Out of curiosity, BO, is there a Louisiana Board? Or would i have to create one?
>Scared of getting Diddled by inmates.
>Diddle little kids.
Wonder if he knows what happens to pedos in jail?
Run scared Deniro, run scared.
From CNN (I know)
The Trump administration quietly made it more difficult for immigrants to seek asylum in the US last month, the latest in a series of steps designed to deliver on the President's campaign promise to harshly enforce immigration laws.
Supporters of President Donald Trump's policies say the move cuts off an incentive for migrants to make their way to the US, where they are granted the chance to pursue asylum claims and sometimes build underground lives illegally.
But advocates for immigrants say the changes could block people fleeing genuinely violent situations – especially vulnerable women and children – from getting protections or even adequately having their cases heard.
The move came without the fanfare of Trump's executive orders and implementation guidance, tucked away in arcane guidance for asylum officers distributed by US Citizenship and Immigration Services to officers and immigration lawyers.
But despite the changes being widely unnoticed, experts say they have major implications for how would-be asylum seekers' cases are handled. Taken with the rest of Trump's actions to crack down on illegal immigration and tighten border security, the changes could further restrict the flow of immigrants into the US without needing to change any laws.
"Clearly a signal is being given to the field here: We want to be stricter," said former USCIS Director Leon Rodriguez, who served in the role for the last two-and-a-half years of the Obama administration and is now an attorney. "I think the intent of it will absolutely be understood by the officers.
Not much better, but second source.
https://www.cnn.com/2017/03/08/politics/trump-immigration-crackdown-asylum/index.html
Interesting find from the U.S. Department of Justice
Executive Office for Immigration Review
Board of Immigration Appeals
They specify women from El Savador
"(2) The respondent afforded material support to the guerillas in El Salvador in 1990
because the forced labor she provided in the form of cooking, cleaning, and washing
their clothes aided them in continuing their mission of armed and violent opposition to
the Salvadoran Government."