Senator Pat Toomey Open Letter Pennsylvania; Stop the Illegal Aliens Town Hall Meeting Held Secret
The conspiracy by the Obama Administration to grant amnesty to millions of illegal
aliens by whatever means, constitutional or otherwise, in the United States began within
days of Barack Obama’s fi rst inauguration. The following timeline outlines the extent
of this conspiracy to get to amnesty through public lobbying and behind-closed-doors
decisions to stop, disrupt and otherwise dismantle all enforcement of laws against illegal
immigration.
2009
January 29: Napolitano Delays E-Verify Requirements for
Federal Contractors
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano
delays the implementation of a rule requiring federal contractors with
contracts over $100,000 to use the E-Verify program from February 20 to
May 21. The rule was promulgated to comply with executive order 13465 by
President George W. Bush, which directed federal agencies to require those
they contract with to verify the work authorization of their employees. The
original deadline for the rule’s implementation was January 15, 2009, but it
was delayed due to a lawsuit fi led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
February 18: President Expresses Support for Amnesty
While appearing on a Spanish language radio show, the President reasserts his
support for granting widespread amnesty to illegal aliens. He also acknowledges that
“politically, it’s going to be tough” and says “some wonderful people on my White
House staff” are already working on this issue.
April 30: DHS Stops Effective Worksite Raids, Switches to Audits
ICE issues new enforcement guidelines for all of its agents in the fi eld. The new
guidelines came as no surprise, given that Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
announced after the successful enforcement action in Bellingham, Washington, that her
Department would reexamine ICE’s procedures more closely. While the guidelines focus
on the need to criminally prosecute employers who hire illegal aliens, they do not offer
anything new with respect to enforcement against employees.
November 13: Napolitano Lays Out Three-Step Immigration Plan, Step 1: Amnesty
DHS Secretary Napolitano describes the Obama Administration’s vision of
immigration reform as a “three-legged stool” in a speech at the pro-amnesty think tank
Center for American Progress. The so-called “stool” consists of : (1) a mass amnesty for
the approximately 12 million illegal aliens currently living in the U.S.; (2) “improved
legal fl ows for families and workers,” which means a dramatic increase in immigration;
and (3) empty promises of “serious and effective enforcement.”
Timeline to Backdoor Amnesty, 2009-2013
U.S. Secretary of
Homeland Security
Janet Napolitano
Backdoor Amnesty Timeline 22010
May 19: ICE Director Tells Agents not to Cooperate with Arizona
In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, ICE Director John Morton announces
that ICE may not even process or accept illegal aliens transferred to the agency’s
custody by Arizona offi cials.
May 27: ICE Email Reveals Luxury Living in New Detention Facilities
An ICE email reveals that “low-risk” detainees will be able to have visitors stay for
an unlimited amount of time during a 12-hour window, be given access to unmonitored
phone lines, email and free internet calling. Illegal alien detainees will also be
entertained with movie nights, bingo, arts and crafts, dance and cooking classes,
tutoring, and computer training.
June 2: Obama Administration Challenges Arizona E-Verify Law
The Obama Administration fi les an amicus brief on behalf of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down a 2007 Arizona law that
punishes employers who knowingly hire illegal aliens. “The Legal Arizona Workers
Act,” signed by then Governor Janet Napolitano, requires all Arizona employers to use
the federal E-Verify system and allows Arizona to suspend and/or revoke the business
licenses to employers who knowingly hire illegal aliens. The Chamber of Commerce
fi led a lawsuit in 2007 seeking to strike down the Arizona law, arguing that federal law
preempts both provisions.
June 25: ICE Union Unanimously Votes No Confi dence in Leadership
The National ICE Council, the union that represents more than 7,000 detention
and removal agents within ICE, unanimously casts a “Vote of No-Confi dence” in ICE
Director Morton. According to the union, the vote refl ects “the growing dissatisfaction
among ICE employees and Union Leaders that Director Morton…has abandoned the
Agency’s core mission of enforcing United States immigration laws and enforcing public
safety, and have instead directed their attention to campaigning for programs and policies
relating to amnesty…”
July 6: DOJ Files Complaint to Enjoin Arizona’s SB 1070
After months of speculation, President Obama’s Justice Department offi cially fi les
suit against Arizona to preliminarily enjoin the state’s immigration enforcement law,
SB 1070, from taking effect. The DOJ claims federal law preempts fi ve sections of
the Arizona law: Section 2 (status verifi cation checks during lawful stops); Section
3 (alien registration crimes); Section 4 (smuggling prohibition); Section 5 (unlawful
seeking of work); and Section 6 (warrantless arrest of illegal aliens). Disregarding
Congressional intent that federal immigration laws be enforced, the complaint states
that if SB 1070 were to take effect, it would “confl ict with and undermine the federal
government’s careful balance of immigration enforcement priorities and objectives.”
