... in response to Re: It's getting serious..., posted by Ray on Oct 7, 2005[This message has been edited by Gary Bala]
Thanks, Ray.
You are quite right that the International Marriage Brokers bill, if passed, is open to various legal challenges (constitutional and otherwise), and will probably be tested for validity in the courts. (One recent problem though is that the federal judiciary is increasingly conservative and, in general, less prone to judicial activism and striking down legislation than in the past.)
I think that some of the best consitutional arguments against the bill are the equal protection argument (similarly-situated U.S. citizen men are treated differently without substantial reason, i.e. men seeking foreign brides vs. domestic ladies), the over-broad argument (the King Amendment not allowing for any mitigating circumstances, and lumping in men with very old convictions for Class C misdemeanors long-ago satisfied and rights restored, with men with recent serious felony convictions for violence), and the "chilling" of U.S. citizen men's free speech and free association rights, especially in light of the immigration principle of family re-unification.
At any rate, after I have a better opportunity to research the issues, I plan to work up an office Press Release summarizing the arguments against the bill, and make it available to the media. Some of these arguments can be brought to light now, in advance of any final vote in Congress, and perhaps it may cause some in Congress to slow down and pause or even modify the more "offensive" parts of the bill before any final passage.
Regards,
GB
For anyone interested:
PS#1 Later this month, I plan to visit and tour the National Visa Center (NVC) with a group from AILA (American Immigration Lawyers Assn.). If anyone has any questions they want us to consider posing to the NVC Director and staff, let us know.
PS #2 I also plan to visit Cali, Colombia for 2 weeks over Thanksgiving Holidays. In case someone wants to reach me, my Colombia Cell is: 315-416-2746.