104th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 269
To amend the
Immigration and Nationality Act to increase control over
immigration to the
United States by increasing border patrol and
investigator personnel;
improving the verification system for employer
sanctions; increasing
penalties for alien smuggling and for document
fraud; reforming asylum,
exclusion, and deportation law and procedures;
instituting a land border
user fee; and to reduce use of welfare by
aliens.
__________________________________________________________________
_____
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
January 24
(legislative day, January 10), 1995
Mr. Dole (for Mr. Simpson)
introduced the following bill; which was
read twice and referred to the
Committee on the Judiciary
__________________________________________________________________ _____
A BILL
To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to
increase control over
immigration to the United States by increasing border
patrol and
investigator personnel; improving the verification system for
employer
sanctions; increasing penalties for alien smuggling and for
document
fraud; reforming asylum, exclusion, and deportation law and
procedures;
instituting a land border user fee; and to reduce use of welfare
by
aliens.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1.
SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Immigrant Control and
Financial
Responsibility Act of 1995''.
SEC. 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS.
The table of contents for this Act is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short
title.
Sec. 2. Table of contents.
TITLE I--IMMIGRANT CONTROL
Subtitle A--Law Enforcement
Part 1--Additional Enforcement
Personnel
Sec. 101. Border Patrol agents.
Sec. 102. Investigators.
Part 2--System To Verify Eligibility To Work and To Receive Public
Assistance
Sec. 111. Establishment of new verification system.
Sec. 112. Demonstration projects.
Sec. 113. Database for verifying
employment and public assistance
eligibility.
Part 3--Alien Smuggling
Sec. 121. Wiretap authority for investigations of alien smuggling.
Sec. 122. Adding offenses to RICO relating to alien smuggling or
fraudulent documents.
Sec. 123. Increased criminal penalties for alien
smuggling.
Sec. 124. Expanded forfeiture for smuggling or harboring aliens.
Part 4--Document Fraud, Misrepresentation, and Failure To Present
Documents
Sec. 131. Increased criminal penalties for fraudulent use
of
government-issued documents.
Sec. 132. New civil penalties for
document fraud.
Sec. 133. New civil penalty for failure to present
documents.
Sec. 134. New criminal penalties for failure to disclose role as
preparer of false application for asylum
and for preparing certain
post-conviction
applications.
Sec. 135. Criminal penalty for false
statement in a document required
under the immigration laws or knowingly
presenting document which fails to contain
reasonable basis in law or
fact.
Sec. 136. New exclusion for document fraud and for failure to present
documents.
Sec. 137. Limitation on withholding of deportation and other
benefits
for aliens excludable for document fraud or
failing to present
documents.
Sec. 138. Definition of ``falsely make any document.''
Part
5--Exclusion and Deportation
Sec. 141. Special port-of-entry exclusion
procedure for aliens using
documents fraudulently or failing to
present
documents, or excludable aliens
apprehended at sea.
Sec. 142. Limited
judicial review.
Sec. 143. Reduction of incentive to delay deportation
proceedings.
Sec. 144. Civil penalty for failure to depart.
Sec. 145.
Authorization of special fund for costs of deportation.
Sec. 146. Reform of
deportation proceedings and judicial review.
Sec. 147. Denial of
nonimmigrant and immigrant visas for countries
refusing to accept deported
aliens.
Sec. 148. Limitation on withholding of deportation for excludable
aliens apprehended at sea.
Part 6--Miscellaneous
Sec. 151. Pilot
program on interior repatriation of deportable or
excludable aliens.
Sec. 152. Pilot program on use of closed military bases for the
detention of excludable or deportable
aliens.
Sec. 153. Use of
legalization and special agricultural worker
information.
Sec. 154.
Communication between Federal, State, and local government
agencies, and the
Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
Subtitle B--Other Control
Measures
Part 1--Parole Authority
Sec. 161. Useable only on a
case-by-case basis for humanitarian reasons
or significant public benefit.
Sec. 162. Inclusion in world-wide level of family-sponsored immigrants.
