Sometimes The Alien Doesn’t Win—Or Goes Home—In Which Case They're No Longer Our Problem
07/19/2024
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Yesterday Federale blogged about the endless appeals illegals get, in It Ain’t Over Until The Alien Wins—Chris Murphy Sponsoring Another Expansion Of Endless Immigration Appeals.

He referenced It Ain’t Over `Til the Alien Wins, by Michelle Malkin June 12, 2007, which discussed a Second Circuit Division decision called BLAKE v. CARBONE (2007), which had stayed the deportation of four really dangerous aliens.

One of them was:

Aundre Singh, a native of Guyana, who was convicted of second-degree murder in 1986. In 1997, the then-INS moved to deport him. In 1998, an immigration judge ordered him deported. In 1999, the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed Singh’s appeal. In 2003, Singh filed a motion to reconsider, which the appeals board denied. Singh filed for reconsideration of that ruling, which was denied in 2004. Singh tried again to appeal the board’s ruling in 2005 and was denied again before heading to the Second Circuit for relief.

Well, I checked the internet to see what Aundre had been up to recently: 

Convicted drug trafficker found not guilty on 5 gun-related charges, by Feona Morrison, Guyana Standard, May 12, 2020

The ”not guilty” is a product of reasonable doubt—he claimed the five guns were totally found in someone else’s room, and the Guyana Police couldn’t prove him wrong—but I’m glad he’s the problem of the Guyanese legal system, rather than the American one.

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