Americans protest and block Federal buses from offloading illegal aliens in Californi

Little-Acorn

Gold Member
Jun 20, 2006
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San Diego, CA
The Federal government has a long history of releasing illegal aliens into the U.S. population with no further supervision or control, when it can't handle the numberas that walk across our borders. Ostensibly, they give each one a piece of paper labeled "Notice to Appear", which tells them to come back to a court building in a month or two for a hearing. According to Federal officers, 90% or more of them simply vanish as soon as they are out of Federal custody. Many refer to the piece of paper as a "Notice to Disappear".

When the Fed govt flew a number of illegal aliens from border detention centers in Texas to California yesterday, loaded them into buses, and tried to bring them to the processing center in Murrieta, CA near San Diego, dozens of Americans lined up with protest signs, flags etc. and blocked the buses from entering the processing station. The buses eventually left without releasing the illegal aliens.

It's a good start. But no more than a start.

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Protests block migrants' arrival in Murrieta | UTSanDiego.com

Protests block migrants' arrival in Murrieta

By Roxana Popescu and Sandra Dibble
3:27 p.m.July 1, 2014
Updated8:34 p.m.

A plan to transport three busloads of Central American families through San Diego for processing at the Murrieta Border Patrol station took an unexpected turn Tuesday when scores of protesters blocked the buses from entering.

The protesters lined up outside the Border Patrol station in Murietta, a city about an hour north of San Diego where the group of about 140 unauthorized immigrants, including parents and children, was to be processed.

Though escorted by local law enforcement authorities and the U.S. Border Patrol, the buses backed up, leaving people from both sides of the immigration debate on the roadside, wielding signs and shouting angrily at each other. The shouting continued for hours after the buses turned around and headed back to San Diego.

“We responded for safety reasons,” said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Immigration in San Diego, explaining the agency’s decision to turn back. “We had to ensure that all of the individuals and the passengers on the buses remained safe.”

The buses were seen entering a Border Patrol station near the Mexican border on Otay Mesa, but ICE would not say if it would be their final destination of the day.

The families are part of a surge of Central Americans who have been entering the United States illegally through the Texas border, overwhelming processing facilities. They were flown earlier Tuesday to San Diego, then transferred to buses operated by ICE to Murietta, where they were to be processed.
 

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