Part 2--Asylum and Refugees
Sec. 171. Limitations on asylum
applications by aliens using documents
fraudulently or by excludable aliens
apprehended at sea; use of special
exclusion procedures.
Sec. 172.
Limitation on work authorization for asylum applicants.
Sec. 173. Increased
resources for reducing asylum application backlogs.
Sec. 174. Requirement of
Congressional approval for admission of more
than 50,000 refugees in a
fiscal year.
Part 3--Cuban Adjustment Act
Sec. 181. Repeal.
Subtitle C--Effective Dates
Sec. 191. Effective dates.
TITLE
II--FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Part 1--Receipt of Certain Public Benefits
Sec. 201. Ineligibility of excludable, deportable, and nonimmigrant
aliens.
Sec. 202. Attribution of sponsor's income and resources to
family-
sponsored immigrants.
Sec. 203. Definition of ``public charge''
for purposes of deportation.
Sec. 204. Requirements for sponsor's affidavit
of support.
Part 2--Border Crossing Fee
Sec. 211. Imposition of fee;
use of collected fees.
Sec. 212. Pilot program.
Part 3--Effective Dates
Sec. 221. Effective dates.
TITLE I--IMMIGRANT CONTROL
Subtitle A--Law Enforcement
PART 1--ADDITIONAL ENFORCEMENT
PERSONNEL
SEC. 101. BORDER PATROL AGENTS.
There are authorized
to be appropriated to the Department of
Justice such funds as may be
necessary to enable the Border Patrol to
increase the number of its agents
and support personnel by 250 for each
fiscal year beginning with the fiscal
year 1995 and ending with the
fiscal year 2000.
SEC. 102.
INVESTIGATORS.
(a) Authorization.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the
Department of Justice such funds as may be necessary to
enable the
Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service in
fiscal
year 1995 to increase the number of investigators and support
personnel
to investigate potential violations of sections 274 and 274A of
the
Immigration and Nationality Act by 100.
(b) Limitation on
Overtime.--None of the funds made available to
the Immigration and
Naturalization Service under this section shall be
available for
administrative expenses to pay any employee overtime pay
in an amount in
excess of $25,000 for any fiscal year.
PART 2--SYSTEM TO VERIFY
ELIGIBILITY TO WORK AND TO RECEIVE PUBLIC
ASSISTANCE
SEC. 111.
ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW VERIFICATION SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--Within eight
years of the enactment of this Act,
the Attorney General, together with the
Secretary of Health and Human
Services, shall develop and implement, subject
to subsection (b), a
system to verify eligibility for employment in the
United States, and
eligibility for benefits under government-funded programs
of public
assistance.
(b) System Requirements.--No verification system
may be implemented
which does not meet the following requirements:
(1)
The system shall be capable of reliably determining
whether--
(A) the
person with the identity claimed by the
individual whose eligibility is
being verified is in
fact eligible, and
(B) the individual whose
eligibility is being
verified is claiming the identity of another person.
(2) If the system requires that document be presented to or
examined by
either an employer or a public assistance
administrator, as the case may be,
then the document--
(A) shall be in a form that is resistant to
counterfeiting and to tampering; and
(B) shall not be required by any
government entity
or agency as a national identification card or to be
carried or presented except--
(i) to verify eligibility for employment
in
the United States or eligibility for benefits
under a
Government-funded program of public
assistance,
(ii) to enforce sections
1001, 1028, 1546,
or 1621 of title 18 of the United States Code,
or
(iii) if the document was designed for
another purpose (such as a
license to drive a
motor vehicle, a certificate of birth, or a
social
security account number card issued by
the Social Security Administration),
as
required under law for such other purpose.
(3) The system shall not
be used for law enforcement
purposes other than to enforce the Immigration
and Nationality
Act; sections 1001, 1028, 1542, 1546, or 1621 of title 18 of
the United States Code; Federal, State, or local laws
pertaining to
eligibility Government-funded benefits described
in section 201 of this Act;
or to enforce laws relating to any
document used by the system which was
designed for another
purpose (such as a license to drive a motor vehicle, a
certificate of birth, or a social security account number card
issued by
the Social Security Administration).
