Illegal Immigrants Flown to Martha’s Vineyard Will Get ‘Crime Victim’ Visas

Bill Pan
By Bill Pan
April 23, 2024Border Security
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Illegal Immigrants Flown to Martha’s Vineyard Will Get ‘Crime Victim’ Visas
Illegal immigrants from Venezuela stand outside St. Andrew's Church in Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard, Mass., on Sept. 14, 2022. (Ray Ewing/Vineyard Gazette/Handout via Reuters)

Some of the illegal immigrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2022 are expected to receive a special visa that would allow them to stay and work, their attorney said.

Those individuals applied last year for what’s known as the U visa, a special type of immigration status granted to crime victims who are helpful to the authorities in the investigation or prosecution of crimes.

In this case, they worked with a Texas sheriff who is pushing for felony charges against the DeSantis administration for allegedly deceiving the illegal immigrants to board the flights from San Antonio to the Massachusetts island.

Upon approval, the U-visa is valid for up to four years, although holders can apply for permanent residency after three years. There are only 10,000 U-visas available each year.

At least three of the original 49 passengers received “bona fide determinations” for their U-visa applications, according to Rachel Self, an immigration lawyer who lives near Martha’s Vineyard and has been assisting them since 2022.

In an interview with The Boston Globe, Ms. Self said this designation allows the applicants to legally work and be shielded from deportation while they wait for their visa to come through.

“These determinations are one step closer to justice,” she told the newspaper. “[They] further underscore that anyone who knows all the facts … simply cannot ignore the criminality of the actors.”

No Charges Yet

The development comes about a year after Javier Salazar, the Democrat sheriff for Bexar County where San Antonio is located, filed a completed criminal case with the county district attorney regarding the transportation of the 49 illegal immigrants.

“The charge filed is unlawful restraint, and several accounts were filed, both misdemeanor and felony,” Mr. Salazar’s office said last June, not mentioning who was charged.

Bexar County District Attorney Joe Gonzales, also a Democrat, has yet to formally press any charges.

The legal saga started in September 2022, when Mr. DeSantis took credit for the two flights that shipped illegal immigrants to the doorsteps of the posh liberal vacation island. According to the Republican governor, this was part of his state’s $12 million taxpayer-funded program to relocate willing newcomers to a “sanctuary destination.”

As Mr. DeSantis promised to continue and potentially scale up the relocation effort, it has triggered a torrent of outrage from Democrats, including President Joe Biden, who accused Mr. DeSantis of “playing politics with human beings, using them as props.”

Pushing back against the criticism, Mr. DeSantis called out Democrats for what he saw as hypocrisy when it comes to the suffering of individuals after being “enticed” to illegally cross the border.

“You’ve had migrants die in the Rio Grande,” he said in an interview on Fox News shortly after the Bexar County sheriff announced the criminal investigation into the migrant flights. “You had 50 died in Texas in a trailer because they were being neglected. Was there a freakout about that? No, there wasn’t.”

In a statement defending the decision to fly the illegal immigrants, the governor’s office argued that all the passengers accepted the one-way plane ticket “voluntarily.”

“Immigrants have been more than willing to leave Bexar County after being abandoned, homeless, and ‘left to fend for themselves.’ Florida gave them an opportunity to seek greener pastures in a sanctuary jurisdiction that offered greater resources for them, as we expected,” a spokesperson for the governor said at that time.

“Unless the [Massachusetts] national guard has abandoned these individuals, they have been provided accommodations, sustenance, clothing and more options to succeed following their unfair enticement into the United States, unlike the 53 immigrants who died in a truck found abandoned in Bexar County this June.”

More Flights Expected

Earlier in April, Mr. DeSantis’ administration was handed a legal victory by a federal judge, who dismissed the state defendants from a lawsuit filed by some of the migrant flight passengers on the grounds of lack of evidence.

“The court cannot ascertain what actions were undertaken by whom and therefore cannot determine which, if any, of the individual defendants transacted business or caused injury here, leaving it no choice but to find that, at least on this record, personal jurisdiction has not been established,” wrote Judge Allison Burroughs, an Obama-appointee.

However, Judge Burroughs did tell the illegal immigrants that they may pursue their case against Vertol, the Florida-based company that was paid $1.5 million to transport them to Massachusetts.

In response, the governor’s office vowed to book more flights to transport illegal immigrants to out-of-state “sanctuary” communities.

“As we’ve always stated, the flights were conducted lawfully and authorized by the Florida Legislature,” Julia Friedland, a spokeswoman for Mr. DeSantis, said in a statement. “We look forward to Florida’s next illegal immigrant relocation flight, and we are glad to bring national attention to the crisis at the southern border.”

From The Epoch Times

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