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US to weigh gay relationships in deportation cases

 

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Amid pressure from Democratic lawmakersHomeland Security officials reiterated Friday that a foreigner's longstanding same-sex relationship with a U.S. citizen could help stave off the threat of deportation.

Binational gay couples are eligible for consideration under a federal program designed to focus resources away from low-prioritydeportation cases and let officials spend more time tracking down convicted criminals, said Marsha Catron, a spokeswoman for theDepartment of Homeland Security.

However, the Obama administration will not automatically shelve deportation cases or process green card applications involving foreign citizens married to same-sex American partners.

Catron said her agency will continue to comply with a 1996 law that prohibits the government from recognizing same-sex relationships, even as Homeland Security takes these relationships into consideration when evaluating possible deportation.

The Obama administration last year said it considers the 1996 law unconstitutional and would no longer defend it in court.

Friday's statement, which builds on comments Homeland Security officials made last summer, came three days after 84 lawmakers demanded the agency put its position in writing to help protect same-sex couples from deportation.

Immigrant advocates welcomed the comments but said a formal policy still is needed.

"It is significant to me because it is expressly inclusive of LGBT families," said Lavi Soloway, an immigration attorney who represents a number of same-sex couples in deportation proceedings.

However, "as long as it's not in writing it doesn't mean that much for an individual in deportation," Soloway said.

That sentiment was echoed by Drew Hammill, a spokesman for Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, one of the authors of a letter this week urging the federal government to recognize couples' ties in a memo or field guidance.

The statement was first reported on Thursday by the online news site BuzzFeed.

Homeland Security officials did not answer questions about whether a written memo would be issued.

The federal government last year began reviewing deportation cases to determine which ones should be top priority and which ones might be shelved. Government attorneys weigh factors such as a person's criminal record, family ties and community relations in making their decisions.

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That is what is happening in Canada.  Some African men are pretending to be gay so they can stay in Canada and not be sent back to Africa.  Some of them are even going to these gay bars and gay organizations and pretend to be gay so they can fool Canadian Immigration when they are being questioned by Canadian immigration officers.  One African man told me that when he visited one of these gay bars in Alberta.  A Chinese man then came up to him at the bar and said "I love strong black men and I like you"  The African man said that he almost fell on the floor when he heard that. 

 

It is not fair for those gays who are real antimen that these guys are abusing the immigration system by pretending to be antimen when in reality they are not.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

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