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View Full Version : Federal Funding of Anti-Arizona Lawsuit Rolls On




FrankRep
07-23-2010, 10:51 AM
The Senate on July 21 rejected an amendment by Republican Senators Jim DeMint and David Vitter to enervate the President’s lawsuit against the anti-illegal-immigration Arizona state law by cutting off funds to the Justice Department that is prosecuting the suit. By Joe Wolverton, II


Federal Funding of Anti-Arizona Lawsuit Rolls On (http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/immigration/4114-federal-funding-of-anti-arizona-lawsuit-rolls-on)


Joe Wolverton, II | The New American (http://www.thenewamerican.com/)
Friday, 23 July 2010


The Senate on July 21 blocked an attempt by a slate of Republicans to enervate the President’s lawsuit against Arizona’s new anti-illegal-immigration law by cutting off funds to the Justice Department that is prosecuting the suit.

The specific legislation was an amendment co-authored by Republican Senators Jim DeMint of South Carolina and David Vitter of Louisiana. The amendment was offered as an attachment to H.R. 4213, the bill extending the length of unemployment compensation.

The Senate rejected the amendment 55-43. Five Democrats crossed the aisle and voted with Republicans to thwart the Administration’s lawsuit: Max Baucus and John Tester of Montana; Mark Pryor and Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas; and Ben Nelson of Nebraska. Two Republican members defected to the other side and voted to reject Senator DeMint’s amendment, thereby effectively giving the President the green light to sue Arizona and impede the enforcement of S.B. 1070. Those defectors were Mike Johann of Nebraska and George Voinovich of Ohio.

As The New American has extensively reported, Attorney General Eric Holder filed suit on behalf of the Justice Department against the state of Arizona seeking to enjoin the enforcement of SB 1070, the anti-illegal immigration law signed on April 23 by Governor Jan Brewer and set to go into legal effect on July 29. The administration’s complaint explicitly asserts federal supremacy over the states in all matters relating to immigration and insists that a "patchwork of state and local immigration policies throughout the country" would interfere with the federal government's authority "to set and enforce immigration policy."

At least seven other lawsuits have been filed against Arizona seeking prevention of the enforcement of the law. Among those groups aligning themselves against the Grand Canyon State’s lawful attempts to staunch the nearly round-the-clock invasion across its southern border is the government of Mexico, whose brief in the case was accepted earlier this month by a federal judge.

In the wake of the federal judge’s decision to accept Mexico’s brief, seven other Latin American countries have filed similar documents expressing support for a lawsuit challenging Arizona's immigration enforcement law.

Bolivia, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Paraguay, and Peru filed separate but nearly identical motions to join Mexico's legal brief supporting the lawsuit filed by U.S. civil rights and other advocacy groups.

With regard to his now-defeated amendment, Senator DeMint made the following points:



• “States like Arizona shouldn’t be prosecuted for protecting their citizens when the federal government fails to do so.”

• “The federal government is rewarding illegal behavior and encouraging many more to enter our nation illegally when they refuse to enforce our laws.”

• “States along the border are facing kidnappings, drug trafficking, human trafficking and gang violence and they have a duty to keep their residents safe. Instead of suing states for doing his job, the President should get serious and stop holding border security hostage to pass amnesty and score points with his liberal base.”


Senator Vitter expressed similar views on the matter: “The Obama administration should not use taxpayers’ money to pay for these lawsuits that the American people overwhelmingly oppose.”

This amendment is but the latest attempt by Senator DeMint, one of the Senate’s most outspoken advocates of the Arizona legislation, to attach an amendment of this sort to a larger legislative package. Previously, DeMint’s riders have proposed legislation to legally compel the national government to finish construction on the fence that runs along the southern border. None of the amendments ever made it into the final version of the larger bills.

The law that President Obama and his retinue of rubber-stampers find so offensive, Arizona’s S.B. 1070, empowers state and local law-enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration laws by requiring proof of legal presence in the state of any person stopped by them for some underlying lawful purpose.

This law neither creates new nor abridges established civil rights of anyone legally present in their state. In fact, the law merely “enforces federal immigration laws” already enacted by Congress. It would seem, then, that enforcement of existing law is per se lawful and not something liable to be abolished by the government of the United States that originally promulgated the underlying provisions. If there is any “profiling” in the law, it is the original federal immigration statutes that are suspect, not Arizona’s specific intent to carry them out within its own sovereign borders.


