Monday, August 22, 2005

Ranch in Arizona Given to Illegals


OK, look, I need to get to work but since reading about this, I have been bouncing off the walls.
An Arizona judge has given a 7-acre ranch to two ILLEGAL ALIENS (a man and woman, both Salvadorians) that were roughed up by the owner of the ranch. The owner was put in jail for pistolwhipping one scumbag (a male) and I guess he looked at the female the wrong way or something. Anyway, they hired an ambulance-chasing lawyer, and found a sympathetic judge; there you go. Two people that came into American soil ILLEGALLY instead of doing it the legal way, get this ranch and the owner is put in jail.
How can a judge do this? What insanity do we live in these days?
I can understand the person being jailed for going overboard, but to lose his ranch because of it?? When I worked in law enforcement, someone was charged with assault, jailed or fined, then that was it. Now you risk losing your home and life? OOHH MAN...I can hardly type.
My first questions when reading this was; what are those two still doing in the US and why aren't they deported? Here is my answer:
Mancia, who lives in Los Angeles, and Leiva, who lives in the Dallas area, have applied for visas available to immigrants who are the victims of certain crimes, Bruner said. Until a decision is made on their applications, they can stay and work in the United States.

They claimed they suffered "post-traumatic stress" from the incident.
They won the lottery man...

Apparently, the evil ranch owner was convicted for gun possession and had priors. He gave the ranch to his sister who was scared out of her wits by the shyster lawyers at some socialist organization called the Southern Poverty Law Center, so she gave the ranch to the court.
Dees said Foote appeared to have no substantial assets, but Nethercott had the ranch. Shortly after the judgment, Nethercott gave the land to his sister, Robin Albitz of Prescott. The Southern Poverty Law Center sued the siblings, saying that the transfer was fraudulent and was meant to avoid the judgment. Albitz, a nursing assistant, signed over the land to the two immigrants last week.

"It scared the hell out of her," Margaret Pauline Nethercott, the mother of Nethercott and Albitz.