illegal.... or just visiting?
I think it very wise to break this down a bit.... since yes, clearly, there are shades of gray here.
The visa stuff into the US is WAY more complicated than I ever imagined...
since I never had to get one.....
Spent some mind numbing minutes on the government website.
forgetaboutit
could not understand a thing
and with all that they were saying this was to make it easier for immigrants!
hello?
So then just a general search turned up this,
Does anyone know the penalty for overstaying a visa in the USA? - Yahoo! Answers
so you are clear for about 180 days.... then you start getting banned for a period of time, then well
one day you wake up and notice---
wow, I have been here 16 years and then they really cannot hope to go back and ever return to the US.... the trigger is the leaving.
Despite all the deportations... and I know that there are at least 30,000 Haitians awaiting final deportation orders... and HALF of them have criminal records...(don't know about Dominicans who are NOT criminals).. i have not heard of any vast INS sweeps going on in the US, even after the Patriot Act.
But I agree that the mere fact that you are illegal is going to mean that you are going to have to go underground and break other laws to survive... forge or purchase false IDs and SSNs in order to work... or turn to crime or
how else are you going to survive?
Interesting. This may raise the question about what is the heavier non-crime since we seem to discuss that "illegal" is not automatically "crime";
I can understand that some may argue that entering a country "illegally" or "just" overstaying is not a crime. After all, just overstaying is usually not creating much of a damage. Yet, I think that only a small one digit percentage of those who overstay their visa for longer than just a few days, will not eventually seek work (at best that) basically taking away jobs from nationals and eventually, once they run into trouble one way or another become a burden to that country's social system (even if it's just that they wind up in jail). As long no criminal activities are involved, all this illegal behavior may still not be qualified as a crime, but I would be surprised to hear that most could not understand why some still recent that.
- Entering a country illegally (sneaking thru the chicken wire or swimming across Rio Grande)?
- By not returning within the visa stated time frame, in fact fraudulently using a "tourist" visa to gain entry and stay, work illegally etc. In other words, also obtaining a visa type on untruthful application?
- Obtaining a visa fraudulently (inside job/connection, using false documents, etc)?
... J-D.
I think it very wise to break this down a bit.... since yes, clearly, there are shades of gray here.
The visa stuff into the US is WAY more complicated than I ever imagined...
since I never had to get one.....
Spent some mind numbing minutes on the government website.
forgetaboutit
could not understand a thing
and with all that they were saying this was to make it easier for immigrants!
hello?
So then just a general search turned up this,
Does anyone know the penalty for overstaying a visa in the USA? - Yahoo! Answers
so you are clear for about 180 days.... then you start getting banned for a period of time, then well
one day you wake up and notice---
wow, I have been here 16 years and then they really cannot hope to go back and ever return to the US.... the trigger is the leaving.
Despite all the deportations... and I know that there are at least 30,000 Haitians awaiting final deportation orders... and HALF of them have criminal records...(don't know about Dominicans who are NOT criminals).. i have not heard of any vast INS sweeps going on in the US, even after the Patriot Act.
But I agree that the mere fact that you are illegal is going to mean that you are going to have to go underground and break other laws to survive... forge or purchase false IDs and SSNs in order to work... or turn to crime or
how else are you going to survive?
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