Migrant Mayhem Bleeds Bedlam by the Bay

http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=5300

http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=5208 and his two sons, Michael and Matthew, is not unique. He may not even be exceptional.

Mexican illegal immigrant Eric Antonio Uc-Cahun (aka “Tweety”) now 19, is the second youthful offender protected from deportation in San Francisco to have been arrested for a violent crime as an adult. And a very violent crime it was.

According to San Mateo County chief deputy district attorney Steve Wagstaffe, Tweety and several other suspected gang members approached a man waiting for a bus, accused him of being a member of a rival gang, then unsatisfied by his denial, proceeded to beat him with a broomstick until it broke. While other gang members stripped the man of his jacket, Uc-Cahun then slashed the victim’s abdomen open with a box cutter in two different places. “He basically gutted him, like you gut a pig to get to the meat,” Wagstaffe said.

Both Tweety and Ramos were in San Francisco’s juvenile justice system, not once but at least twice, during Mayor Gavin (“I never met a gay wedding I didn’t sanction”) Newsom’s time in office — Ramos for assault and attempted robbery committed when he was 17, “Tweety” for assaults and “other crimes.”Both were protected, possibly coddled, rather than being turned over to the Feds for deportation under San Francisco’s “Sanctuary Policy.” Until the crimes were uncovered and reported by the San Francisco Chronicle, Bedlam on the Bay prided itself on its self-decreed status as an “Asylum City.” Lunatic Asylum would be more accurate.

The pot-headed policy began in 1985 under Mayor Dianne Feinstein. DiFi and SFO’s Board of Supes officially designated San Francisco as a sanctuary city to provide asylum immigrants supposedly fleeing persecution under the Reagan administration-backed right-wing governments of El Salvador and Guatemala.

Four years later, however, the city not only opened the floodgates, but the public purse. The city’s politicos extended the policy to all immigrants! Even worse, they decreed that the city could not use its resources or funds to assist federal immigration law enforcement, except when required by federal law.

Then in the 1990s, San Francisco officials began interpreting the ordinance along with state juvenile law as preventing them from referring undocumented immigrants in the juvenile justice system to federal authorities for deportation.

But the social insanity didn’t stop there. Not only did Frisco harbor the criminals, it aided and abetted them by providing them with city — that is, taxpayer — money!

Mayor Newsom’s office gave grants totaling more than $650,000 to nonprofit — that is, non-White/anti-White ethnic interest — agencies to provide the underage offenders with free services. These “services” include everything from immigration attorneys to housing assistance, even “arts and cultural affirmation activities.” All this at the time that SFO real estate prices became out of sight for the Middle Class (until the bursting of Wall Street’s latest asset bubble caused housing values to go into free fall, foreclosures to materialize and then metastasize, and jobs to go South — or East — or wherever).

In 2006, the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice, described as a “community outreach” program, started ladling out grants specifically designed to assist, rather than deport what were euphemistically described as “undocumented, unaccompanied and monolingual” youths. The goal of these programs was defined as assisting these individuals to “successfully navigate the juvenile justice system and achieve stability within the community setting.” Truth is the programs were legalized hush money to silence protests by “youth advocacy groups” protesting the “crowded conditions” in SFO’s juvenile hall — crowding occasioned by the massive influx of Central American youths doing time for drug crimes.

The city doled out $467,000 to three nonprofit agencies under the grant program from mid-2006 and mid-2008 and another $200,000 was approved for two of the agencies for the current budget year.

The language justifying the grants specified that these illegals “require extensive support” to overcome “multiple complex barriers” in the justice system; the grants were described as part of Frisco’s “proud tradition as a haven for immigrants.”

In addition to immigration attorneys, the program helped young illegal felons to obtain housing, food, clothing, educational and vocational training, English-language instruction, medical care, mental health assessments, and even “spiritual, cultural enrichment and recreation activities.”

“How many of these people are there who were the beneficiaries of this process?” asked Joseph Russoniello, the U.S. attorney for Northern California, crying out like a modern day John the Baptist in a wilderness of insanity.

