Immigration

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has federal oversight over immigration and issues accompanying immigration. The Immigration and Naturalization Act ("INA") aims to unify the numerous rules and regulations relating to immigration. The United States has a perennial immigration problem, and, following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the federal government grew stricter on implementation of immigration laws.

Immigration law in the United States is complex, and, as mentioned above, strictly implemented. Currently, the INA limits the annual worldwide permanent immigrants to 675,000. Certain exceptions apply to close family members, including spouse, minor children, parents, and siblings. The limit does not apply to the number of refugees admitted each, the decision of which is left to the U.S. President's discretion. The main principle used in the admission of immigrants in the United States is reunification of families. Highly-skilled workers or specialists are also admitted as American immigrants. Moreover, the United States also admits as refugees and individuals from countries who have not sent immigrants in the past five years under the principle of promoting diversity.

Canada has one of the most extensive immigration program in the world by offering a number of options, including skilled worker, investor, trade worker, family sponsorship and Canadian experience. In Canada, immigration law is embodied under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. The federal, provincial and territorial governments of Canada share jurisdiction over immigration issues.

Immigration in Australia is governed by the Migration Act and the Migration Regulations. Like the United States and Canada, Australia offers variety of visas for skilled workers. Australia also offers visas to refugees and asylum seekers although most of these visas have time expiration and grants limited rights to applicants.

Applying for immigrant status in the United States, Canada and Australia is a complicated, tedious, lengthy, and expensive process. It is filled with paperwork and the applicant must comply with numerous requirements before an application is granted. In the United States alone, application for immigrant status under the principle of family reunification must meet age and financial status requirements. Add to that the fact that the number of family preference visas, one of the two visas granted under the principle of family reunification, varies each year depending on the number of visas issued the prior year. Moreover, Congress also set a per-country ceiling under which permanent immigrants from one country cannot exceed 7% of the total amount of applicants for the same year. This means that a visa application can be automatically denied when that application is already past the limit set by Congress for the year.

One of the foremost issues accompanying immigration law is deportation. In order to avoid deportation, one must apply for immigrant status legally by filling out the proper forms, complying with the requirements, and paying the required fees. Deportation can lead to loss of employment, embarrassment, imprisonment, or bankruptcy. It is thus imperative to contact an expert immigration law attorney to apprise you of current immigration laws and procedures so that the money used for application would be well-spent.

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Drug Crimes Law - Legal Information and Resources

Drug Crimes

Drug crime law is a subset of criminal law, which deals with illegal possession, use, manufacture and sale of prohibited drugs. Drug crime law also deals with other criminal offenses associated with the possession, use, manufacture, and sale of illegal drugs. Illegal drugs include both "street" drugs and drugs specified under the Federal Controlled Substances Act of 1970.

Because drug crimes are "victimless" crimes, it has been proven a daunting task for both the federal and state level to enforce the law. Unless drug use has contributed to a violent crime, it is difficult for the government to run after the perpetrators because there is no "victim" except the user or the trader. Under the CSA, the federal government regulates the legal production, possession, and distribution of controlled substances. Some drugs listed under the CSA are allowed to be used and sold provided that they are for specific reasons, such as medical use. "Street" drugs, which are all deemed illegal in the United States, include cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine.

All drug charges are considered felonies. The gravity, however, of the offense is determined upon the kind of drug involved, the quantity found with the offender, and the offender's intent to sell or use the drugs. The federal government, as well as the state government, is strict in enforcing anti-illegal drugs law that the penalties accompanying drug charges stiffer than the penalties for most crimes. Moreover, conviction for drug trafficking, especially if the trafficking is large scale, also leads to denial of federal benefits and forfeiture of real and personal property.

One of the most common issues arising from drug crimes is illegal stop and search or frisk. Police officers have the authority to stop and frisk suspicious individuals but because the Bill of Rights limits the government's encroachment upon personal liberties, in this case, the right against unnecessary search and seizures and unlawful issuance of warrants, those suspected of a drug crime can argue that they were illegally searched and stopped by law enforcement agencies. In defending a person accused of a drug crime, a drug crime law attorney must take note of the details prior to the arrest of the accused as the procedure as to how the accused was apprehended may lead to his or her acquittal.

With the rising incidences of interstate and inter-country drug trafficking, the federal government created an extensive web of agencies, enforcements, and programs meant to stop the proliferation of drug use in the United States. The government has identified, based on statistics, specific areas and ethnic groups where drug use and trade proliferates. It is thus not uncommon for law enforcement agencies to target impoverished neighborhoods or some ethnic groups in their surveillance. Some of these surveillance activities, however, result to ethnically-biased arrests and accusations. A person who is wrongfully accused of a drug crime badly needs the talent of a drug crime law expert as it is difficult to battle against a government that is bent on working towards a drug-free and safe society.

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