(4) The privacy and security of
personal information and
identifiers obtained for and utilized in the system
must be
protected in accordance with industry standards for privacy and
security of confidential information. No personal information
obtained
from the system may be made available to any person
except to the extent
necessary to the lawful operation of the
system.
(5) A verification that
a person is eligible for employment
in the United States, or for benefits
under a Government-funded
program of public assistance, may not be withheld
or revoked
under the system for any reason other than the person is
ineligible under the applicable law or regulation.
(c) Employer
Sanctions.--An employer shall not be liable for any
penalty under section
274A of the Immigration and Nationality Act for
employing an alien, if--
(1) the alien appeared throughout the term of employment to
be prima
facie eligible for the employment (under the
requirements of section 274A(b)
of such Act);
(2) the employer followed all procedures required in the
verification system established in section 111 of this Act; and
(3) (i)
the alien was verified under such system as
eligible for the employment; or
(ii) a secondary verification procedure (as described in
section 113(d)
of this Act) was conducted with respect to the
alien and the employer
discharged the alien promptly after
receiving notice that the secondary
verification procedure had
failed to verify that the alien was eligible for
the
employment.
(d) Restriction on Use of Documents.--If the Attorney
General
finds, by regulation, that one (or more) of the documents described
in
section 274A(b)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act as
establishing employment authorization or identity does not reliably
establish the same or is being used fraudulently to an unacceptable
degree, the Attorney General may prohibit or place conditions on its
(or
their) use for purposes of the verification system established in
section
274A(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act or in this
section.
SEC. 112. DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS.
(a) In General.--(1) The
President, acting through the Attorney
General, shall begin conducting
projects in five States demonstrating
the feasibility of systems to verify
eligibility for employment in the
United States, and for benefits under
Government-funded programs of
public assistance. Each project shall be
consistent with subsection (b)
of section 111 of this Act and shall be
conducted for a period of three
years in accordance with an agreement
entered into with the respective
State. In determining which five States
shall be designated for such
projects, the Attorney General shall take into
account the estimated
number of excludable aliens and deportable aliens in
each State.
(2) Demonstration projects not using the Database for
Verifying Employment and Public Assistance Eligibility
established in
section 113 of this Act must be started within
six months of the date of
enactment of this Act.
(3) Demonstration projects using such Database must
be
implemented within six months of the establishment of such
Database.
(b) Additional Projects.--(1) The President is authorized to renew
agreements for demonstration projects, consistent with subsection (b)
of
section 111 of this Act. Each project conducted under such renewal
agreement
shall be completed within three years of the report required
in subsection
(f)(1).
(2) After the report required in subsection (f)(1), the President
is authorized to enter into additional agreements for demonstration
projects, consistent with subsection (b) of section 111 of this Act.
Each project conducted under such agreement shall be completed within
three years of such report.
(c) Nationwide Project.--Effective sixty
days after submission of
the report described in subsection (f)(1), and
notwithstanding section
274A(d)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
the President is
authorized, subject to subsection (b) of section 401 of
this Act, to
implement one or more of the demonstration projects, in whole
or in
part, singly or in combination, as a nationwide demonstration project,
to be completed within 3 years of the report required in subsection
(f)(1).
(d) Congressional Consultation.--The Attorney General shall
consult
with the Committees on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives
and the Senate not less than every six months from the date of
enactment
of this Act on the progress made in developing demonstration
projects under
this section.
(e) Implementation.--In carrying the projects described in
subsection (a), the President--
(1) shall support the efforts of Federal
and State
government agencies in developing (A) tamper and counterfeit-
resistant documents that may be used in the new verification
system,
including drivers' licenses or similar documents issued
by a State for the
purpose of identification, the Social
Security account number card issued by
the Social Security
Administration, and certificates of birth in the United
States
or establishing United States nationality at birth, and (B)
recordkeeping systems that would reduce the fraudulent
obtaining of such
documents, including a nationwide system to
match birth and death records;
and
(2) shall, for one or more of such projects, utilize the
Database
for Verifying Employment and Public Assistance
Eligibility established in
section 113 of this Act.
