• Texas immigration law SB4 goes into effect today: these are the new pen

    From Michael A. Turdsmeller@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 6 22:06:55 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.society.liberalism, tx.politics
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, talk.politics.guns

    Texas Governor Greg Abbot signed into law Senate Bill 4 in December
    which is a controversial set of measures to stem immigration across
    its southern border. The two main features of the legislation create
    stricter sentencing guidelines for human smuggling and empowers
    local law enforcement to arrest illegal immigrants and deport them.

    Civil rights groups and the federal government have sued to block
    the new immigration law declaring it unconstitutional. “Under the
    Supremacy Clause of the Constitution and longstanding Supreme Court
    precedent, states cannot adopt immigration laws that interfere with
    the framework enacted by Congress,” said Associate Attorney General
    Vanita Gupta in the federal government’s complaint.


    Starting Tuesday 6 February, a mandatory minimum sentence of 10
    years will apply to those who are accused of smuggling undocumented
    immigrants. If the offense is punishable as a first-degree felony
    the minimum prison sentence is 15 years, or more if another
    applicable provision of law applies.

    The penalty drops to 5 years for those transporting certain close
    family members, those with a “third degree of consanguinity” or
    “third degree of affinity.” The concern is that the definition of
    smuggling is quite broad in Texas, and merely driving a family
    member to the doctor could result in a 10-year jail term.

    Those who hide immigrants in safe houses, popularly known as “stash houses,” will face a mandatory minimum sentence of five years behind
    bars.
    Punishments will be increased to that prescribed for the next higher
    category of offense if it was committed in an area under a declared
    state of disaster. The measure also expands criminal sanctions for
    other crimes related to victims that occurred during the commission
    of smuggling.

    Additional immigration laws take effect in March targeting migrants

    Unless the courts block the measure, starting 5 March, under another
    part of SB4, state and local police officers will gain the authority
    to arrest undocumented immigrants and suspects attempting to cross
    the southern border of the United States. Currently, state and local governments must request permission from the federal government
    before making any type of arrest on undocumented immigrants.

    This law also seeks to increase penalties for undocumented
    immigrants, since people who are arrested at the southern border
    could be charged with a first-degree felony and face 180 days to
    five years behind the bars, depending on their criminal history. The
    penalty could be increased to a second-degree felony for immigrants
    who refuse arrest, increasing the sentence from 2 to 20 years.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/texas-immigration-law-sb4-goes- into-effect-today-these-are-the-new-penalties-for-migrants/ar-
    BB1hSidM

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