Obama’s action fuels worry about scams
SAN DIEGO — Immigrant advocacy groups barely waited for President Barack Obama to finish speaking about sweeping changes to the U.S. immigration system to start warning about scams.
“We hear horror stories about people getting taken advantage of horribly,” attorney Ginger Jacobs told several dozen people who watched the president’s speech at the offices of one such organization, Alliance San Diego.
California Attorney General Kamala Harris and Mexican consulates sounded similar alarms after Obama promised executive action that is expected to shield about 5 million people from deportation.
For decades, immigrants have fallen victim to attorneys and consultants who disappear with their money or give bad advice that may land them in deportation proceedings.
“Anything related to immigration tends to have this activity associated with it,” said Laura Vazquez, senior immigration legislative analyst at National Council of La Raza, a Latino advocacy group. “There are people who really want to get right with the law and seek any opportunity to adjust their status. They’ll sometimes believe things that aren’t true.”
Harris, whose state is home to an estimated 2.4 million people who immigrated to the U.S. illegally, issued a lengthy “consumer alert” Tuesday. Her tips include making sure attorneys are licensed and advisers are recognized by the U.S. Justice Department’s Board of Immigration Appeals.
The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles warned of fraud when delivering Thanksgiving turkeys Wednesday and will repeat the message at a workshop next month at the Los Angeles Convention Center, political director Apolonio Morales said. The group recommends working through trusted community organizations.
There have been few reports so far of efforts to profit from the president’s announcement, which promises work permits for parents of U.S. citizens and legal residents who have been in the country for five years or more and have a clean criminal record. It also makes more people who arrived as young children eligible to stay.
The Federal Trade Commission reported 891 complaints for immigration services last year, up from 746 the previ- ous year but down from 1,220 in 2011. The extent of abuse is believed to be underreported.
Waiting three to six months, until applications are published, to hire representation is the hardest part for some. A woman at the San Diego gathering to watch Obama’s speech asked if someone who gets stopped by police would be deported before applying.
Jacobs said she didn’t know but that U.S. Immi- gration and Customs Enforcement was unlikely to expel someone who qualifies under Obama’s announcement. She recommended carrying children’s birth certificates, leases and other documents.