(f) Reports.--(1) Within thirty-eight months of the
commencement of
the latest-to-begin of the demonstration projects conducted
pursuant to
subsection (a) which utilizes the Database for Verifying
Employment and
Public Assistance Eligibility established in section 113 of
this Act,
the President shall submit a report to Congress--
(A)
describing the verification system the President
recommends for permanent
nationwide implementation; or
(B) recommending that certain of the
demonstration projects
be renewed for up to three years, or that additional
projects
be established in one or more of the same or additional States
for up to three years.
(2) If any demonstration projects are completed
after the report
required in subsection (f)(1), the President shall submit a
report to
Congress within sixty days of the completion of the last such
project,
describing the verification system the President recommends for
permanent nationwide implementation.
(g) Authorization of
Appropriation.--There are authorized to be
appropriated such sums as may be
necessary to carry out this section.
SEC. 113. DATABASE FOR VERIFYING
EMPLOYMENT AND PUBLIC ASSISTANCE
ELIGIBILITY.
(a)
Establishment.--(1) Within twelve months of the date of
enactment of this
Act, the Attorney General shall establish the
Database for Employment
Authorization Verification (referred to in this
section as the ``Database'')
containing information from the
Immigration and Naturalization Service and
the Social Security
Administration necessary to determine the work
authorization of
individuals residing in the United States.
(2) The
Database may be used with demonstration projects carried
out under section
112 of this Act and with any permanent system to
verify eligibility for
employment in the United States or for benefits
under any program referred
to in section 201 of this Act.
(b) Limitation on Data Use.--Any personal
information contained in
the Database may not be made available to any
Government agency,
employer, or other person except--
(1) to determine
eligibility for employment in the United
States or for benefits under any
Government-funded program of
public assistance; or
(2) to enforce the
Immigration and Nationality Act or
section 1001, 1028, 1542, 1546, or 1621
of title 18, United
States Code.
(c) Office of Employment and Public
Assistance Eligibility
Verification.--(1) There is established within the
Department of
Justice the Office of Employment and Public Assistance
Eligibility
Verification (in this section referred to as the ``Office'')
which
shall be responsible for collecting and integrating the information
necessary for the Database and for the administration of the Database.
(2) For the purpose of establishing the Database, the Office shall
contract, to the extent practicable and subject to the availability of
appropriations, with computer services specialists having demonstrated
expertise in establishment of confidential data systems and protection
of privacy of individuals with respect to whom data is being collected.
(d) Secondary Verification.--(1) The Administrator of Social
Security
and the Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization shall
establish
procedures for prompt secondary verification of information
in the Database
when necessary due to inability of the Database to
verify an individual's
eligibility for employment in the United States
or for benefits under a
Government-funded program of public assistance.
(2) When an individual's
assistance is required for the completion
of such secondary verification,
the individual shall be promptly
notified.
(e) Data Reliability.--(1)
The Administrator of the Office shall
take all necessary steps to ensure
that the information in the Database
is complete, accurate, verifiable, and
revised within a period of ten
business days after acquisition of new or
updated information provided
by the Immigration and Naturalization Service
or the Social Security
Administration.
(2) The Administrator of Social
Security and the Commissioner of
Immigration and Naturalization Service
shall provide such new or
updated information to the Office within ten
business days after
acquisition by those agencies.
(f) Privacy and Civil
Liberties Protections.--(1) The privacy and
security of personal information
and identifiers obtained for and
utilized in the Database must be protected
in accordance with industry
standards for privacy and security of
confidential information.
(2) No personal information collected pursuant to
this section may
be made available to any person except to the extent
necessary--
(i) to establish or operate the verification system
established in section 111 of this Act or section 274A(b) of
the
Immigration and Nationality Act,
(ii) to administer the Social Security Act,
or
(iii) to enforce the Immigration and Nationality Act or
section 1001,
1028, 1542, 1546, or 1621 of title 18 of the
Untied States Code.
