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Home Front: WoT
Visa Fraud Prompts Federal Church Probes
2007-04-21
WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government is inspecting churches and religious groups to clamp down on fraud in a visa program for religious workers, government officials said Thursday. The visits are part of an effort by Citizenship and Immigration Services, a division of the Department of Homeland Security, to tighten rules for the religious worker visas after finding fraud in about 33 percent of applications.
How many for the mosque in Arizona?
The agency said that because of the level of fraud it did not want to wait until proposed rule changes became final to start checking on the religious organizations.

Every religious organization that files visa applications for its workers will be visited before the application is approved. They may not get a second visit if they seek a visa for a second worker, but could be contacted by phone, said Janis Sposato, an associate director of CIS who led the fraud review.

The review uncovered churches that did not exist and applications filed falsely under the name of a legitimate church that did not petition for the worker, Sposato said. "This is an ongoing program. There is no start date. We are doing the site visits," Sposato said.

Costs for the federal inspection would be absorbed in fee increases proposed by Citizenship and Immigration Services. Eventually, federal contractors would do the inspections, she said. The proposed rule changes come 20 months after the agency reviewed the religious worker visa program and found the 33 percent fraud rate, officials said Thursday.

Sposato refused to say whether the review uncovered any terrorism suspects or someone who might cause harm in the country.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  But, NO, can't clamp down on Catholic churches who organize political rallies by the tens of thousands of illegal Mexicans in the US to change Federal politics, NO NO NO. Can't do clamp down on THAT.

Sorry - it isn't a 'political rally'. Disagreeable as it is (and I disagree with my bishops on this), they do have a right to engage in rallies on issue advocacy.

What they cannot do is advocate, endorse, or promote a political candidate or party.
Posted by: Pappy   2007-04-21 23:52  

#3  careful on the broad brush on the Catholic Churches. Our parish in La Mesa, CA does NOT support any sanctuary position
Posted by: Frank G   2007-04-21 23:00  

#2  Or black churches that contribute to Democrats.
Posted by: Jackal   2007-04-21 22:57  

#1  Ah yes. Good ol seperation of church and state.

Two things the government WILL clamp down on, white Churches who endorse certain candidates on one extreme (threatened with the loss of IRS non-profit status if they do endorse) and on the other extreme, Islamist religious groups who want to import Islamists.

But, NO, can't clamp down on Catholic churches who organize political rallies by the tens of thousands of illegal Mexicans in the US to change Federal politics, NO NO NO. Can't do clamp down on THAT.
Posted by: Uninens Big Foot5550   2007-04-21 11:45  

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