[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 140 (Tuesday, September 20, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6260-H6264]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Alabama (Mr. Brooks) is recognized
for the remainder of the hour.
Mr. BROOKS. Madam Speaker, according to a 2009 study by the Pew
Hispanic Center, 7.8 million illegal aliens hold jobs in America. Madam
Speaker, there is a sure-fire way to create jobs now for American
citizens: evict all illegal aliens from America and immediately open up
millions of jobs for unemployed Americans.
The eviction of illegal aliens from America has the side benefit of
eliminating the abundance of cheap, illegal alien labor which, in turn,
forces blue color wages up, thus helping American families afford and
pursue the American Dream.
{time} 1930
Unfortunately, Madam Speaker, there are those in Washington who chase
a different dream, a class warfare nightmare, that pits unemployed
Americans against illegal aliens in a competition for scarce jobs.
The White House and too many Members of Congress seek amnesty for
millions of illegal aliens, thereby legitimizing criminal conduct and
depriving American citizens of job opportunities.
Madam Speaker, Congress and the White House must create jobs now for
American citizens. We can and must fight for American citizens, not
turn our heads the other way, which gives illegal aliens preference
over American citizens.
But the issue of illegal aliens is greater than just jobs and better
incomes for American citizens. Illegal aliens crowd our hospital
emergency rooms, delaying treatment for Americans and driving up health
care costs because too many illegal aliens don't pay their bills. Too
often, illegal aliens get free health care on the backs of our already
stressed American taxpayers. Illegal aliens also do not produce enough
in tax revenue to pay for our schools; yet illegal alien children
overcrowd our schools, thereby reducing the quality of education for
American children.
Illegal aliens commit horrendous crimes against American citizens,
crimes that strain State and Federal judicial systems, police and
sheriff departments, and prisons that are already overcrowded and in a
financial crisis.
Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, in one of her last Supreme
Court opinions, wrote in 2005 in Medellin v. Drake, that: ``In 2003,
over 56,000 noncitizens were held in State prisons. Noncitizens
accounted for over 10 percent of the prison populations in California,
New York, and Arizona. As of February 2005, 119 noncitizens from 31
nations were on State death row.''
Madam Speaker, so that I am clear, let me emphasize that death row is
not just for any kind of murderer. Death row is for murders where
victims are tortured or raped before killed. Death row is for murders
where multiple citizens are killed. In sum, death row is reserved for
only the most heinous of murderers.
Hundreds if not thousands of Americans are dead today because the
United States Government has been derelict in its duty to protect
American citizens from illegal aliens.
For example, in my home of Madison County, Alabama, population
roughly 300,000 people, we have had more American citizens killed or
murdered by illegal aliens than we have had lost in combat in Iraq and
Afghanistan combined. Madam Speaker, let me share with you a personal
story that happens to have happened in Huntsville, Alabama. But, the
truth be told, similar events have likely happened throughout America.
On April 17, 2009, a 19-year-old man in my hometown of Huntsville by
the name of Tad Mattle was needlessly killed by an illegal alien who
has since been convicted of murder and sentenced to 15 years in prison,
at a cost to Alabama taxpayers well into the hundreds of thousands of
dollars.
So that we are clear about the illegal alien's conduct, he was drunk.
He was wanted for crimes in several States. When he murdered Tad
Mattle, he was fleeing the scene of yet another crime. What had Tad
Mattle done wrong? Absolutely nothing.
Tad Mattle was driving home from a church social with his girlfriend.
He was lawfully stopped at an intersection not far from my own home.
After everything was said and done, at the end of an illegal alien
crime spree, both Tad Mattle and his girlfriend were subject to force
trauma and burned beyond recognition. Both died.
Why did this needless crime occur? Why were these two young person's
lives snuffed out? Because our American Government has steadfastly
failed and refused to protect American citizens from illegal aliens.
Madam Speaker, please let me share with you information about Tad
Mattle, told in the words of his grieving father, Dan Mattle:
Tad Mattle was the first child of Dan and Terri Mattle, born on
November 8, 1989, in Florissant, Missouri. Tad was very curious and
enjoyed figuring out how things worked. Shortly after his parents
installed safety locks on all of the cupboards, he figured them out and
then taught his little brother how to defeat them.
He loved to play outside in the dirt and loved the water. He enjoyed
trying different sports. More than anything, however, he loved building
and creating. To the frustration of his parents, he would scatter Legos
all over the floor as he created ships, starships, and airplanes. On
family vacations, he reveled in the sand as he built sand castles. When
he was 8 years old, he helped his father rebuild an engine on the
family truck.