August: Immigration Offi cers Stop Detaining Illegal Aliens During Traffi c Stops
ICE begins circulating a draft policy that would signifi cantly limit the
circumstances under which ICE would take custody of illegal aliens. The memo
3 Backdoor Amnesty Timeline provides that immigration offi cers shall issue detainers — or offi cial notifi cation to
local law enforcement agencies that ICE intends to assume custody of the alien — only
after a law enforcement agency has independently arrested the alien for a criminal
violation. Thus, in effect, no longer will ICE pick up an illegal alien for illegally
entering the country with false ID or false immigration documents.
September 16: Memo: DHS Reveals Administrative Amnesty Plan
A 10-page memo leaked to The American Spectator, and dated February 26, 2010,
details how DHS has “long envisioned” a two-phase amnesty program to legalize
“those who qualify and intend to stay here.” The fi rst phase would include registration,
screening, and the granting of “interim status that allows illegal aliens to work in the
U.S.” The second phase would grant legal permanent resident status (i.e. green cards)
to those who meet additional requirements.
October 8: ICE Presents Misleading Deportation Data
According to ICE’s deportation statistics, from October 2009 until September 2010
the agency deported over 390,00 illegal aliens. Roughly half of the deportations —
more than 195,000 — were of criminal illegal aliens. However, they fail to mention
that while the deportation of criminal illegal aliens, the change in the total number of
overall deportations is statistically insignifi cant. In fact, the number of deportations
non-criminal illegal aliens has decreased.
December 6: Public Learns Homeland Security Padded FY 2010 Deportation
Numbers
Interviews and internal communications cited in the Washington Post indicate the
record number of over 390,000 deportations was padded. First, the article charges that
ICE included 19,422 removals in FY 2010 that were really from the previous fi scal
year. The Post article also describes how ICE extended a Mexican repatriation program
beyond its normal operation dates, adding 6,500 to the fi nal removal numbers.
2011
March 2: Morton Memo #1: Administration Outlines Enforcement Priorities;
Limits to Criminal Aliens
In a departmental memo, ICE Director John Morton outlines “new enforcement
priorities” and encourages immigration agents to not enforce the law against most
illegal aliens, but only to take action against those who meet the these “priorities.”
June 17: Morton Memo #2: Obama Administration Bypasses Congress, Will Not
Prosecute Illegal Aliens Eligible for the DREAM Act
Director Morton issues a second memorandum further directing ICE agents to
refrain from enforcing U.S. immigration laws against certain segments of the illegal
alien population — criteria similar to that under the DREAM Act — despite having
no legal or congressional authority and despite the fact that the DREAM Act was three
times defeated in Congress.
Backdoor Amnesty Timeline 4June 17: Morton Memo #3: Non-Enforcement Against Illegal Aliens Claiming
to be Victims
Director Morton issues a third memorandum instructing ICE personnel to consider
refraining from enforcing the law against individuals engaging in a protected activity
related to civil or other rights (for example, union organizing or complaining to
authorities about employment discrimination or housing conditions) who may be in a
nonfrivolous dispute with an employer, landlord, or contractor.
June 23: ICE Union Outraged Over Morton DREAM Act Memo
Leaders of the national ICE union express outrage over the June 17 administrative
amnesty memorandum authored by Director Morton. The law offi cers say that since
the Administration was “unable to pass its immigration agenda through legislation,
{it} is now implementing it through agency policy.” It also accuses ICE offi cials of
working “hand-in-hand” with the open borders lobby, while excluding its own offi cers
from the policy development process. In plain words, they are saying the political
appointees of ICE are advancing the agenda of those here illegally and maneuvering
against their own law offi cers trying to do their duty.
June 27: ICE Emails Reveal Cover-up of Administrative Amnesty Policy
Internal memos confi rm that once the Houston Chronicle (on Aug. 24, 2010)
exposed DHS’ directive to review and dismiss deportation cases then in process, ICE
offi cials attempted to publicly distance themselves from such lenient policies and deny
that they ever existed.
