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Sep 1, 2011

Fw: - DOJ seeks to ensure illegal aliens get federal housing

 

A free for all immigrants....
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: 
To: Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2011 12:09 PM
Subject: - DOJ seeks to ensure illegal aliens get federal housing
 

Hi,

I know how to stop the hassle over discriminatory Section 8 housing.  Eliminate the program.

V.

 


 

From:  On Behalf Of Sr
Sent: Monday, August 29, 2011 7:25 PM
To: Subject: [protectourbordernow] NWV News - DOJ seeks to ensure illegal aliens get federal housing

 

DOJ SEEKS TO ENSURE ILLEGAL ALIENS GET FEDERAL HOUSING

By NWV News writer Jim Kouri
Posted 1:00 AM Eastern
August 25, 2011
© 2011 NewsWithViews.com

[Assistant Attorney General] Perez claims [Los Angeles County
officials] discriminate against blacks and Latinos when it comes to
providing federally-subsidized housing known as Section 8, even though 86%
of the Section 8 recipients in both cities are minorities, according to the
county commissioner Michael Antonovich who represents the area.

In a case that legal experts say defies logic and common sense, in
order to ensure that low-income minorities get taxpayer-subsidized housing,
Obama's Department of Justice (DOJ) has launched a nationwide discrimination
probe that, ironically, is focusing on an area where the overwhelming number
of public housing residents are Latino and black.

The investigations are being conducted by the DOJ's bloated civil
rights division, which is headed by renowned illegal immigration advocate
Thomas Perez, who once served as president of a taxpayer-funded group (Casa
de Maryland) dedicated to helping illegal aliens, according to a
public-interest law firm.

A former Maryland Labor Secretary, Assistant Attorney General Perez
has made a number of controversial moves at the DOJ to protect illegal
immigrants and minorities in general. Most famous is his dismissal of
charges against the New Black Panther Party who were "accused" of voter
intimidation of whites.

Among controversial movies is his ordering Colorado to protect the
interests of "language minority populations," suing a public college system
for discrimination over a requirement that job applicants furnish proof of
residency to get hired and launching an initiative to kill written tests
that Perez asserts discriminate against minorities in the workplace.

"Perez doesn't care if these workers can speak, read and write
English. In his world, as long as they are living and breathing they're
qualified to work at institutions of higher learning," said former New York
Detective Ben Cardoza

This month the DOJ's pro-minority act du jour focuses on two cities --
Lancaster and Palmdale -- in Los Angeles County known as the Antelope
Valley
. Perez claims they discriminate against blacks and Latinos when it
comes to providing federally-subsidized housing known as Section 8, even
though 86% of the Section 8 recipients in both cities are minorities,
according to the county commissioner Michael Antonovich who represents the
area.

Antonovich accused Perez, who flew into the Antelope Valley a few days
ago to formally announce the probe, of grandstanding.

At the heavily promoted Antelope Valley press conference Perez also
announced that his agency has opened a related investigation into
allegations of discriminatory policing by the law enforcement agency that
patrols the area, the L.A. County Sheriff's Department. This is relevant
because Perez alleges that deputies harass minority residents of
government-subsidized housing in an effort to drive blacks and Latinos out
of the historically white area that sits about 60 miles north of the city of
Los Angeles, according to a Judicial Watch report.

Officers who patrol the Antelope Valley engage in a pattern or
practice of discrimination on the basis of race or national origin, Perez
said, revealing that his agency made the determination after "extensive
conversations with individuals" in addition to "representatives from
community organizations."

During the interviews, DOJ investigators heard "troubling accounts of
allegedly unjustified stops and searches," according to Perez who said his
agency is focusing on whether there is a pattern of "racially motivated
stops and arrests."

Under Perez's leadership the DOJ has launched similar investigations
of state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the country,
including New York, Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, the District of Columbia
and Louisiana.

It has also created a secret department (National Origin Working
Group) within the civil rights division to monitor "discriminatory" laws
passed by states and municipalities to control illegal immigration.

PROTECTION OF ILLEGAL ALIENS

Last June, Obama's Department of Justice ordered Colorado to protect
the interests of "language minority populations" by strengthening a Court
Interpreter Oversight Committee that assures immigrants who don't speak
English get free translators.

The new DOJ mandate also applies to civil cases, which means that U.S.
taxpayers will fund interpreting services for foreigners who may stand to
make settlement money. Under the agreement, announced this week, the
Colorado Judicial Department will also develop "state and local language
access plans" that address "both oral interpretation and the translation of
vital written documents."

A revitalized state Court Interpreter Oversight Committee will be
expanded to include an attorney, prosecutor, public defender and an
"advocate" representing the interests of the "language minority
populations," according to the DOJ's order.

Interpreters have always been provided in criminal cases and in civil
cases in which litigants were indigent. The new DOJ accord mandates free
access to "timely and competent language assistance" for all "limited
English proficient individuals" in all cases. This won't come cheap.
Colorado's court system already spends nearly $4 million on 25 full-time
interpreters and 300 contractors who provide services in 75 different
languages.

In addition, the DOJ expects illegal aliens to be given the same
assistance in civil lawsuits they file against American citizens and
businesses.

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The assistant attorney general that President Obama appointed to run
the DOJ's Civil Rights Division (Thomas Perez) says it's essential because
"justice cannot be served without access and effective communication." Perez
is a known open-borders advocate who served on the board of a controversial,
taxpayer-funded day laborer center that assists illegal immigrants.

Last year Perez lied to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission to cover up
that political leadership was involved in the dismissal of the voter
intimidation case against the New Black Panther Party. Judicial Watch
obtained records that prove top political appointees were intimately
involved in the decision to drop charges against the radical black
revolutionary group for bullying voters with racial insults, profanity and
weapons during the 2008 presidential election.

© 2011 NWV - All Rights Reserved

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The new DOJ mandate also applies to civil cases, which means that U.S.
taxpayers will fund interpreting services for foreigners who may stand to
make settlement money.

http://www.newswithviews.com:80/NWV-News/news270.htm

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