At age 9, Tad Mattle and his family moved back to Huntsville,
Alabama. Being very social, he quickly made new friends at church and
school.
In Cub Scouts, he achieved the Arrow of Light award. In his last
year, he won the Pack Pinewood Derby Contest. In middle school, Tad
joined the Boy Scouts and joined the school band as a percussionist.
Tad thoroughly enjoyed making music, and he kept switching between
first and second chair with one of his friends.
During a scout trip in this period, Tad went caving with his father.
By the time he was 13, he was a qualified vertical caver. By age 14, he
had achieved a prestigious award among the caving community by
completing his ``Vertical 8.''
In high school, Tad Mattle became heavily involved in the marching
and symphonic bands. In his last 2 years, he served as the percussion
section leader.
Tad also pursued an advanced diploma by taking advanced placement
science and math classes. In addition
[[Page H6261]]
to these activities, he continued serving the community through Boy
Scout and church youth group service projects. With his troop, in which
he served as a leader, he participated in many different activities.
On a Boy Scout troop hike on the Appalachian Trail, Tad helped
maintain morale with his goofy sense of humor. Tad is especially
remembered for his Julie Andrews impersonation as he skipped down a
meadow on Siler Bald, wearing a 40-pound backpack, while the troop sang
``The Sound of Music.''
Tad was very excited when he became old enough to drive. He wanted
his own car, so he took a job to earn money for it. He bought a
neglected Toyota Supra that cost only $475. He spent the next few
months restoring it to running condition. In his junior year of high
school, Tad took an auto body collision repair course and completely
restored the body of that car. He was so proud on the day he brought it
home from the paint booth. He took meticulous care of that car and
never abused it because he did not want to destroy all of his hard
work.
During his senior year of high school, Tad achieved the rank of Eagle
Scout. For his Eagle leadership service project, he chose to rebuild a
boat dock at the Madison County Boat Harbor on the Tennessee River. The
original dock was a hazard to users due to warped, splintered, and
rotten boards. Tad's leadership resulted in 190 man-hours of volunteer
labor that saved the county thousands of dollars.
In 2008, Tad graduated from high school with an advanced diploma. His
dream was to work in an auto body collision repair and open his own
shop. As he worked the following summer and winter, he realized that an
education would be necessary to fulfill his dream. Tad applied to the
University of Alabama in Huntsville, and with his excellent top 1
percent ACT score of 32, he was quickly accepted. On April 14, 2009,
just 3 days before his murder, Tad received a letter awarding him the
UAH Presidential Full Scholarship which covered all tuition for his
mechanical engineering degree. Tad was so excited as he read this
letter to his parents that night.
Three days later, on April 17, his father's birthday, Tad attended a
church social with his family and girlfriend. After the social, he and
his girlfriend headed to her cousin's house to watch a movie. While
stopped at a traffic light, Tad's car was rammed by a truck driven by a
drunk illegal immigrant who was fleeing from the police. Tad and his
girlfriend were killed instantly, which was a blessing because the
impact ruptured the gas tank of the car Tad had so meticulously
restored and burned the two beyond recognition.
There were no skid marks from the drunken driver's vehicle, and
accident investigations indicated the truck impacted between 67 and 72
miles per hour, almost double the legal speed limit. The illegal
immigrant responsible for this crash had seven different aliases, had
four different DUI arrests, and was wanted by at least four other
States for misdemeanors and felonies.
{time} 1940
According to police records, he was to have been deported in 2001.
Let me reread that part for emphasis. The illegal immigrant responsible
for this crash had seven different aliases, had four prior DUI arrests,
and was wanted by at least four other States for misdemeanors and
felonies. According to police records, he was to have been deported in
2001.
Tad left behind a family that still mourns his loss. His brother and
sister have dealt with depression, nightmares, and guilt. His mother
still deals with days of depression. This loss was completely
unnecessary but occurred because of a failure by the Federal Government
to perform its duty to protect legal citizens' rights to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness. As Tad's father, all I ask is that the
government perform its Constitutional obligations to its citizens to
prevent other families from experiencing this same nightmare.
Madam Speaker, Tad Mattle's tragic story is one of many that I could
tell here today, and his story illustrates so clearly why the Federal
Government must stop being derelict in its duty to ensure the safety
and security of American citizens.
