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Daily Archives: June 18, 2012

Marco Rubio’s DREAM Act plan might be dead this year

After President Obama swooped in with a DREAM Act-like executive order, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is starting to cool on his already stalled plan for an alternative to help immigrant kids who were brought to or remain in this country illegally

Sen. Marco Rubio sounds ready to scuttle his version of a pro-immigrant DREAM Act this year, and he’s blaming President Obama.

For the past three months, Rubio has been trying to craft a bill that would give legal residency to young immigrants who were brought to the United States illegally by their parents.

But on Friday, Obama essentially turned Rubio’s undrafted proposal into an executive rule made by his administration. Rubio and other Republicans say Obama overstepped his bounds.

“When the president ignores the Congress, ignores the Constitution and forces a policy like this down the throat of the American people, it’s going to make it harder to have a conversation like that,” Rubio said. “It’s going to make it harder to elevate the debate.”

Obama’s campaign refused to comment, though Democrats buzzed on Twitter that Rubio was scapegoating the president, whose administration denies that he’s making law with an executive rule. They say the president, urged to act by immigration advocates, had no choice in the face of a do-nothing Congress.

And it’s not like Congress hasn’t acted: The legislation passed the House and has majority support of 55 members in the U.S. Senate — but failed to pass because of a Republican filibuster.

Janet Napolitano, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, said the order to stop deporting these young people was a case of prosecutorial discretion — not legislating by the executive branch of government.

“It is an exercise of discretion,” she said Friday. “Our nation’s immigration laws must be enforced in a strong, accessible manner.”

Rubio’s nascent proposal and the president’s executive decision differ from the Dream Act in that they do not create a special pathway to citizenship — which critics like Rubio view as “amnesty” — for those who are illegally in the country. Obama’s rule expires in two years.

Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who’s considering Rubio for a vice-presidential slot, has said he’d veto the DREAM Act. But he hasn’t said what he’d do about Obama’s executive rule, which he called an election-year play for Hispanic votes.

Rubio said the president’s actions will make it tougher to win support from Republicans and critics.

“It’s going to be hard to deliver this in an election year. The president just made it harder,” Rubio said.

“I didn’t want this to be a divisive thing. I didn’t want to intro a bill that immediately led to all of the squabbling that has invariably doomed efforts at reform in the past,” he said. “And to do that, you have to sit down with all of the stakeholders.”

Frank Sharry, an immigrant-rights advocate with the Washington group America’s Voice, said he understood why Rubio would step back.

“Rubio’s brilliant move was to present a Republican alternative to the DREAM Act that would reposition his party on the issue. And that was trumped by an even-more brilliant move by the president,” Sharry said. “It makes sense for Rubio to step back. Now, instead of being a knight in shining armor, he’d look like a rubber stamp for the president.”

Rubio said he wasn’t ready to kill his plan entirely just yet. But he acknowledged struggling to find common ground between liberals and conservatives.

Some on the right have too much of a deport-them-first view when it comes to immigration, while those on the left portray any opponent of their plans as being “anti-immigrant,” Rubio said.

“What troubles me about this debate is there doesn’t seem to be room to reconcile these two positions,” Rubio said. “That’s what I’m trying to arrive at. That’s what I’m trying to find room for.”

Rubio made the comments while discussing his new autobiography, An American Son, in which he laments the difficulties in navigating the “two worlds” he inhabits as a conservative Republican and as the son of immigrants who lives in an immigrant community, Miami.

“Writing a book about your life is one thing, authoring a proposal on a public policy that could impact 800,000 people is a different endeavor,” he said. “It’s not like ordering a Big Mac at McDonalds. There’s a lot of complexity.”  Source

 
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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

George Zimmerman jailhouse phone calls released

 

SANFORD, Fla. –

Jailhouse calls show how the former neighborhood watch leader charged with killing Trayvon Martin instructed his wife to transfer money from bank accounts.

The calls released by prosecutors Monday could play a crucial role in George Zimmerman’s second bond hearing next week  LISTEN: Call 1 | Call 2 | Call 3 | Call 4 | Call 5 | Call 6
Quick Clicks
Zimmerman jail call 1
Zimmerman jail call 2
Zimmerman jail call 3
Zimmerman jail call 4
Zimmerman jail call 5
Zimmerman jail call 6

Zimmerman was released on $150,000 bond in April, several days after the calls took place. At his bond hearing, his wife, Shellie, testified that she didn’t know how much money had been raised from a website created for his legal defense.

