More on how Mohammed Bary risks deportation
Mohamad Bary has sworn entirely contradictory things in his two applications to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service.See at the second link. He should be facing a jail term before deportation too for his breaking the law.
He has claimed that he entered the country illegally around 1981 or 1982, and that he lived here five years — a claim he had to make in order to qualify for the old Reagan-era immigration amnesty of the 1980s, for which he did belatedly apply.
But Mohamed Bary was not here in the 1980s. We know that because he himself said so in a different immigration filing.
In an application for temporary entry into the United States, he claimed that in the three years before his application, he had lived outside the U.S. for at least one continuous year.
This contradicted his amnesty application, in which he claimed that he had resided continuously inside the United States since on or before Jan. 1, 1982.
He could not have lived outside the United States for one year during the same time period in which he had claimed to be living continuously inside the United States. He maintained these contradictory claims as necessary elements to file his applications under the differing statutes — one governing the issuance of an entrance visa, the other governing the granting of amnesty for continuous illegal presence.
He obviously committed perjury.
There is more.
Labels: immigration, islam, misogyny, United States