Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Crackdown Expands to Legal Immigrants and Tourists
#1
gift link

Maybe this is how he gets rid of Melania?
Or should Germany ban some US citizens that support Nazis, like JD Vance and Elon?

hmm...

=====

As Trump Broadens Crackdown, Focus Expands to Legal Immigrants and Tourists

U.S. border officials are using more aggressive tactics at ports of entry as the administration scrutinizes green card and visa holders who have expressed opposition to its policies.
Reply
#2
So calling Trump an orangutan “threatens national security and undermines foreign policy?”
I’m in troublllllleeeee…”
Reply
#3
special wrote:
gift link

Maybe this is how he gets rid of Melania?
Or should Germany ban some US citizens that support Nazis, like JD Vance and Elon?

hmm...

=====

As Trump Broadens Crackdown, Focus Expands to Legal Immigrants and Tourists

U.S. border officials are using more aggressive tactics at ports of entry as the administration scrutinizes green card and visa holders who have expressed opposition to its policies.

And even citizens as I have already experienced.
Reply
#4
Entering the U.S.? Here are your rights at airports and border crossings.

https://wapo.st/4ixJDqz

You are not obligated to unlock your devices if an agent asks to search them, but refusing may affect your travel. Foreign nationals may be denied entry to the U.S. if they do not cooperate with a search. U.S. citizens will not be denied entry, but they could be detained and their devices might be seized by authorities.

CBP policy states officers can hold onto electronic devices for up to five days (though it may be longer if officials consider there to be “extenuating circumstances”). If your devices are seized, you should ask an officer for a custody receipt, which they are required to issue and will contain guidance for retrieving your devices.

What do electronic searches entail?

There are two types of searches that officers conduct on electronic devices: basic and advanced. Basic searches generally involve an officer manually reviewing a device without external equipment and can be performed on anyone.

In an advanced search, an officer connects external equipment to a device to review, copy or analyze its contents. Officers require reasonable suspicion of a violation of law and manager approval to conduct an advanced search, according to the CBP.

CBP policies for electronic searches state that officers should handle sensitive information, including medical records or work-related information from journalists, “in accordance with any applicable federal law,” though this can be murky in practice, according to the ACLU.

You should tell an officer conducting a search if your device contains legally protected information, Bhandari said.
Reply
#5
Speedy wrote:
Entering the U.S.? Here are your rights at airports and border crossings.

“Our rights”.

What a quaint, yet now-antiquated concept. Per the Orange One, “We are the law”.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)