Prosecutors say the calls show George and Shellie Zimmerman knew that roughly $135,000 had been raised by the site.

Officials on Friday originally said all 151 jail house calls made by Zimmerman would be released, but Zimmerman’s attorney Mark O’Mara filed a motion objecting the release of the jail calls not mentioned in the state’s motion to revoke bond.

Zimmerman’s defense team also announced on Friday that it had received a a second round of evidence from state prosecutors. According to the website, the discovery package includes seven compact discs and hundreds of pages of documents. The website says it includes surveillance video, police radio transmissions, crime scene photos, 911 calls Zimmerman made prior to the night of the shooting and more.

The evidence also includes cellphone records of Martin’s father and emails from former Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee.

The document issued by court officials says Judge Kenneth Lester issued the discovery to O’Mara and his legal team on Thursday. On O’Mara’s website, GZLegalCase.com, the June 1 ruling of the court says the defense will have 30 days to review the discovery before it is made available to the public.

“The discovery process is ongoing, and we expect additional discovery to be disclosed as the case develops,” O’Mara wrote.

Zimmerman is charged with second-degree murder in the death of Martin, who was shot and killed Feb. 26. Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty, claiming self-defense.

His wife, Shellie Zimmerman, was recently arrested on perjury charges after prosecutors said she lied about their finances at her husband’s first bond hearing. She has since been released on bond.

George Zimmerman’s second bond hearing is scheduled for June 29.  Source

 
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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Polls: Public’s opinions on George Zimmerman shifting

SANFORD, Fla. — For weeks, the death of Trayvon Martin, the investigations it launched and the civil rights rallies it spurred were the most important news stories in the country, according to pollsters.

At least six news organizations or polling companies did surveys. What they documented, in general, was that people were fascinated and outraged by the Feb. 26 death of the unarmed 17-year-old and angry at the shooter, Neighborhood Watch volunteer George Zimmerman.

Two sets of findings, though, stand out:  Since then, more-recent photos of Martin and Zimmerman have been published.

“I think the images bear out it’s a pretty even battle, in terms of body size and mass,” Irby said. “But you know, Skittles versus a gun, there’s no fairness in that alignment.”

Every week, the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press conducts a survey asking people what news stories are most important to them.

In a poll completed April 1, 10 days before Zimmerman was arrested, Americans said Martin’s shooting was. The week before, they gave the same answer.

“This story had so many elements that it just kept percolating for a while,” said Michael Remez, a Pew spokesman, “questions of race … the adequacy of the police probe.”

There also were questions about gun rights, Remez said, and the wisdom of Florida’s “stand your ground” law, which allows people with a reasonable fear of death or great bodily harm to use deadly force without fear of arrest.

There was a stark difference, though, between how the story resonated with blacks and whites. In the April 1 survey, 58 percent of blacks identified the Martin/Zimmerman story as the country’s most important vs. 24 percent for whites, Pew reported.

“Blacks in America are still very much aware of the prevalence of racism in American society,” said Irby, “so the Martin case struck a major chord among African-American people and increasingly people of color in America.”

They understand, in a way that whites do not, what racial profiling is and how dangerous it can be, he said.

“This was kind of clarion call that we need some change, some real change in regard to profiling,” he said  Source

 
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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Former Chris Bosh girlfriend applies for food stamps

As Chris Bosh prepares for the Miami Heat’s third game in the NBA Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder, his baby mama has applied for food stamps, Gossip Extra has learned.

In her first interview about the legal battle that Bosh and former live-in galpal Allison Matthis have been waging in three states, Matthis’ lawyer says Orlando resident Matthis was laid off from her gig as a secretary in a construction company and this week applied for federal food assistance.

Matthis is also expecting to see her home go into foreclosure.  Source

 
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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

6 jailhouse calls to be released Monday in Case Against George Zimmerman

ORLANDO —

New information is expected to be released in the Case Against George Zimmerman Monday.

The State Attorney’s Office announced Friday that six jailhouse phone calls involving Zimmerman will be released.

Originally, 151 jailhouse calls were to be made public.

The release comes days after Zimmerman’s attorney announced they had received a second round of evidence from state prosecutors.

The evidence includes a potential witness list, Zimmerman’s MySpace account, phone records of Trayvon Martin’s father and e-mails between Zimmerman and former Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee.  Source

 
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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Uncategorized