Contact an Immigration Attorney Today
Immigration Lawyers Home About Kretz & Romero P.C. Attorneys Payments Find Us Espanol
Immigration Law
Family-Based Green Cards
Employment-Based Green Cards
Visas
US Citizenship
Consular Processing
Deportation Defense
Appeals
Testimonials/FAQ
Detained Or Arrested By ICE
Temporary Protected Status
ICE Detainee Locator
Website Updates
Priority Dates
FAQ's
Staff
Office News
Testimonials
Other Services
Immigration Updates
Why Hire An Attorney
US Immigration Law Timeline
Know Your Rights
Visit us on these social networks
Skype
Immigration News

Victories

Virtual Fence is likely to get canned.

With all the focus on Arizona's controversial immigration law in doubt in the courts. Another less publicized controversy coming out of the state is the SBI net or what others may know other knows name as the ""virtual fence" which runs along Arizona and the Mexican border. This fence uses high-tech radar towers that was suppose to be the end all of all end alls to stopped people from crossing into the United States from the Mexican border. Michael Chertoff, the then head of the Department of Homeland Security back in 2006 had all the confidence in the world that this technology was the savior to stopping illegal crossing. Boeing was awarded a contract to take on the task on manning the 2,000 mile border, which ran into glitches from the get go. Now just a mere 4 years later and a billion dollars of our taxpayers dollars wasted on less the 55 miles of ineffective fencing installed, that has unclear pictures, bad radar that can't detect automobiles from people and software that is unable to follow people in real-time, not to mention that the so called virtual fence does not work in poor weather. The Department of Homeland Security has just about seen enough and is ready to pull the plug on this failed venture. When and what will it take for the politicians and the public to understand that our broken immigration system needs fixed the correct way.

Albuquerque, New Mexico Immigration Attorneys

Kretz & Romero, P.C. 





Virtual Fence es probable que se conserva.

Con todo el énfasis en la ley de inmigración de Arizona polémica en duda en los tribunales. Otra controversia menos publicidad que sale del Estado es la red de OSE o de lo que otros puedan conocer otras conoce el nombre de "el" muro virtual ", que corre a lo largo de Arizona y la frontera con México. Esta guía utiliza las torres de radar de alta tecnología que se supone que debe ser al final todos de todos los alls fin a la gente dejó de cruzar a Estados Unidos desde la frontera con México. Michael Chertoff, el entonces jefe del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional en el 2006 tenía toda la confianza en el mundo que esta tecnología fue el salvador detener el cruce ilegal. Boeing se adjudicó un contrato para asumir la tarea en equipo, la frontera de 2.000 millas, que se encontró con problemas técnicos desde el principio. Ahora, tan sólo 4 años más tarde y un mil millones de dólares de nuestro dinero de los contribuyentes gastado en menos de 55 millas de cerca ineficaces instalado, que tiene imágenes claras, radares mal que no puede detectar los automóviles de la gente y de software que no es capaz de seguir a la gente en tiempo real, por no hablar de que la valla llamada virtual no funciona en el mal tiempo. El Departamento de Seguridad Nacional tiene casi visto lo suficiente y está dispuesto a tirar del enchufe en esta empresa no. ¿Cuándo y qué se necesita para que los políticos y al público a entender que nuestro sistema roto de inmigración necesidades permanentes de la forma correcta. 

Albuquerque, Nuevo México Abogados de Inmigración

Kretz & Romero, P.C.
Categories: Arizona virtual fence

Comments

No Comments Posted

New Mexico Immigration Attorneys
Contact Kretz & Romero, P.C.
Site Map
Professional Web Design
© Kretz & Romero, P.C. 2009

The information on this New Mexico Immigration Attorneys / Law Firm website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this or associated pages, documents, comments, answers, emails, or other communications should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information on this website is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing of this information does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.

Address: 301 Edith Blvd NE Suite 100 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Phone: 505-243-9855 Fax: 505-243-9888 - Administration