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If ILLEGALS continue getting away with breaking the law then, they're being rewarded for breaking the law. The hypocritical double-standards have to stop. Just enforce the laws already on the books.
Read this article:
"Identity theft is not a soft crime"
"Let's put some context on this -- this is the fastest-growing crime in the country. Roughly 10 million people every year are victimized by identity theft....
"...he pulled a Social Security Number out of the air -- he simply made it up using the three digits for Connecticut as a prefix and then putting all the rest together. Little did he know that he was inventing the number of an investigative reporter, and so down the road, when it turned out that he had been running up bills on nine different credit cards, passing bad checks at Indian casinos, and when his mess made his way into my credit file during a refinance, I then set out to find the guy. Which I did, and working with law enforcement, managed to get him arrested and deported. Under this new ruling, he would not be guilty of aggravated identity theft, because by having pulled my Social out of the air, he did not, quote unquote, "knowingly" steal my Social Security Number."
marketplace.publicradio.org/disp...heft/
* A response to the news: Supreme Court rules against government in immigration identity-theft case
www.latimes.com/news/natio...32350.story
;
Read this article:
"Identity theft is not a soft crime"
"Let's put some context on this -- this is the fastest-growing crime in the country. Roughly 10 million people every year are victimized by identity theft....
"...he pulled a Social Security Number out of the air -- he simply made it up using the three digits for Connecticut as a prefix and then putting all the rest together. Little did he know that he was inventing the number of an investigative reporter, and so down the road, when it turned out that he had been running up bills on nine different credit cards, passing bad checks at Indian casinos, and when his mess made his way into my credit file during a refinance, I then set out to find the guy. Which I did, and working with law enforcement, managed to get him arrested and deported. Under this new ruling, he would not be guilty of aggravated identity theft, because by having pulled my Social out of the air, he did not, quote unquote, "knowingly" steal my Social Security Number."
marketplace.publicradio.org/disp...heft/
* A response to the news: Supreme Court rules against government in immigration identity-theft case
www.latimes.com/news/natio...32350.story
;
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