
low-level offenders to immigration
December 5, 2012
Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca said Wednesday he will no longer honor
requests from federal authorities to detain suspected illegal immigrants
arrested for low-level crimes, a reversal from his previous support of the
controversial Secure Communities program.
Until
recently, Baca has been adamant about complying
with the federal requests, arguing that they were mandatory. He was the most
outspoken opponent of a bill called the Trust Act, which would have required
California law enforcement to disregard the requests in many cases.
A Baca spokesman said the change was prompted by a legal directive issued by California Atty. Gen. Kamala
Harris on Tuesday indicating that compliance with the federal requests is at
the discretion of sheriffs' and police departments.
The change may not take effect immediately. Baca has directed his staff to
flesh out the details of the new policy, which would apply only to those
arrested for misdemeanors. It would still require jailers to honor federal
detention requests for those accused of serious or violent crimes.
Under Secure Communities, all arrestees' fingerprints are sent to
immigration officials, who may ask that they be held for up to 48 hours until
transfer to federal custody.
The program has come under fire for ensnaring minor offenders when its
stated purpose is to deport dangerous criminals. Critics say it has made
immigrants fearful of cooperating with police.
Last month, Los Angeles Police Chief
Charlie Beck announcedthat his department would no longer honor federal
immigration detainers for low-level arrestees not previously convicted of
violent crimes. The LAPD joined several other California law enforcement
agencies, including the San Francisco and the Santa Clara counties sheriffs'
departments, that were already declining the requests.
“The last thing we want is victims to be frightened to
come forward,” said Steve Whitmore, the Baca spokesman. Lou
Dobbs Tonight
Monday, February 11, 2008
In California, League of United Latin American Citizens
has adopted a resolution to declare "California Del Norte" a
sanctuary zone for immigrants. The declaration urges the Mexican
government to invoke its rights under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo "to seek
third‑nation neutral arbitration of ....disputes concerning immigration laws
and their enforcement." We’ll have the story.
*
COMPTON (LOS ANGELES) GANG MURDERS – THE LOOTING MENTALITY
By Megan Garvey
Times Staff Writer
Gang-related homicides are up more than 30% this year in areas under the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, but the department's countywide gang enforcement team is substantially smaller than it was three years ago and remains chronically understaffed. For many years the department dealt with significantly less gang crime than police in the city of Los Angeles. No more. At least half of the homicides in sheriff's territories are now gang killings, about the same level as in the city. Statewide, gang violence accounts for about 16% of all homicides. But although the Los Angeles Police Department under Chief William J. Bratton has reconstituted and increased the size of its anti-gang units, assigning nearly 350 officers to gang enforcement duty, the gang unit under Sheriff Lee Baca has shrunk. The sheriff's anti-gang units have 20 fewer deputies than authorized in the department's budget — about 150 sworn officers instead of 170. Those numbers are down from a high of nearly 190 sworn deputies on duty three years ago. This year, while gang homicides rose sharply in a few small areas patrolled by the sheriff — Compton, East Los Angeles and unincorporated neighborhoods bordering Watts — Operation Safe Streets, the department's anti-gang unit, lacked flexibility to move specially trained personnel out of lower-crime areas and into communities with soaring gang killings, according to its head of operations. "Unit commanders should have the autonomy to put their resources in the places they would have the greatest impact based on crime statistics," said Lt. Bob Rifkin. "We are spread too thin to try to do the whole county. Do you do a mediocre job in the whole county or do you do a dynamite job in the quarter of the county where the worst crime is?" In an interview Friday, Baca seemed surprised that gang homicides were up substantially — 210 as of late last week, compared with 164 for the same period last year — but said he needs more personnel to deal with gang crime. "We are doing our best with what we have and we don't have enough," he said. "If you doubled what we have, we don't have enough. "Baca is promoting a quarter-cent sales tax earmarked for gang intervention and enforcement, which he hopes to get on the ballot next year. Such a tax would generate about $280 million annually for law enforcement agencies in L.A. County, he said. For the time being, Baca said, shifting resources is not the answer because it might suppress crime in one area at the cost of allowing it to increase elsewhere. "What one has to understand is the nature of policing gangs," Baca said. "There are over 100-plus active violent gangs in Los Angeles County, and you have 100 holes in the dike and the problem is you only have so many plugs. If you