SOURCE:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/immigration/4114-federal-funding-of-anti-arizona-lawsuit-rolls-on

FrankRep
07-23-2010, 11:04 AM
Private/State Money (Pro-AZ) vs. Federal Government Tax Money (anti-AZ)


http://www.thenewamerican.com/images/stories/US_12-2009/2605-coverstory.jpg (http://www.shopjbs.org/index.php/tna/subscriptions.html)


Keep Arizona Safe!
http://www.keepazsafe.com/




In response to the July 6 announcement that the federal government was suing the State of Arizona over its Senate Bill 1070, due to go into effect July 29, donations have been pouring into the state for its defense. by Mary McHugh


$500,000: Donations From Other States Being Made to Arizona Defense Fund (http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/immigration/3986-donations-from-other-states-being-made-to-az-defense-fund)


Mary McHugh | The New American (http://www.thenewamerican.com/)
Friday, 09 July 2010


On July 6, the federal government announced it was suing (http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/immigration/3967-us-v-arizona-the-feds-sue-arizona-over-sb-1070) the State of Arizona over its Senate Bill 1070, due to go into effect July 29. This bill is part of Arizona’s efforts to defend itself against the illegal immigration pouring over its southern border shared with Mexico, and the multitude of problems and dangers this has ensued both locally and nationally.

In the wake of the government’s announcement, a defense fund originally set up through executive order by Gov. Jan Brewer on May 26 immediately began amassing thousands of dollars from concerned parties of all 50 states, plus Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico. The total donated as of Thursday morning was about $500,000, with $330,000 arriving between July 6-8 alone; 7,008 of the 9,057 total online contributions since May were also made during this time period, with an estimated 88 percent of the fund’s (https://az.gov/app/keepazsafe/index.xhtml) total donations coming from these online contributors. Generally, the contributions were small, from between $5 to $2,000, and many of those donating were retirees. One concerned contributor, Mary Ann Rohde from Rialto, California, stated, "Arizona needs our help. It's a disgrace what our government is doing." She and her husband donated $20. According to the Associated Press (http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/07/08/supporters-donate-k-defend-arizona-law/):



It's unclear what the state's legal costs will be in defending the law. Snell & Wilmer, the Phoenix-based law firm representing the state in the pending challenges, told a federal judge Wednesday that its lawyers were working late into the evening to respond to all the filings in the cases.

Citing the crush of filings in the case, U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton has imposed limits on the size of so-called "friend of the court" briefs filed by groups in support or opposition to the law.

Brewer hired the private lawyers to represent the state even before the Democratic attorney general, Terry Goddard, agreed to Brewer's demand to withdraw from the state's defense. He had opposed the legislation but said he was willing to do his duty to defend the state law.


The attorney fees are estimated to be about $450 per hour. And though Goddard, who is also a candidate for Governor, “said the law as finally amended was legally defensible,” he did eventually step down in order to avoid undertaking a separate court battle with Governor Brewer. There were concerns among Arizona state lawmakers that Goddard would not support S.B. 1070 well, and they therefore gave Brewer authority to move ahead with spearheading its defense.

An article in the Herald (http://www.svherald.com/content/news/2010/07/09/brewer-s-defense-fund-amasses-nearly-500000) of Sierra Vista, Aarizona, commented, “If the pace of donations are an indication, the decision Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Justice to file its own lawsuit has resulted in an outpouring of support for Brewer.” It added that after the $100,000 sent in by Arizona’s own citizens, the second and third largest contributions as of Thursday were from California and Texas.

One contributor from Georgia sent $20 to help Arizona defend its new immigration law, “Because our president is stupid.’’ There indeed is concern and anger throughout the country about the President’s approach to border security and the defense of the United States. The intentions of he and his administration are under considerable question.


SOURCE:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/immigration/3986-donations-from-other-states-being-made-to-az-defense-fund

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Nearly Half a Million Dollars Pledged by Americans to Fight DOJ Lawsuit Against Arizona (http://www.infowars.com/nearly-half-a-million-dollars-pledged-by-americans-to-fight-doj-lawsuit-against-arizona/)

Infowars.com | July 9, 2010

free1
07-23-2010, 11:22 AM
A State or it's sovereign People can delegate to the United States (government) things, but that doesn't restrict them from doing that thing.

The sovereign, in this case the People through their State, is always the holder of the power in this country. A sovereign doesn't give up that power just because he delegates it to his bumbling servant.

This suit could be thrown out in 3 seconds.

WTF are the lawyers doing?

OH!! Milking the cow!