(g)
Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated
such sums as may be necessary to carry out this section.
(h) Certification
and Reports.--(1) The Attorney General shall
certify to the Congress when
the Database is established and shall
cause such certification to be
published in the Federal Register with a
sixty-day public comment period.
(2) Not later than three months after the date of the certification
under paragraph (1), the Comptroller General of the United States shall
submit a report to Congress on the reliability of the Database.
(3) Not
later than six months after the implementation of the
Database the Attorney
General and the Secretary of Health and Human
Services shall report to the
committees on the Judiciary of the House
of Representatives and the Senate
on the feasibility and desirability
of utilizing the Database for the
purposes set forth in section 121(a)
of the Immigration Reform and Control
Act of 1986.
PART 3--ALIEN SMUGGLING
SEC. 121. WIRETAP AUTHORITY
FOR INVESTIGATIONS OF ALIEN SMUGGLING.
Section 2516(1) of title 18,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (c), by inserting after
``trains)'' the
following: ``, or a felony violation of section 1028
(relating
to production of false identification documentation), section
1542 (relating to false statements in passport applications),
section
1546 (relating to fraud and misuse of visas, permits,
and other
documents)'';
(2) by striking ``or'' after paragraph (l);
(3) by
redesignating paragraphs (m), (n), and (o) as
paragraphs (n), (o), and (p),
respectively; and
(4) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraph:
``(m) a violation of section 274, 277, or 278 of the
Immigration
and Nationality Act (relating to the smuggling of aliens);''.
SEC. 122. ADDING OFFENSES TO RICO RELATING TO ALIEN SMUGGLING OR
FRAUDULENT DOCUMENTS.
Section 1961(1) of title 18, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``or'' after ``law of the United
States,'';
(2) by inserting ``or'' at the end of clause (E); and
(3) by
adding at the end the following:
``(F) any act in violation of section 1028,
1542,
or 1546 of this title for personal financial gain and
section 274,
277, or 278 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act.''.
SEC. 123.
INCREASED CRIMINAL PENALTIES FOR ALIEN SMUGGLING.
(a) In
General.--Section 274(a) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (8 U.S.C.
1324(a)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)(A)--
(A) by striking ``or''
at the end of clause (iii);
(B) by striking the comma at the end of clause
(iv)
and inserting ``; or''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following
new clause:
``(v)(I) engages in any conspiracy to
commit any of the
preceding acts, or
``(II) aids or abets the commission of any
of the
preceding acts,'';
(2) in paragraph (1)(B)--
(A) in clause (i), by
inserting ``or (v)(I)'' after
``(A)(i)'';
(B) in clause (ii), by
striking ``or (iv)'' and
inserting ``(iv), or (v)(II)'';
(C) in clause
(iii), by striking ``or (iv)'' and
inserting ``(iv), or (v)''; and
(D)
in clause (iv), by striking ``or (iv)'' and
inserting ``(iv), or (v)''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Any person
who hires for employment an alien--
``(A) knowing that such alien is an
unauthorized
alien (as defined in section 274A(h)(3)), and
``(B) knowing
that such alien has been brought into
the United States in violation of this
subsection,
shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, and
shall
be imprisoned for not less than 2 years or more
than 5 years.''.
(b)
Smuggling of Aliens Who Will Commit Crimes.--Section 274(a)(2)
of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1324(a)(2)) is
amended--
(1)
in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``or'' at the end of clause (ii);
(B) by redesignating clause (iii) as clause (iv);
and
(C) by
inserting after clause (ii) the following:
``(iii) an offense committed with
the
intent or with reason to believe that the alien
unlawfully brought
into the United States will
commit an offense against the United States or
any State punishable by imprisonment for more
than 1 year,''; and
(2) at the end thereof, by striking ``be fined'' and all
that follows
through the period and inserting the following:
``be fined under title 18,
United States Code, and shall be
imprisoned not less than 3 years or more
than 10 years.''.
