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Some Criminal Aliens Obtain U.S. Tourist Passes With No Intention of Leaving

AP Photo/Marco Garcia

Multiple recent stories about illegal aliens who entered the U.S. with a tourist visa and then stayed indefinitely to receive American benefits and commit crimes have underscored the need for reform in our tourist visa system.

Bad actors in foreign countries exploit America's birthright citizenship system, tourist visas, and work visas to an egregious extent. Insufficient vetting, over-long visa validity, bloated bureaucracy, and a bias in favor of importing cheap labor from overseas have created a visa system rife with fraud and abuses. Let's talk about just a few of the individuals who exploited tourist visas in particular to Americans' detriment.

Firstly, we have this young Colombian creep who entered the U.S. on a tourist visa, and subsequently murdered his stepfather:

Argentinian national Alejandro Saul Rico is not a murderer, but he is a violent criminal. Like Gonzalez-Diaz, Rico — and his family — entered our country after he obtained a B1 tourist visa. The Rico family was supposed to go to Disney World in Florida. Twenty years later, they’re still here.

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Yes, truly, Rico originally received his visa in 2006. The type of visa he received is generally valid for only a few months, but it can be valid for up to 10 years. His obviously was, because the Department of Homeland Security said it expired in 2016. That seems a ridiculously long time for a visitor. In any case, he is now an illegal alien, because he remained another 10 years after the expiration of the visa.

DHS stated that Rico's criminal history includes an assault conviction and a third-degree sex offense arrest in Maryland. So he (and his family) not only remained here illegally, but he also committed violent crimes. 

There are a number of other examples. Ecuadorian Cesar Augusto Diaz Poveda now faces charges of assault and obstructing police, after he, too, came to America on a tourist visa that expired in 2016. Iranian Shahin Farokhrani arrived in the USA decades ago on a tourist visa, stayed 23 years past an immigration judge ordering his removal, and ultimately ended up in handcuffs for sex abuse, theft, drug charges, and a DUI. Jamaican Christopher Leon Bailey overstayed his 2009 tourist visa. He was involved in a crazy crime where he almost hit two pedestrians, chased them down, pulled a knife and chased the two around, then ran over one of the victims in his car. And Chinese Yunhua Rong was in the U.S. on a tourist visa that expired last year, though he stayed and ended up arrested for murder.

To a certain extent, this is all anecdotal evidence, but all these stories highlight profound problems with our visa system, as I mentioned at the beginning of this article. Does the United States government have any effective guardrails in place to ensure that aliens cannot remain after their tourist visas expire? It would appear not.

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