pull one plug in an area where you've plugged up the violence, will it pour out there again? "The department's difficulties responding to the increased rate of killing underscore two of the biggest problems the Sheriff's Department faces: It is seriously understaffed, with nearly 1,000 fewer deputies overall than the 9,500 authorized, and its political structure works against assigning available deputies based on the worst crime problems. The Sheriff's Department patrols unincorporated areas of the county and 41 cities that contract with the department for policing. Cities pay for a specific number of deputies each year and, if they can afford it, may add personnel and specialized teams as needed. Baca said about 55% of his deputies work under city contracts. Maintaining good relationships with the officials of contract cities has long been a high priority for senior officials of the department. There has also been considerable pressure recently from the county Board of Supervisors to ensure that county areas are getting their fair share of services. The gang unit is one of several specialized teams that work countywide for all residents, allowing the sheriff discretion — in theory, at least — in their deployment. But because the department serves an area with 2.6 million residents over 4,000 square miles, distribution of limited resources is challenging. Capt. Mike Ford, who runs Operation Safe Streets and is Rifkin's boss, noted that although other areas have fewer homicides than Compton, gang crime is quite real to people who live in those areas." The reality is we work for the people who live there, and no one likes to deal with graffiti or drug dealing," he said, adding that he would be reluctant to withdraw officers from other areas, even if that were politically possible. But some gang crime experts warn that the department's approach to distributing its deputies could allow crime to spread." If 50% or more of your murders are gang-related, it looks to me like you ought to have a lot of resources doing that," said Wes McBride, president of the Assn. of California Gang Investigators
Lou Dobbs Tonight
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Gov. Schwarzenegger said California is facing “financial Armageddon”. He is making drastic cuts in the budget for education, health care and services. But there is one place he isn’t making cuts… services for illegal immigrants. These services are estimated to cost the state four to five billion dollars a year. Schwarzenegger said he is “happy” to offer these services. We will have a full report tonight.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Gov. Schwarzenegger said California is facing “financial Armageddon”. He is making drastic cuts in the budget for education, health care and services. But there is one place he isn’t making cuts… services for illegal immigrants. These services are estimated to cost the state four to five billion dollars a year. Schwarzenegger said he is “happy” to offer these services. We will have a full report tonight.
*
SANCTUARY COUNTY LOS ANGELES SPENDS $600 MILLION ON WELFARE
FOR ILLEGALS
County Spends $600 Mil On
Welfare For Illegal Immigrants
Last
Updated: Thu, 03/11/2010 - 3:14pm
For
the second consecutive year taxpayers in a single U.S. county will dish out
more than half a billion dollars just to cover the welfare and food-stamp costs
of illegal immigrants.
Los
Angeles County, the nation’s most populous, may be in the midst of a dire
financial crisis but somehow there are plenty of funds for illegal aliens. In
January alone, anchor babies born to the county’s illegal immigrants collected
more than $50 million in welfare benefits. At that
rate the cash-strapped county will pay around $600 million this year to provide
illegal aliens’ offspring with food stamps and other welfare perks.
THE
EXORBITANT FIGURE DOES NOT INCLUDE THE ENORMOUS COST OF EDUCATING, MEDICALLY
TREATING, OR INCARCERATING ILLEGALS ALIENS. THIS COSTS THE COUNTY AN ADDITIONAL
ONE BILLION DOLLARS.
The
exorbitant figure, revealed this week by a county supervisor, doesn’t even
include the enormous cost of educating, medically treating or incarcerating
illegal aliens in the sprawling county of about 10 million residents. Los Angeles
County annually spends more than $1 billion for those combined services,
including $500 million for healthcare and $350 million for public safety.
About
a quarter of the county’s welfare and food stamp issuances go to parents who
reside in the United States illegally and collect benefits for their anchor
babies, according to the figures from the county’s Department of Social
Services. In 2009 the tab ran $570 million and this year’s figure is expected
to increase by several million dollars.
Illegal
immigration continues to have a “catastrophic
impact on Los Angeles County taxpayers,” the veteran county supervisor (Michael Antonovich) who
revealed the information has said. The former fifth-grade history teacher has
repeatedly come under fire from his liberal counterparts for publicizing
statistics that confirm the devastation illegal immigration has had on the
region. Antonovich, who has served on the board for nearly three decades,
represents a portion of the county that is roughly twice the size of Rhode
Island and has about 2 million residents.