There are many Tad Mattles in America, each and every one of them
victims of crimes that could have been prevented. In that vein, I
introduced the Jobs for Americans Act. It empowers State and local
governments to help the Federal Government by passing laws that
identify illegal aliens, deter illegal aliens from entering the United
States, apprehend illegal aliens, or encourage or otherwise cause
illegal aliens to leave the United States.
States aren't asking for another Federal handout. They're asking for
freedom from Federal interference. They're asking for the freedom to
protect their citizens' lives and livelihoods. This act ensures that
the Federal Government will appreciate, not punish, States that do the
hard work of enforcing our laws.
Madam Speaker, when States like Arizona, Alabama, Georgia, and many
others act to stop illegal aliens, they should be given letters of
appreciation from Washington leaders for doing Washington's job.
Instead, they receive lawsuits from the President's Justice Department.
That is wrong. And the Justice Department's conduct will only victimize
more American citizens.
Madam Speaker, my Jobs for Americans Act prevents these wasteful
Justice Department lawsuits against States that are only trying to
protect their citizens from illegal aliens and the Federal Government's
dereliction of its duties.
Today, I ask my colleagues to join me in supporting American jobs.
The Jobs for Americans Act does just what it says. It returns jobs to
the American people. Its premise is simple. If the Federal Government
won't do its job, it should get out of the way for States and those who
will.
At this point, I yield to my good colleague from Alabama.
Mr. ADERHOLT. Madam Speaker, I want to congratulate the gentleman
from Alabama, my colleague in the Fifth Congressional District, for
organizing this tonight. We are all here tonight to discuss what
America is facing, and that is a self-imposed security crisis.
The main concern is that it appears that the administration is
ignoring its responsibility to enforce our Nation's immigration laws.
For our security, economic well-being, and safety, immigration
enforcement does matter.
Since the beginning of the current administration, we have seen
decisions and policies that have denigrated immigration enforcement. It
started with the identification of ``priorities'' where the Department
of Homeland Security announced it would focus largely on removing only
those aliens convicted of serious crimes.
More recently, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, as it is
referred to, issued guidance directing broad use of prosecutorial
discretion. Let me explain how that works. ICE agents locate a fugitive
who has been ordered to be removed. The fugitive is arrested in his
apartment where four other people are present. ICE agents ascertain
that all these individuals are illegal aliens, though they do not have
an actual criminal conviction. Pursuant to ICE priorities, these
individuals would not be arrested.
This process on whether to prosecute or not was intended to be
exercised on a case-by-case basis, not by front-line officers directed
to ignore the law, but by supervisors and attorneys looking at the law
and the facts of a particular case and considering humanitarian
concerns or national security interests. Now, front-line agents and
officers in the middle of an encounter are being asked to essentially
conduct an on-the-spot investigation.
Under the administration's policy, front-line officers and agents
don't have much of a choice but to ignore the law and leave the illegal
alien behind, unless the alien is a fugitive or has an actual criminal
conviction.
Not only do we have memos directing front-line officers to ignore
illegal aliens under the current administration, but we have committees
second-guessing decisions officers, attorneys, and judges make. The
Department of Homeland Security set up a task force of outsiders to
tell the Secretary whether this policy should include ignoring illegal
aliens encountered at traffic stops and those who would have drunk
driving violations. The Department is also establishing a committee to
review all 400,000 immigration proceedings, including for aliens with
final removal orders, to decide whether
[[Page H6262]]
these illegal aliens should actually be removed.
This is the problem, and it leads to cases like the one that my
colleague from Alabama just talked about, Tad Mattle. The new policy,
in effect, refuses to enforce immigration law until, and let me stress
that, until a serious, perhaps violent crime, has been committed. If
immigration law had been enforced, Tad's life may have been spared.
Today, more than ever, our Nation's fiscal resources are constrained.
Despite that fact, this body has made immigration enforcement and
homeland security a priority. Congress, under both Republican and
Democrat leadership, has consistently provided ICE with funds above
those funds they have requested, and that's to ensure strong
enforcement and security. Funds the Department of Homeland Security
received at the hand of this Chamber should not be used to blatantly
ignore the law or for the implementation of flawed and reckless
policies that provide backdoor amnesty.
These memos and committees may allow millions of illegal immigrants
to remain in the United States in violation of existing law and
regulation and compete with unemployed Americans and legal immigrants
working for scarce jobs.