SEC. 124. EXPANDED FORFEITURE FOR SMUGGLING OR
HARBORING ALIENS.
Section 274 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C.
1324(b)) is amended--
(1) by amending subsection (b)(1) to read
as follows:
``(b) Seizure and Forfeiture.--(1) Any property, real or
personal,
which facilitates or is intended to facilitate, or has been used
in or
is intended to be used in the commission of, a violation of subsection
(a) or of section 274A(a)(1) or 274A(a)(2), or which constitutes, or is
derived from or traceable to, the proceeds obtained directly or
indirectly from a commission of a violation of subsection (a) or of
section 274A(a)(1) or 274A(a)(2), shall be subject to seizure and
forfeiture, except that--
``(A) no property used by any person as a
common carrier in
the transaction of business as a common carrier shall be
forfeited under the provisions of this section unless it shall
appear
that the owner or other person in charge of such
property was a consenting
party or privy to the unlawful act;
``(B) no property shall be forfeited
under the provisions
of this section by reason of any act or omission
established by
the owner thereof to have been committed or omitted by any
person other than such owner while such property was unlawfully
in the
possession of a person other than the owner in violation
of the criminal
laws of the United States or of any State; and
``(C) no property shall be
forfeited under this paragraph
to the extent of an interest of any owner, by
reason of any act
or omission established by that owner to have been
committed or
omitted without the knowledge or consent of the owner, unless
such action or omission was committed by an employee or agent
of the
owner, and facilitated or was intended to facilitate, or
was used in or
intended to be used in, the commission of a
violation of subsection (a) or
of section 274A(a)(1) or
274A(a)(2) which was committed by the owner or
which was
intended to further the business interests of the owner, or to
confer any other benefit upon the owner.'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``conveyance'' both places it
appears and inserting
``property''; and
(B) by striking ``is being used in'' and inserting
``is being used in, is facilitating, has facilitated,
or was intended to
facilitate'';
(3) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by inserting ``(A)''
immediately after ``(3)'',
and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(B) Before the seizure of any real property pursuant to
this section,
the Attorney General shall provide notice and an
opportunity to be heard to
the owner of the property. The
Attorney General shall prescribe such
regulations as may be
necessary to carry out this subparagraph.'';
(4)
in paragraphs (4) and (5) by striking ``a conveyance''
and ``conveyance''
each place such phrase or word appears and
inserting ``property''; and
(5) in paragraph (4) by--
(A) striking ``or'' at the end of subparagraph
(C),
(B) by striking the period at the end of
subparagraph (D) and
inserting ``; or'', and
(C) by inserting at the end the following new
subparagraph:
``(E) transfer custody and ownership of forfeited
property to any Federal, State, or local agency
pursuant to section
616(c) of the Tariff Act of 1930
(19 U.S.C. 1616a(c)).''.
PART
4--DOCUMENT FRAUD, MISREPRESENTATION, AND FAILURE TO PRESENT
DOCUMENTS
SEC. 131. INCREASED CRIMINAL PENALTIES FOR FRAUDULENT USE OF
GOVERNMENT-ISSUED DOCUMENTS.
(a) Fraud and Misuse of
Government-Issued Identification
Documents.--Section 1028(b)(1) of title 18,
United States Code, is
amended by striking ``five years'' and inserting ``10
years''.
(b) Changes to the Sentencing Levels.--Pursuant to section 944 of
title 28, United States Code, and section 21 of the Sentencing Act of
1987, the United States Sentencing Commission shall promulgate
guidelines, or amend existing guidelines, relating to defendants
convicted of violating, or conspiring to violate, sections 1546(a) and
1028(a) of title 18, United States Code. The basic offense level under
section 2L2.1 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines shall be
increased to--
(1) not less than offense level 15 if the offense
involved
100 or more documents;
(2) not less than offense level 20 if
the offense involved
1,000 or more documents, or if the documents were used
to
facilitate any other criminal activity described in section
212(a)(2)(A)(i)(II) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C.
