Saturday, February 26, 2011

Texas Attorney General charged 6 Notaries with immigration fraud. Only attorneys can offer immigration legal services in U.S.A.

Feb 23, 2011

MCALLEN, Texas — Attorney General Greg Abbott says six individuals and their
businesses have been shut down over alleged immigration-related fraud in South
Texas.

Abbott on Wednesday announced six so-called "notaries" are accused of violating
the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, the state Notary Public Act and the
State Bar Act.
The lawsuits, filed in Hidalgo and Cameron counties, led to temporary
restraining orders and injunctions.

The six are: Anna Trejo; Dora Maria Resendez; Josefina Fonseca, doing business
as Fonseca Services; Maria Alvarado, doing business as Mary's Bookkeeping &
Income Tax; Maria Yolanda Solis; and Emilio Zabala, doing business as Azteca
Immigration.

** State investigators say all six are commissioned Texas notaries public, but
falsely claimed to be able to handle immigration cases.

The state seeks civil penalties of up to $20,000 per violation.

Read more at: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/7442527.html

Mexican Police Officer denied asylum in USA: this can set a precedent for other pending asylum claims from former police officers.

C.Juarez, Mexico, Police Officer denied asylum in USA: this decision can set a
precedent for many other pending asylum claims from former police officers.

Feb 08, 2011.

Jose Alarcon, 27, was a cop in one of the world's most lawless cities. Wounded
in a gun battle with drug gangs in Juarez in 2008, he survived only to see his
partner killed in another gunfight. When Alarcon refused bribes from the city's
drug lords, he knew it was a matter of days before they killed him, too.
Alarcon, his wife and two young children fled to El Paso to seek asylum in the
United States.

In early January, Alarcon's asylum case was denied by a Dallas federal
immigration judge. The case could set a precedent for other Mexican police
officers seeking asylum in the U.S. It's difficult to determine how many
officers have requested asylum because U.S. immigration officials do not collect
the data. One of Alarcon's Dallas attorneys, Will Humble, said Texas lawyers
with cases scheduled before asylum judges have been calling his office since the
denial. "They're very anxious and want to see how the decision applies to their
clients," he says.

In Alarcon's case, the judge ruled that the dangers he faced as a police officer
in Juarez were "the risks police officers have to take," Humble says. He
declined to release the judge's decision to the Observer because it contains
details that could endanger Alarcon's life.

The number of Mexicans fleeing because of drug cartel violence continues to
escalate. The most violent city is Juarez, with 6,347 deaths in the past four
years. Despite the growing list of victims, at least 85 percent of Mexicans who
apply for asylum are denied, according to U.S. immigration statistics.
Applicants must prove they are members of a social, political or other group
targeted for persecution—a difficult standard.

Humble says Alarcon will appeal his case, which could take another 18 months.
Until then, the 27-year-old former police officer and his young family remain in
limbo in the United States. "He's just going to wait and pray that his case is
approved," Humble says

Read at: http://www.texasobserver.org/lalinea/juarez-officer-denied-us-asylum