While the Federal Government seems to find loopholes to keep illegal
aliens who pose public safety threats in this country, States like my
home State of Alabama are being prosecuted for attempting to take this
problem into their own hands. Alabama and other States burdened with
these issues shouldn't have to worry about Federal intervention.
Alabama was the fifth State in this country to adopt laws addressing
illegal immigration. The legislature of Alabama and the Governor have
opted to act. Instead, the administration has filed a judicial action.
The administration should take this as a wake-up call, a bold reminder
of the Federal Government's duty to protect each and every American
from being the victim of crimes that can so easily be prevented. The
Federal Government should be working with States to ensure the safety
of all Americans.
This is not a time for partisan politics. This is a time for a
robust, coordinated effort to guarantee the security of our citizens
and to protect our Nation's borders.
I thank the gentleman from Alabama for yielding.
Mr. BROOKS. Madam Speaker, I next recognize the gentlelady from
Tennessee, Congresswoman Diane Black.
Mrs. BLACK. I thank the gentleman from Alabama for yielding.
Madam Speaker, the tragic death of Tad Mattle that took place in
Huntsville, Alabama, on April 17, 2009, serves as a sad reminder of the
broken immigration system that we have here in the United States. We
see stories like this in our local newspapers and on our local and
national news. They're reminders that we have a serious illegal
immigration problem in our country and the need to take action to
secure our borders. As a member of the Immigration Reform Caucus, I
believe that while we are a nation of immigrants, we are first and
foremost a nation of laws. I'm a cosponsor of a number of comprehensive
bills that would help combat illegal immigration. One bill, the CLEAR
Act, would authorize State and local law enforcement to assist in the
enforcement of the U.S. immigration laws, which means that they can
investigate, apprehend, and transfer over to ICE officials illegal
aliens in the United States.
{time} 1950
Another bill that I'm cosponsoring goes after sanctuary cities,
denying State Criminal Alien Assistance Program funding for any State
or local government that has in place any law, policy, or procedure
that breaks Federal immigration law.
The SAVE Act is another great bill. The SAVE Act would increase
Border Patrol and investigative personnel, encourage recruitment of
former military personnel and use of Department of Defense equipment,
calls on the administration to develop a national strategy to secure
our borders and, finally, directs authorities to check against
terrorist watch lists those persons suspected of alien smuggling and
smuggled individuals.
Defense of our country and securing our borders is one of the primary
responsibilities of government, and I believe that those who enter this
country illegally are not only breaking the law, but risking the very
security of this country.
I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Mr. BROOKS. Madam Speaker, I next recognize the gentleman from
Georgia, Congressman Rob Woodall.
Mr. WOODALL. I appreciate my friend from Alabama for yielding.
Candidly, I can't say it much better than my freshman colleague from
Tennessee just did. We are a Nation of immigrants, and we are a Nation
of laws. And my question is, When did it become so clear to everyone
else that those things were in conflict with one another? Because when
I look at it, it's not in conflict at all; in fact, it's in concert, in
concert with one another.
It was hard to listen to the story that my friend from Alabama was
telling because it's not a story that you only hear once. It's a story
that you hear heartbroken families tell over and over and over again.
It's a family in Alabama, it's a family in Georgia, it's a mom in South
Carolina, and it's a grandmother from Indiana, and on and on and on.
What I want to know is, Who is it who's coming to defend that story
tonight? Because I hear it in town hall meetings all the time, and I
know my friend from Alabama hears the same thing: Rob, I want you to go
up there and I want you to fight for what's right, and I don't want you
to compromise. Well, I don't want to compromise on principle. There is
absolutely no principle I have that I'm interested in compromising on.
But what I tell folks back home is there's common ground. There's
common ground where no matter where you sit on the political spectrum
you can see your way clear to this path forward.
What I want to know from my colleagues--and I wish there were more of
them in the Chamber tonight--and, again, I'm grateful to my friend from
Alabama for putting this hour together--but where are the folks who
oppose enforcing the laws? Where are the folks who believe that legal
immigration is what we don't want and illegal immigration is what we do
want?
Where are the folks who believe that when criminals commit crimes,
they're not supposed to be prosecuted? Where are those folks defending
that? Because what I see in my part of the world--and I'm there in the
northeastern suburbs of Atlanta--what I see in my part of the world are
people who are proud of our history as an immigrant Nation and proud of
our future as an immigrant Nation.
