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Latest Immigration News » Immigration: Court Decisions » Supreme Court Limits Penalty For Using False Social Security Numbers

Supreme Court Limits Penalty For Using False Social Security Numbers

This week the US Supreme Court limited the government’s ability to prosecute and deport workers in this country illegally. While the use of false documents can result in being jailed, the court ruled a charge of the more serious crime of “aggravated identity theft” cannot be made without proof that they knew the identification number belonged to someone else.

Removal from the United States through the Immigration Courts takes time, and the crime for which a person is convicted can have dramatic effects. Aggravated felonies can seriously limit the ability of a person to remain in the United States and for his or her ability to return at some later date.

During the Bush administration, a number of workplaces were targeted with some of those arrested being charged with possessing false documents and aggravated identity theft. One of the most publicized raids took place at a meatpacking plant in Iowa. Agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested almost 400 undocumented immigrants in what government officials billed as the nation’s largest immigration raid ever. Agents stormed the meatpacking plant, rounding up mostly Guatemalan and Mexican immigrants.

As posted on our website  and recent broadcast on ICE worksite arrests, in over 6,000 worksite arrests made by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) last year only 135 were employers. The rest targeted were all illegal aliens.

The Obama administration is currently focusing on employers who knowingly violate the law by hiring illegals, and criminal aliens, rather than individual illegal workers.

Now, unless “knowledge” is established, an illegal worker may face civil charges related to illegally entering the United States or overstaying a visa, criminal charges of illegally reentering the country after being deported, or a combination of these.

Please comment below...

Written by

Thomas W. Goldman, Esq., J.D., LL.M., and Peter J. Loughlin, Esq., J.D., LL.M., are US immigration lawyers and the founders of Goldman and Loughlin, PLLC Law Firm, a national immigration law firm with offices in Orlando, Florida and Naples, Florida and Bradenton Florida.

Filed under: Immigration: Court Decisions · Tags: , , ,

3 Responses to "Supreme Court Limits Penalty For Using False Social Security Numbers"

  1. foo says:

    they swear a oath when they file their w-4 and the penalty for that violation is ONE YEAR IN PRISON

    f-tard nation refuses to enforce its laws THEN

    the STATES MUST ENACT THEIR OWN LAWS FOR DOCUMENT FRAUD

    ONLY JAIL TIME will end the takeover of america by mehicanos

  2. Eric says:

    My estranged wife has a temporary Social Security Card which says “Not eligible for employment” or somthing like that – but she got a fake one made that had those words missing and uses it to get jobs. Is this not a serious offense? In Texas it would be…. Forgery of a Governemnt Document – a felony, right?

  3. catt11daddy says:

    let me get caught using a fake ID and see if i’m not jailed for forgery, and facing 5-7 years in prison, so un fair to citizens.

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