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WASHINGTON TIMES
FRONT PAGE AMNESTY DOCUMENT
Article published Jun 27, 2007
'Amnesty' fake papers pledged in wiretap June 27, 2007 By Stephen Dinan and
Jerry Seper -
ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: The head of a
Mexican forgery ring was convinced he could make phony documents that illegal
aliens could use to indicate fraudulently that they were eligible for a new
amnesty, says a government affidavit recounting wiretapped phone calls the man
made. Julio Leija-Sanchez, who ran a $3 million-a-year forgery operation before
he was arrested in April, was expecting Congress to pass a legalization
program, which he called "amnesty," and said he could forge documents
to fool the U.S. government into believing illegal aliens were in the country
in time to qualify for amnesty, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) agent said in the affidavit. In recounting a wiretapped telephone
conversation, ICE agent Jason E. Medica said he heard Mr. Leija-Sanchez tell an
associate the forgery ring could "fix his papers" to meet the
requirements of a legalization program such as the bill the Senate is debating
today. "When Leija-Sanchez said 'if there's an amnesty, he can fix his
papers,' Leija-Sanchez was referring to the possibility of pending legislation
which would allow a certain class of illegal aliens to remain in the United
States, as long as they can prove a term of residency in the United States with
no convictions," agent Medica wrote. "When Leija-Sanchez said 'he can
fix his papers,' he was referring to the fact that the organization could
fraudulently create or alter documents to falsely prove the requisite residency
period," the agent wrote. Mr. Leija-Sanchez also used his forgery ring to
help smuggle illegal aliens into the country on the understanding they would
work for his criminal enterprise. He was arrested on charges of forgery and
conspiracy to commit murder. The Senate immigration bill was resurrected
yesterday and is headed for a final vote later this week. It includes a path to
citizenship for the 12 million to 20 million estimated illegal aliens as long
as they can show they arrived in the country by the beginning of this year. Its
backers say it cracks down on fraud by requiring new legal workers to have a
tamper-proof ID, but opponents say it would invite a new wave of illegal aliens
with fraudulent documents trying to prove they are eligible for legal status.
They point to the 1986 amnesty, in which about a quarter of approved
applications were later deemed fraudulent. "It's clear that the most
capable fraud document cartel in Mexico has been gearing up for comprehensive
immigration reform at the same time we have been here on Capitol Hill - only
they're ahead of the game," said Michael Maxwell, senior policy analyst
for homeland security for Rep. John Culberson, Texas Republican. "They're
already making money and will continue to do so if this bill passes." In
the affidavit, agent Medica said that although the forgery ring was mostly
Mexican, its customers were "American, Polish, Indian, Algerian, Arab,
Mexican, Nigerian, Canadian, Haitian, Pakistani and Asian." The agent said
the organization never refused to sell documents to anyone who had money. The
113-page affidavit describes a document-fraud investigation by ICE that began
in October 2003 in Chicago and targeted a Mexico-based gang that produced false
documents in cities nationwide, including Denver, Los Angeles and Chicago. ICE
officials said the gang generated millions of dollars in illicit profits each
year by recruiting illegal aliens to sell false documents on street corners in
the city. They said as many as 20 illegal aliens sold false documents at any
one time in just one location. Mr. Leija-Sanchez, 31, was identified in court
papers as the leader of the organization's Chicago operation. He was among 22
persons arrested in April as part of what federal authorities said was a
bustling counterfeit identification document business. He also was accused of
paying $3,000 and conspiring with others to kill two fledgling competitors for
stealing computers used to make the phony documents. The conversations
involving potential documents to obtain amnesty were among numerous calls that
ICE agents intercepted using court-authorized wiretaps since February, during
the final months of the investigation code-named Operation Paper Tiger. Based
on undercover purchases and information from cooperating sources, ICE officials
said the organization sold 50 to 100 sets of fraudulent identification
documents daily, charging about $200 to $300 per set. A set consisted of a
Social Security card and either an immigration green card or a state driver's
license. Under the Senate bill, documents illegal aliens can use to prove they
have been in the country long enough include bank records, records from a
day-labor center and sworn affidavits from known relatives. Mr. Leija-Sanchez
said he could produce any document for which he had a model to copy. At one
point, a customer asked for a driver's license from Seattle, but the forger
said he didn't have a model. He offered an Ohio license instead. He said he
could make birth certificates, green cards, work visas and driver's licenses
from 20 states.
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