I tell folks all the time I don't worry that people want to come to
America. I worry about the one day people don't want to come to
America. What happens when they want to take their big brain and their
hard work ethic and their entrepreneurial ideas and take it to China or
take it to India or take it to Brazil? I worry about that.
We have so many challenges, as my friend from Alabama knows, in terms
of restructuring our legal immigration process. I am heartbroken that
we spend even a moment arguing amongst ourselves about the necessity of
shutting down illegal immigration now--not tomorrow, not a week from
tomorrow, not after the next election cycle, today.
Of the few things that the United States Constitution empowers the
Federal Government to do, requires that the Federal Government do,
enforcing our border security is one; and we don't do that well. We
have so many conversations down here, as the Speaker knows, about all
the things the Federal Government should stick its nose into, as if
we're going to do those well. What about the one the Constitution
requires us to do, which is secure our borders?
For me, the untalked-about victim in the illegal immigration debate
is the legal immigrant. Have you ever been to a naturalization
ceremony? Do you have any friends who have been naturalized, who have
earned the right to be a United States citizen? Wow. Wow. It's tears,
but it's tears of joy. I wish we were teaching the same thing to our
young people in schools that we're teaching to our immigrants in their
citizenship classes, who are developing this deep and abiding respect
for the rule of law and the American way of life.
[[Page H6263]]
And the victim, when we turn a blind eye to illegal immigration, is
the legal immigrant who does it all right because they're the victim of
the animus that comes out of this debate. They're a victim of the
sadness. In fact, I will tell you, the angriest people--again, I come
from the Deep South. A lot of folks have a lot of stereotypes about how
it is in the Deep South. But I will tell you, the angriest people in my
part of the world about illegal immigration are not the ninth
generation white guy; it's the legal immigrants.
Somebody stopped me the other day and they said, Rob, if you ever
pass an amnesty bill--which we never will do, just to be clear, never,
ever going to happen, not while I'm here in Congress--give me my money
back. You can't give me my life back; you can't give me back all the
years and years and years I worked and I waited on the list and I
waited patiently in my home country until my number came up, you can't
give me that back, but I want my money back because it wasn't cheap.
It's not. Being a United States citizen is advanced citizenship. It
requires great commitments, as it is a great opportunity; and we treat
it in this country as if it's a nothing.
As my friend from Alabama knows, there's another bill, introduced by
my friend from Iowa (Mr. King), called the Birthright Citizenship Act--
and I'm a cosponsor of that act--that goes back to the 14th Amendment.
It goes back to that time in this country when we were struggling with
our national identity and says those born in the United States, under
the jurisdiction thereof, shall be United States citizens.
As you tell the story, I say to my friend from Alabama, of someone
who has been convicted of crime after crime after crime, of someone who
has warrants out for their arrest across the United States, of someone
who hasn't yet found a single American law that they have chosen to
obey, I tell you that person is not under the jurisdiction of the
United States, and births that are associated with that person do not
give rise to citizenship in the United States.
But the courts have said Congress just won't decide on this; Congress
won't take a stand on this. Well, Steve King of Iowa said, yes, we
will. And I was proud to join him on that to define what is the
greatest gift we have in this country, and that's the gift of American
citizenship. I was born with it, and I'm grateful for it every day of
the week, but we treat it like it's nothing. And I will say to folks
who think that it's nothing, go to one of these naturalization
ceremonies. Talk to your friends and neighbors who have worked for it
and earned it, and they will tell you that it's something.
And in the army that we're developing across America to come and
stand strong on the issue of illegal immigration, the army that's
forming across America to say we are proud that we're a Nation of
immigrants, but we're even more proud that we're a Nation of laws, that
army is composed of legal immigrants of every stripe from coast to
coast, from north to south. It makes me so proud because I think that's
what America is all about.
I want to go back and say to the gentleman from Alabama, thank you
for introducing the American Jobs Act. For folks who look those things
up on TV, it's H.R. 2670, I believe; is that correct?
Mr. BROOKS. Yes.
Mr. WOODALL. Again, where are those folks? We're not talking about
compromising our principles; we're talking about pursuing those things
that are common ground. In this era of 10 percent unemployment, who are
those folks who think that hardworking, taxpaying American citizens
don't deserve that job first if they're willing to work for it? Who is
that?
I'm sure that there has been an editorial or two in your local
newspapers--if your newspapers are anything like mine--that have not
reacted all that kindly to your decision to stand up and do what is
right. But doing what's right is not always easy, and it's rarely
appreciated in its time. It's often appreciated as history writes it.