According to Russoniello, SFO politicos “took the concept of sanctuary, and they applied it in a way that it is as close to harboring as I’ve ever seen.” In fact, he continued, the city “is using taxpayer dollars to basically endear itself to activist groups that need funding for their activities.”

Which organizations? How much money? Cui bono? Here’s a partial listing:

·        Legal Services for Children received more than $164,000 in city money from 2006 to 2008.

·        The Mission (i.e., Hispanic) District-based Instituto Familiar de la Raza, got $143,000 over two years and is due for another $100,000 this year. Its director, one Estela Garcia, did not return calls from the Chronicle seeking comment.

·        Mission Neighborhood Centers got $150,000 from 2006 to 2008 for what it described as “case intervention” for immigrant felons being held at juvenile hall.

Oh, by the way. When the program spreading out this cash to illegals was created in 2006, the head of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice was Allen Nance. He is now the No. 2 official in the Juvenile Probation Department, which is responsible for housing underage offenders and advising Juvenile Court justices on how their cases should be handled.

Nance denied that providing services to juvenile illegal immigrant offenders was helping to shield them from deportation. Rather, he pleaded, some of the youths were victims of abuse, abandonment or neglect, were seeking legal status refuge in the United States and should be able to do that through the immigration courts.

He even went so far as to label the program part of a “local action plan” to reduce juvenile crime(!): “All kids face, as adolescents, making bad decisions at times. The goal of the program was … to correct any signs of delinquent behavior and afford youth an opportunity to continue to live a crime-free life, which is our expectation of any youth.”

By the way, the program was first suggested by one David Onek, then the second-in-command of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice, now recently named to the Police Commission. Onek was a staff attorney for Legal Services for Children, one of those “not for profit” organizations feeding at the city’s trough.

However, Bay City Bedlam doesn’t end there.

Eight young Honduran crack dealers shielded from INS and housed in Southern California at taxpayer expense took a powder within days of their arrival. Some of the centers are run by a nonprofit company called Silverlake Youth Services in mountain towns southeast of San Bernardino and costs taxpayers $7,000 per month — each! That’s $233.33 per day or $84,000.00 per year! Not bad for an illegal, crackhead who can’t even ‘Spic-a-de English.’ Offer most hardworking American citizens struggling to make ends meet in current tough times $84,000.00 — and that’s tax free — and they’ll swear to spend a year laying low and causing no trouble, possibly even contributing to the survival of their threatened society.

Silverlake’s website says the company maintains 10 such “http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=5181" that “exist for the sole purpose of providing a home environment and psychological health care for troubled youth. The focus of the program is to provide residents with the opportunity to gain effective control over their lives through the acquisition of rethinking skills and positive character growth.” Many of the group homes “have large lots and offer the opportunity for the residents to garden, tend to fruit trees and raise farm animals.

Finally, to close out this tale of SF madness, there has  been a major twist in the case of Edwin Ramos, the Salvadoran illegal accused murderer of three members of the Bologna family. Mayor Newsom and City DA Herrera have sworn to stop shielding illegal criminals, but Mrs. Bologna, whose husband and two sons were murdered, isn’t satisfied.  

The widow Bologna, whose husband and two sons were the victims of the city’s “proud tradition as a haven for immigrants” has had it. She is http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=5453 for being partially responsible for their deaths. (Ramos has pleaded not guilty.)

Her claim states that the city knew Ramos was a member of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13 gang, with a documented violent past, but nonetheless failed to report him as required by federal law to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.

“When a city is violating federal law and that violation of law leads to horrific consequences like this, then the city has clearly acted in a negligent manner,” said one of the Bologna’s attorneys, Kris Kobach, an immigration law professor at University of Missouri, Kansas City School of Law, who also served as former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft’s chief adviser on immigration law and border security

The city has 45 days to respond to the wrongful death claim, which is a precursor to a lawsuit. Perhaps Bedlam by the Bay can find some charity for a decent American citizen who lost her husband and two sons as the result of their insane policies.

http://theoccidentalobserver.com/articles/Editorial-TweetyEtAl.html#Tweety, with important links

2008-08-28