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EDITORIAL: Lawmakers should look to Arizona

For more than two years, the electorate has loudly and unequivocally demanded that action be taken to end illegal immigration, that the status quo of open borders, open schools, full employment and free welfare for unskilled noncitizens must stop at once.

Because of congressional impotence, enforcement of federal immigration laws has been left up to cities, states and businesses. So one by one, areas burdened by the fiscal and social costs of illegal immigration have taken steps to answer the outrage of the voting public.

Except Nevada.

Citizens learned this week that a law enacted last year to crack down on illegals and the companies that knowingly hire them has less bite than a pound puppy. An opinion from the state attorney general’s office declared the provisions of Assembly Bill 383 unenforceable, but that sentiment was overly generous. “Worthless” would have been a better word. The legislation was never intended to do anything more than score political points.

The law authorizes the state Tax Commission to impose fines against businesses that hire illegal immigrants. But before the commission can do so, the U.S. attorney general must determine that the company employed illegals.

You know, the federal government that won’t enforce its own immigration laws.

“I supported the final version because it is all we had,” said Assemblywoman Ellen Koivisto, D-Las Vegas, who sought the law, only to see it watered down by her colleagues. “I felt at the time it was feel-good legislation that would not accomplish anything. It had no teeth.”

Compare this cosmetic exercise to the approach of our neighbor to the southeast. In Arizona, a huge budget deficit and citizen anger prompted a Democratic governor and Republican legislature to pass the country’s toughest illegal immigration law. Arizona companies that knowingly hire illegals can be stripped of their business licenses.

The law is working as intended. Faced with the prospect of losing their livelihoods, business owners are doing their due dillegence in verifying the immigration status of prospective hires. Scores of illegals are saving them the trouble and leaving the state.

Gotbaum Family Moving to Sue Over a Death Ruled an Accident

The family of Carol A. Gotbaum, Manhattan women, whose death in the custody of the police at the airport in Phoenix in September last year, has attracted national attention, has filed a notice of claim against the city of Phoenix, a condition for the filing of an appeal by civil law.

An autopsy concluded that Ms. Gotbaum’s death was an accident, but his family has asked how the police treat cases. Ms. Gotbaum and fatherless legislation is Victor Gotbaum, a distinguished former guide working mother-in-law and son-in-law Betsy Gotbaum, the New York City public advocate.

Michael C. Manning, a lawyer in Phoenix, represents the family Gotbaum, confirms that he is not a claim to the name of the family, but also, in a statement has something more to offer than the procedural details.

On September 28, 2007, Gotbaum woman was alone, on the way to a treatment program for alcoholism in Tucson, if it misses its flight and Phoenix. He was arrested by police for disorderly conduct argued, after workers with the airline, and was appalled. Flac She was found in a polling booth minutes left police alone, her husband, Noah, stress calls to Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, after the state told his wife, but the call came too late.

An autopsy, medical examiners Maricopa County Office of the concluded they had accidentally stranguliert with their baskets. He also pointed out that it had taken antidepressants and blood alcohol level was three times the limit values laid down by law for the trip to Arizona.

Gary Verburg, lawyer for the city of Phoenix, whose department defended the town against the civil rights disputes that have a site in September defend reaction of the police in handling cases Gotbaum.

The Republic of Arizona, stated that the assertion that the city had appointed, that the family it is meant to $ 8 million, believe that the police used excessive force.

Arizona Attorney General warns of lottery scams

The Arizona Attorney General’s office warned consumers, the elderly, in particular, on fraud and false fraudulent lotteries.

The office, Wednesday, that the elderly are particularly targeted with letters and e-mails from bogus lotteries and games. The look financial fraud and provide victims with information to facilitate fraud credit card and identity theft. Some ask before payment of the monetary policy for the enormous profits that never come.

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