But who is it who believes that folks who have paid their taxes for a
decade, who have been laid off in the middle part of their life, who
can't afford to send their kids to college, who can't afford to buy
medicine for their wife? Who are those people who believe that those
folks don't deserve first crack at that job? First crack.
{time} 2000
We have a legal immigration process in place in this country that
will allow you to come here the right way, get a green card the right
way, and apply for jobs just like everybody else. Folks do it. Do it,
and I welcome you.
But in this era of unemployment, who are those folks who defend this
practice of illegal labor? I will tell you, it's not just the folks who
go to work. It's the folks who employ those folks who go to work. This
is not about illegal immigrants alone. This is about those businesses
that hire those illegal immigrants.
A crime is a crime here in this country. They're not all the
heartbreaking crimes that my friend from Alabama has described, but
they are crimes that have consequences. These are not victimless
crimes. Illegal immigration is not a victimless crime.
The victim could be that American who can't find a job to support his
kids and his family. The victim could be that school district that
can't afford to sort out how those classes are going to go, that can't
afford all the teachers, but has an increasing workload because of the
children associated with illegal immigration today.
The victim could be that health care system that can't treat folks as
they'd like to treat them, doesn't have enough money to deal with the
community as it is, and the burden keeps growing and growing and
growing. It is not a victimless crime.
In terms of finding common ground, I looked at my friend Rob Bishop's
bill. Rob Bishop is from Utah, and he's introduced H.R. 1505, the
National Security and Federal Lands Act.
Now, the preposterous things that we discuss here in Washington, this
is one. Look it up for yourself. H.R. 1505, what it does is it changes
the law, changes the law so that Border Patrol agents can access areas
of the border. Hear that. There is a bill in this Congress to change
the law so that Border Patrol agents can get access to the border. 4.3
million acres of border designated wilderness along our southern
border, and in those areas the Border Patrol can't use motorized
vehicles, can't construct roads, can't even install security and
communication apparatus. Hear that. Hear that.
The law of the land in America today is that the Border Patrol agents
cannot patrol the borders. H.R. 1505 will change that, and I hope we'll
pass that here.
I want to say finally to my friend from Alabama, you and I are both
new here. I've only been here 9 months, and I'm learning something
every day here. I was more than a little bit surprised when the
administration came out and said, no, it's really not whether or not
you're illegal; it's whether or not you're illegal and when we make our
decisions about whether or not to deport you.
But what I learned in that conversation is that we have a backlog of
deportations in this country. When we talk about funding priorities in
this country, for the last 9 months I've been focusing on funding the
Border Patrol. I thought what we needed were more boots on the ground,
and I still believe we do. But what I have learned from the
administration is we also need more bottoms in the seats in immigration
courtrooms across this country. We may need more immigration judges. If
we don't have enough people to process all the deportations that are in
line, what we need is not to stop the deportations; what we need is to
hire more people to process those deportations.
I tell you, I'm a small government conservative. You're not going to
find many government programs that I want to come down here and spend
money on. But again, the Constitution has given to you and me the
responsibility of enforcing this part of the law, has given us the
responsibility of securing our borders; and if what it takes to be
successful is spending more money to hire more immigration court judges
to fill more buses to comply with more of the law that is, in fact, the
law of the land, then I'm prepared to do that.
I appreciate the administration, again, for educating me in that way,
because I had no idea that we were so successful at identifying folks
and we
[[Page H6264]]
just weren't successful at finishing that deportation process.
So I say to my friend from Alabama, again, I so much appreciate his
leadership on this issue. I am a proud supporter of the Jobs for
Americans Act. I look forward to bipartisan support on that act
because, again, we're not talking about asking anyone to compromise
their principles. We're asking people to celebrate that we are an
immigrant nation and that we are a nation of laws. And I tell you, I
don't want to live in a nation that is willing to give up on either one
of those, and we don't have to.
I thank my friend.
Mr. BROOKS. Madam Speaker, I want to express my thanks for the
eloquence of Congressmen Rob Woodall of Georgia, Diane Black of
Tennessee, and Robert Aderholt of the State of Alabama.
I pray that the American people and Washington, D.C., will be mindful
of the loss of Tad Mattle, the suffering of his family, and the
sufferings of hundreds, if not thousands, of other Americans under
similar, yet difficult, circumstances, all brought about because our
Federal Government is derelict in its duty to protect American citizens
from the conduct of illegal aliens.
With that, Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________