October 12: ICE Director Admits White House Role in Amnesty Memos
In testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, Director Morton admits that
White House Director of Intergovernmental Affairs and former National Council of La
Raza employee (now White House Domestic Policy Director) Cecelia Munoz, assisted
in preparation of the administrative amnesty memoranda.
October 18: ICE Does Nothing After Santa Clara County Vote to Ignore
Immigration Detainers
ICE refuses to take any action after the Santa Clara County, California, Board of
Supervisors votes 3-1 to stop using county funds to honor ICE detainers, except in
limited circumstances.
October 19: ICE Does Nothing after D.C. Mayor Orders Police to Disregard
Immigration Laws
ICE refuses to act after District of Columbia Mayor Vincent Gray issues an executive
order to prevent D.C. police from enforcing U.S. immigration laws. Among other
things, the order prohibits all public safety agencies from inquiring about an individual’s
immigration status or from contacting ICE if there is no nexus to a criminal investigation.
November 22: DOJ Files Complaint to Enjoin Utah’s HB 497
President Obama’s DOJ fi les suit to enjoin from taking effect three core provisions
of Utah’s immigration enforcement law, HB 497. These provisions include Section 3,
which would require any law enforcement offi cer conducting a lawful stop, detention,
5 Backdoor Amnesty Timeline or arrest, to check the immigration status of any person they arrest for a felony or Class
A misdemeanor if that person is unable to provide valid identifi cation; Section 10, which
makes it a crime for an individual to harbor, encourage the entry of, or transport an illegal
alien into or within the state, for fi nancial gain; Section 11, which allows law enforcement
offi cers to arrest without a warrant aliens who have a deportation order or who have
been charged or convicted in another state with one or more aggravated felonies. The
DOJ lawsuit makes Utah the fourth state to be sued by the federal government over its
immigration enforcement law in just over a year. The DOJ elects not to challenge the
legality of other Utah immigration laws which openly defy the federal government’s
authority over immigration policy because those laws work to the benefi t of illegal aliens.
Source: Federation for American Immigration Reform
November 22: ICE Does Nothing after New York City Enacts Ordinance to Prevent
Detention of Illegal Aliens
ICE refuses to act after New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg signs a measure
ordering all city jails to ignore certain ICE detainers issued to deport illegal aliens from
those jails. As a result, New York City jails will now release many illegal aliens back
into the community instead of handing them over for ICE removal.
December 15: DOJ Accuses Maricopa County, Arizona, of Discrimination Against
Latinos; Rescinds 287(g) Agreements without Filing Suit
Without an opportunity to defend itself, and little regard for the maintenance of
public safety or the rule of law, DHS rescinds Maricopa County’s 287(g) agreement – a
cooperative agreement whereby local law enforcement receive training in identifying
and apprehending illegal aliens. Director Morton also tells the Maricopa County
Attorney that ICE will no longer respond to calls from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s
Offi ce (MCSO) involving traffi c stops, civil infractions or “other minor offenses.”
However, it is unclear how ICE can refuse to respond to inquiries from deputies and
not directly violate federal law, which requires the federal government to respond to
inquiries by law enforcement agencies to verify immigration status.
December 29: ICE Relaxes Detention Policies
ICE creates a 24/7 hotline for illegal alien detainees to be staffed by the Law
Enforcement Support Center (LESC) — the same organization that ICE says is too
understaffed to keep up with immigration status check requests from state and local law
enforcement. ICE then revises its detainer form to include a new provision that allows
ICE agents to “consider this request for a detainer operative only upon the subject’s
conviction.” This shift in policy to a discretionary “post-conviction” model ignores the
fact that being in the country illegally is a violation of federal law with simultaneously
welcoming criminal aliens back onto the streets
Backdoor Amnesty Timeline 62012
January 19: Administration Closes Over 1,600 Deportable Alien Cases as Part of
Administrative Pilot Review
ICE attorneys in Denver and Baltimore recommend that the agency voluntarily
close 1,667 removal cases, resulting in the release of illegal aliens already in
proceedings without consequence for violating U.S. immigration law.
February 7: ICE Creates Public Advocate Position to Lobby for Illegal Aliens
ICE announces the creation of the ICE Public Advocate, who is to serve as a point
of contact for aliens in removal proceedings, community and advocacy groups, and
others who have concerns, questions, recommendations, or other issues they would like
to raise about the Administration’s executive enforcement and amnesty efforts.