His
district is simply a snippet of a larger crisis. Nationwide, Americans pay
around $22 billion annually to provide illegal immigrants with welfare benefits
that include food assistance programs such as free school lunches in public
schools, food stamps and a nutritional program (known as WIC)
for low-income women and their children. Tens of billions more are spent on
other social services, medical care, public education and legal costs such as
incarceration and public defenders.
*
Anchor Babies Grab One Quarter of
Welfare Dollars in LA Co
The anchor baby
scam has proven lucrative for illegal aliens in Los Angeles County, at
considerable cost to our own poor and downtrodden legal citizenry.
The numbers show that more than $50 million in CalWORKS benefits and food stamps for January went to children born in the United States whose parents are in the country without documentation. This represents approximately 23 percent of the total benefits under the state welfare and food stamp programs, Antonovich said.
"When you add this to $350 million for public safety and nearly $500 million for health care, the total cost for illegal immigrants to county taxpayers far exceeds $1 billion a year -- not including the millions of dollars for education," Antonovich said.
I love children and I'm all for compassion -- smart, teach-them-to-fish
compassion. But when laws, the Constitution, and enforcement allow illegal
aliens (the operative word here being "illegal") to insinuate
themselves into our nation and bleed us of our precious financial resources,
then laws, the Constitution and enforcement need to be changed.
Where To Go When Your Local Emergency Room
Goes Bankrupt?"
During the past ten years 84 California hospitals have declared bankruptcy and closed their Emergency Rooms forever. Financially crippled by legislative and judicial mandates to treat illegal aliens have bankrupted hospitals! In 2010, in Los Angeles County alone, over 2 million illegal aliens recorded visits to county emergency rooms for both routine and emergency care. Per official figures, the cost is $1,000 dollars for every taxpayer in Los Angeles County.
http://justcommonsense-lostinamerica.blogspot.com/2011/03/where-to-go-when-your-local-emergency.html
*
A STATE TURNS INTO A MEXICAN DUMPSTER, AND YET OBAMA,
PELOSI, FEINSTEIN, BOXER and PELOSI ALL PUSH FOR MORE ILLEGALS AND CONTINUED
NON-ENFORCEMENT AMNESTY.
latimes.com
Opinion
California must stem the flow of
illegal immigrants
The state should go after employers
who hire them, curb taxpayer-funded benefits, deploy the National Guard to help
the feds at the border and penalize 'sanctuary' cities.
By
Steve Poizner
March
27, 2010
The United States, and California in particular, has been
built by immigrants who legally crossed our borders in search of a brighter
future. For generations, these legal immigrants have made immeasurable
contributions to creating a unique and vibrant California. As Americans and
Californians, we are right to welcome people from all over the globe when they
obey our laws and are willing to play by the rules.
Illegal immigration is another matter entirely. With the state budget in tatters, millions of residents out of work and a state prison system strained by massive overcrowding, California simply cannot continue to ignore the strain that illegal immigration puts on our budget and economy. Illegal aliens cost taxpayers in our state billions of dollars each year. As economist Philip J. Romero concluded in a 2007 study, "illegal immigrants impose a 'tax' on legal California residents in the tens of billions of dollars."
Some have said that illegal immigration is an issue for the federal government, not the states, and that there's little a governor can do to fix the problem. Those people are wrong.
In government at any level, federal or state, a chief executive's duty is to preserve the rule of law. This also means confronting those who flout it, including illegal immigrants and those who shield them.
Illegal immigration is another matter entirely. With the state budget in tatters, millions of residents out of work and a state prison system strained by massive overcrowding, California simply cannot continue to ignore the strain that illegal immigration puts on our budget and economy. Illegal aliens cost taxpayers in our state billions of dollars each year. As economist Philip J. Romero concluded in a 2007 study, "illegal immigrants impose a 'tax' on legal California residents in the tens of billions of dollars."
Some have said that illegal immigration is an issue for the federal government, not the states, and that there's little a governor can do to fix the problem. Those people are wrong.
In government at any level, federal or state, a chief executive's duty is to preserve the rule of law. This also means confronting those who flout it, including illegal immigrants and those who shield them.