ANIMAS HIGH SCHOOL MODEL SENATE
Committee: Immigration
Principal Authors:
Mitch McConnell (Jonathan Smith)
Ron Johnson (TJ Rifkin)
Bill No:
Submission Date: (11-9-16)
Title of Bill: Deportation Reform Bill
BE IT ENACTED BY THE ANIMAS HIGH SCHOOL MODEL CONGRESS
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Preamble: Whereas in January of 2012, The Department Of Homeland Security reported
that there are approximately 11.4 illegal aliens residing in the United States, and since in
2015 the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency deported 235,413 illegal aliens
from the United States, and since by comparison, in 2012 (409,849), and since this has
dropped by 42%, and since illegal aliens as outlined in SECTION 1 of this document are
automatically found guilty of having violated Title 8 of United States Law and are therefore
automatically introduced into the removal process as defined by Title 8 U.S. Code1229a Removal Proceedings and carried out by Title 8 U.S. Code1231 - Detention and Removal
of Aliens Ordered Removed, Persons who enter the United States by any means without
proper legal authority given in Title 8 U.S. Code1101 sub-SECTION 15 are considered to
have an illegal presence in the united states as defined by Title 8 U.S. Code 212
-Inadmissibility of Illegal Aliens,
SECTION 1: This bill may be cited as True Enforcement of Title 8 Immigration Laws Bill
of 2016
SECTION 2: Repeal executive orders and/or congressional memorandums or legislation
that restricts the enforcement of Title 8 immigration laws to remove the prioritization of
illegal immigration investigations and enforcing immigration laws regardless of, but not
limited to, violent assault, rape, murder, theft. Immigration Customs Enforcement Agents
are allowed to perform their duty without hinderance from executive order.
SECTION 3: No executive order or legislation can be passed that infringes on law
enforcement ability to enforce the immigration laws outlined in Title 8 for every illegal
alien regardless of status, criminal status, standing in the community or other.
SECTION 3: The I-9 form created by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 to
enforce Section 101 sub-SECTION 274a stating that In general.--It is unlawful for a person
or other entity to hire, or to recruit or refer for a fee, for employment in the United States-(A) an alien knowing the alien is an unauthorized alien (as defined in subsection (h)(3))
with respect to such employment, or (B) an individual without complying with the
requirements of subsection (b). shall be submitted to the Citizenship and Immigration
Services upon completion of employment by every employee upon hire rather than upon
audit request to any business entity in the United States of America.
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Sub-SECTION A: Any and all I-9 forms submitted that contain, but not limited to
the following, information of illegal aliens, fraudulent social security number,
falsified government issued identification are to be submitted from the Citizenship
and Immigration Services to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for
investigation
Sub-SECTION B: Any business entity in the United States is required to submit
I-9 forms for their employees is required within 30 days of this bill passing to
re-submit the I-9 forms for each current employee as well as a total amount of
employees at the end of each fiscal year. All I-9 forms must be submitted at the
end of each 6 month period to immigration services for review.
Sub-SECTION C: Any information given to employers for applicants who are
unable to produce two forms of government issued identification must be
submitted to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for investigation prior to
being granted employment in the United States.
Sub-SECTION D: Any business found to be employing illegal aliens shall be
fined according to section 274A of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), were
added by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA).
SECTION 4: All illegal aliens admitted into the judicial system of the United States are to
be tried for the charges placed against them with the charge of illegal immigration as
outlined by SECTION 1 of this document in addition and regardless of the decision in the
additional charges they will continue to be detained and introduced into the removal hearing
process as Title 8 U.S. Code1229a - Removal Proceedings and carried out by Title 8 U.S.
Code1231 - Detention and Removal of Aliens Ordered Removed
Sub-SECTION A: Law enforcement agencies locally and federally are
prohibited from disregarding the immigration status of aliens when taken into
custody and are required to transfer them to Immigration and Customs Services
after the above qualifications are met.
Sub-SECTION B: An illegal alien must serve the sentence imposed by the court
in the United States and once that sentence has been carried out fully the alien
must then be transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Sub-SECTION C: Deferred action will be abolished and no longer accepted by
the law of the United States for executives to defer.
SECTION 5: Complete removal of Title 8 1229b - Cancellation of Removal; Adjustment
of Removal subSECTIONS 1 and 2 and replacing them with a new subsection once the
removal proceedings outlined in Title 8 Section 1229a have concluded and the alien has
been determined in violation in Title 8 immigration laws a cancellation of removal cannot
be granted except under the conditions in the following sections
SECTION 6: Revise Title 8, U.S. Code1226 - Apprehension and Detention of Aliens from
The Attorney General may release an alien described in paragraph (1) only if the Attorney
General decides pursuant to section 3521 of title 18 that release of the alien from custody is
necessary to provide protection to a witness, a potential witness, a person cooperating with
an investigation into major criminal activity, or an immediate family member or close
associate of a witness, potential witness, or person cooperating with such an investigation,
and the alien satisfies the Attorney General that the alien will not pose a danger to the safety
of other persons or of property and is likely to appear for any scheduled proceeding. A
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decision relating to such release shall take place in accordance with a procedure that
considers the severity of the offense committed by the alien. to The Attorney General may
release an alien described in paragraph (1) only if the Attorney General decides pursuant to
section 3521 of title 18 that release of the alien from custody is necessary to provide
protection to a witness or a potential witness. In no other instances can an alien be released
from custody after detention.
SECTION 7: Increase Immigration and Customs Enforcement employees from 19,791 to
59,373 employees to increase the effectiveness of our border patrol efforts and to increase
the efforts in the deportation of the 11.4 million illegal aliens living within the borders of
the United States of America. To accomplish this, the budget for the salaries and expenses
within the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency will rise from $5,881,137 to
$17,643,411 for the FY2016 and beyond.
Sub-SECTION A: To offset the budget increase for the Salaries and
Expenses by lowering the Alternatives to Detention budget from $30.8m to
$13,156,589 as increasing the amount of deportations will decrease the need
for alternative methods of detention for illegal aliens
SECTION 8:
This bill shall go into effect 30 days after passage.