February 13: Obama Administration Moves to Defund 287(g) Program; Slashes
Immigration Enforcement
President Obama’s 2013 budget not only proposes cutting funding for ICE by
4 percent, but specifi cally proposes a $17 million slash in the 287(g) federal-local
law enforcement program, effectively gutting the program, which was enacted by
Congress. The budget describes what is essentially a phase-out of the 287(g) program
in favor of the expansion of Secure Communities, calling the cut a “realignment and
reduction of 287(g)” that will “reduce the 287(g) program” as ICE implements Secure
Communities nationwide. Obama also proposes cutting the Federal Law Enforcement
Training Center (FLETC) by 5 percent, decreasing funds for border security
inspections and trade facilitation between points of entry by $6 million, and decreasing
funds for border security fencing, infrastructure, and technology by $72.9 million.
March 29: Obama Administration Announces Rolling Closures of
Immigration Courts
The Administration announces an expansion of its administrative amnesty program to
four major U.S. cities: Detroit, Seattle, New Orleans, and Orlando. The rollout suspends
immigration court dockets in the four cities while ICE attorneys review deportation
cases of aliens not in custody and administratively close or dismiss those not meeting the
Administration’s enforcement priorities.
April 17: Obama Administration Defends Pulling National Guard Troops
from Border
After 19 months of stationing 1,300 National Guard troops along the border, the
Obama Administration cuts the number to a mere 300. Testifying before the House
Homeland Security Subcommittee on Border and Maritime Security, Assistant Defense
Secretary Paul Stockton claims that aerial surveillance technology will provide a
new deterrent to illegal border crossings. Skeptical and concerned members of the
Subcommittee argue against withdrawal, noting that the U.S. only has operational
control of 873 miles of the 2,000-mile southern border.
Source: Federation for American Immigration Reform
7 Backdoor Amnesty Timeline April 25: ICE Announces the Number of Illegal
Aliens Benefi tting from Case-by-Case Amnesty
Review Has Increased to 16,500
ICE offi cials announce it has offered to
close over 16,500 illegal alien deportation cases
pending background checks in connection with
the Administration’s review of 300,000 pending
immigration cases. The Administration also announces
that the number of illegal aliens whose cases it has
already closed is up to 2,700 from just over 1,500 the
previous month.
April 27: Obama Administration Weakens Secure
Communities
ICE shifts is policy on Secure Communities, where local offi cers report arrests
of people who are here illegally, to stop the enforcement of immigration laws against
illegal aliens apprehended for “minor traffi c offenses.” When Secure Communities
identifi es illegal aliens pursuant to a traffi c offense, ICE will no longer ask the local
jails to detain the illegal aliens so that ICE may begin deportation proceedings; rather,
ICE will only consider detaining an alien if the alien is ultimately convicted of the
offense. Moreover, despite claims of limited resources, ICE also announced it plans to
take action against jurisdictions with arrest rates the agency deems too high.
June 5: ICE Releases Latest Backdoor Amnesty Statistics
ICE releases its latest statistics in its case-by-case review of pending deportation cases
and states the Agency’s attorneys have reviewed over 288,000 cases. Of those reviewed,
ICE says it plans to voluntarily close 20,648; it states over 4,300 of these cases have
already been processed and the remaining will be closed pending background checks.
June 11: DOJ Plans to Sue Florida Over Effort to End Illegal Alien Voting
Assistant Attorney General Thomas Perez announces that the DOJ will sue Florida in
federal court over the state’s removal of ineligible voters, including illegal aliens, from its
voter registry. After a news outlet uncovered a number of ineligible voters, the Florida
Department of State began investigation of its voter rolls. To help the state correct its
records and remove illegal aliens and other ineligible voters, the Florida Department
of State asked DHS to grant it access to the federal Systematic Alien Verifi cation for
Entitlement (SAVE) Program. After numerous delays by DHS, DOJ asked Florida to halt
its investigation altogether.
Source: Federation for American Immigration Reform
June 15: Obama Administration Circumvents Congress. Obama Administration
Unilaterally Implements DREAM Act; 1.4 Million Illegal Aliens Set for Removal
Reprieve
The Obama Administration announces it will circumvent Congress by using
prosecutorial discretion to implement unilaterally the DREAM Act. Effective
immediately, DHS will grant deferred action and possible work authorization to certain
illegal aliens under the age of 30 who claim they arrived in the U.S. before 16 years of
Backdoor Amnesty Timeline 8age. DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano expects that 800,000 illegal aliens will be granted