Whitey Ford
01-03-2019, 06:32 PM
Sierra Leone, Ghana, Haiti...niggers better take back their wayward, wandering dindus who think that they can just rudely intrude and invade American soil! Or Trump will get the BAN Hammer.
https://i.imgur.com/38pxZaD.jpg
Sierra Leone for years had thumbed its nose at U.S. officials, slow-walking deportations so badly that it earned its way onto Homeland Security’s “recalcitrant country” naughty list. Over the last two years of the Obama administration, Sierra Leone took back just 21 deportees.
President Trump took office vowing action, and one of his first executive orders instructed his administration to stop issuing visas to the worst-offending countries. The Sierra Leone government was targeted with sanctions in August 2017, and the change came quickly, with 44 deportees sent back that year, and 79 shipped back in fiscal 2018.
While much of Mr. Trump’s immigration agenda remains tied up in the federal courts or stalemated in Congress, he has made extraordinary progress on recalcitrant countries like Sierra Leone, cutting the number of deadbeat countries from a peak of 23 in 2015 down to just nine as of last month.
Under Mr. Trump, six countries have already been slapped with deportee-related sanctions.
In each of those cases, the U.S. government said it would no longer issue business or tourist visas to government officials and their families — and warned that even broader sanctions could follow.
“Now these countries understand that the party is over and they — government officials in particular — will face consequences for blocking deportations,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy studies director at the Center for Immigration Studies. “The sanctions work.”
U.S. authorities earlier this year won a five-year sentence against a Ghanaian man who ran a heroin distribution operation from his apartment in National Harbor, in the suburbs outside Washington, D.C.
Jeffrey Okyere had amassed a criminal record and was deported once before, then snuck back in, was caught and served time for that illegal reentry — but Ghana refused to take him back after that, and he had to be released into the community, where he was nabbed after selling thousands of dollars of heroin to an undercover officer.
The Ghanaian government has refused to respond to repeated requests for comment about its decision-making.
In another infamous case, Haiti refused to take back a man who’d served time for attempted murder, insisting it couldn’t verify that he was actually Haitian. The man, Jean Jacques, would go on to kill a young Connecticut woman, Casey Chadwick, after a drug dispute with her boyfriend.
https://i.imgur.com/38pxZaD.jpg
Sierra Leone for years had thumbed its nose at U.S. officials, slow-walking deportations so badly that it earned its way onto Homeland Security’s “recalcitrant country” naughty list. Over the last two years of the Obama administration, Sierra Leone took back just 21 deportees.
President Trump took office vowing action, and one of his first executive orders instructed his administration to stop issuing visas to the worst-offending countries. The Sierra Leone government was targeted with sanctions in August 2017, and the change came quickly, with 44 deportees sent back that year, and 79 shipped back in fiscal 2018.
While much of Mr. Trump’s immigration agenda remains tied up in the federal courts or stalemated in Congress, he has made extraordinary progress on recalcitrant countries like Sierra Leone, cutting the number of deadbeat countries from a peak of 23 in 2015 down to just nine as of last month.
Under Mr. Trump, six countries have already been slapped with deportee-related sanctions.
In each of those cases, the U.S. government said it would no longer issue business or tourist visas to government officials and their families — and warned that even broader sanctions could follow.
“Now these countries understand that the party is over and they — government officials in particular — will face consequences for blocking deportations,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy studies director at the Center for Immigration Studies. “The sanctions work.”
U.S. authorities earlier this year won a five-year sentence against a Ghanaian man who ran a heroin distribution operation from his apartment in National Harbor, in the suburbs outside Washington, D.C.
Jeffrey Okyere had amassed a criminal record and was deported once before, then snuck back in, was caught and served time for that illegal reentry — but Ghana refused to take him back after that, and he had to be released into the community, where he was nabbed after selling thousands of dollars of heroin to an undercover officer.
The Ghanaian government has refused to respond to repeated requests for comment about its decision-making.
In another infamous case, Haiti refused to take back a man who’d served time for attempted murder, insisting it couldn’t verify that he was actually Haitian. The man, Jean Jacques, would go on to kill a young Connecticut woman, Casey Chadwick, after a drug dispute with her boyfriend.