View Single Post
  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to sci.med,rec.autos.driving,rec.food.cooking,misc.consumers.frugal-living
Mrs Irish Mike Mrs Irish Mike is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Midwife birth certificates tied to immigration problems alongTexas border

On Jun 7, 5:22*am, brad herschel > wrote:
> On Jun 6, 9:10*am, Metspitzer > wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > (CNN) -- The women's lives have taken different paths since the days
> > they were born.

>
> > Brenda Vazquez is a 29-year-old elementary school teacher in
> > Matamoros, Mexico. Laura Castro lives across the border in
> > Brownsville, Texas. She is a 32-year-old housewife who helps her
> > husband manage several stores.

>
> > They share one thing in common: Both say they were delivered by
> > midwives in south Texas, but pressured by U.S. Border Patrol agents to
> > deny their U.S. citizenship.

>
> > Their problems began, according to attorney Jaime Diez, when a group
> > of midwives along the U.S.-Mexico border were found guilty of selling
> > birth certificates to people who were not born in the United States.

>
> > "Now all the midwives in the area are suspected of committing fraud,"
> > said Diez, who said his office regularly sees cases of people
> > delivered by midwives in Texas. Some of them are struggling to get
> > passports because officials question the validity of their birth
> > certificates, he said. Others have been deported and had their
> > identification documents confiscated at the border, he said.

>
> > Vazquez, who Diez is representing in a federal lawsuit filed last
> > week, said she was intimidated into signing a document swearing she
> > was not a U.S. citizen at a border crossing in Brownsville, Texas,
> > last year.

>
> > "He said, 'You'd better cooperate with me, because if you don't,
> > you're going to jail. I had to lie and say that I was not a citizen.
> > ... I was quite scared. I was crying," the second-grade teacher said.

>
> > A U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman said he could not
> > comment about Vazquez's case or other such cases "due to pending legal
> > action."

>
> > Border patrol agents are "obligated to ensure that documentation
> > presented to establish citizenship is proper and correct and was
> > issued to the person presenting the documents," spokesman Bill Brooks
> > said in a statement.

>
> > A 2012 report from the Texas Office of the Inspector General said a
> > fraud investigation had been "substantiated" and Vazquez's birth
> > record had been flagged, noting Vazquez's signed confession and the
> > fact that officials found birth certificates for Vazquez in both the
> > United States and Mexico. The report said the case would not be
> > prosecuted because it was beyond the statute of limitations.

>
> > Vazquez said her parents obtained the Mexican birth certificate so she
> > could study in Mexico.

>
> > Vazquez said she has never lived in the United States, but wants to
> > fight to regain her citizenship.

>
> > "With crime as it is in Mexico, something might happen, and as a
> > citizen I would go live there," she said.

>
> > Laura Castro said she faced a similar situation with her mother and
> > sister at the same border crossing in 2009.

>
> > "My sister got desperate and signed the paper," Castro said.

>
> > A border patrol agent told her that her mother had admitted to buying
> > false identification documents for the family.

>
> > "He kept asking me the same thing, and I replied the same thing, that
> > I was a citizen. ... I said I was not going to sign because I did
> > nothing wrong, and they let me go. ... They sent me back to Mexico,"
> > she said.

>
> > Nearly a year later, authorities returned Castro her U.S. passport
> > after she filed a lawsuit, she said.

>
> > But Castro said she remains frustrated.

>
> > "We were very humiliated. We were treated like criminals," she said.

>
> > The issue has come up before. In 2008, the ACLU sued the federal
> > government on behalf of nine people, arguing that authorities were
> > unfairly discriminating against passport applicants.

>
> > "For countless Latinos who were delivered by midwives in the Southwest
> > ... trying to obtain a passport has become an exercise in futility,"
> > the ACLU said in a statement at the time. "Although midwifery has been
> > a common practice for more than a century, particularly in rural and
> > other traditionally underserved communities, the U.S. government has
> > imposed unsurpassable hurdles on midwife-delivered Latinos to prove
> > their citizenship and eligibility for U.S. passports -- even when
> > their citizenship has already been established in the past."

>
> > In a 2009 settlement, the State Department agreed to a new set of
> > procedures for such passport applications.

>
> > But the settlement said the department denied the ACLU's accusations,
> > and noted that "there has been significant fraud by midwives and other
> > birth attendants certifying births as occurring in the United States
> > when they have not occurred in the United States."

>
> > Diez said U.S. authorities need to do more to address the problem.

>
> > "If they doubt that a person was born here and they can't criminally
> > charge them, then give them a process in which they can send their
> > documents to be investigated, give them a chance to be before a judge
> > with a lawyer, and in which there could be a process in which they
> > make things right. That's how it should be when we are talking about
> > the citizenship of someone," he said.

>
> >http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/05/us/tex...ives/index.htm...

>
> Dirty, filthy, beaner scum.


Wanna bet the dirty mid-wives were not Hispanic?