1182(a)(A)(i)(II)) or in section 101(a)(43) of such Act,
as amended by this
Act; and
(3) not less than offense level 25 if the offense
involved--
(A) the provision of documents to a person known or
suspected of
engaging in a terrorist activity (as such
terms are defined in section
212(a)(3)(B) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(3)(B));
(B) the provision of documents to facilitate a
terrorist activity or to assist a person to engage in
terrorist activity
(as such terms are defined in
section 212(a)(3)(B) of the Immigration and
Nationality
Act (8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(3)(B)); or
(C) the provision of
documents to persons involved
in racketeering enterprises (as such acts or
activities
are defined in section 1952 of title 18, United States
Code).
SEC. 132. NEW CIVIL PENALTIES FOR DOCUMENT FRAUD.
(a) Activities
Prohibited.--Section 274C(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1324c(a)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``or'' at the end of paragraph
(3);
(2) by striking the period and inserting ``, or'' at the
end of
paragraph (4); and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) in reckless disregard of the fact that the
information is false or
does not relate to the applicant, to
prepare, to file, or to assist another
in preparing or filing,
documents which are falsely made (including but not
limited to
documents which contain false information, contain material
misrepresentations, or information which does not relate to the
applicant) for the purpose of satisfying a requirement of this
Act.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments for Civil Penalties.--Section 274C(d)(3)
of
the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1324c(d)(3)) is
amended by
striking ``each document used, accepted, or created and each
instance of
use, acceptance, or creation'' each of the two places it
appears and
inserting ``each instance of a violation under subsection
(a)''.
SEC. 133. NEW CIVIL PENALTY FOR FAILURE TO PRESENT DOCUMENTS.
Section 274C(a) (8 U.S.C. 1324c(a)), as amended by section 132 of
this Act, is further amended--
(1) by striking ``or'' at the end of
paragraph (4);
(2) by striking the period at the end of paragraph (5) and
inserting ``; or''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(6) to present before boarding a common carrier for the
purpose of coming to the United States a document which relates
to the
alien's eligibility to enter the United States and to
fail to present such
document to an immigration officer upon
arrival at a United States port of
entry.
The Attorney General may, in his or her discretion, waive the
penalties
of this section with respect to an alien who knowingly violates
paragraph (6) if the alien is granted asylum under section 208 or
withholding of deportation under section 243(h).''.
SEC. 134. NEW
CRIMINAL PENALTIES FOR FAILURE TO DISCLOSE ROLE AS
PREPARER OF FALSE
APPLICATION FOR ASYLUM AND FOR
PREPARING CERTAIN POST-CONVICTION
APPLICATIONS.
Section 274C of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C.
1324c) is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(e) Criminal Penalties for Failure To Disclose Role as Document
Preparer.--(1) Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of the
Service under section 208 of this Act, knowingly and willfully fails to
disclose, conceals, or covers up the fact that they have, on behalf of
any person and for a fee or other remuneration, prepared or assisted in
preparing an application which was falsely made (as defined in section
274C(a)) for immigration benefits pursuant to section 208 of this Act,
or the regulations promulgated thereunder, shall be guilty of a felony
and shall be fined in accordance with title 18, United States Code,
imprisoned for not less than 2 nor more than 5 years, or both, and
prohibited from preparing or assisting in preparing, regardless of
whether for a fee or other remuneration, any other such application.
``(2) Whoever, having been convicted of a violation of section
274C(e)
of the Immigration and Nationality Act, knowingly and willfully
prepares or
assists in preparing an application for immigration
benefits pursuant to
this Act, or the regulations promulgated
thereunder, regardless of whether
for a fee or other remuneration and
regardless of whether in any matter
within the jurisdiction of the
Service under section 208 of this Act, shall
be guilty of a felony and
shall be fined in accordance with title 18, United
States Code,
imprisoned for not less than 5 years or more than 15 years, or
both,
and prohibited from preparing or assisting in preparing any other such
application.''.
SEC. 135. CRIMINAL PENALTY FOR FALSE STATEMENT IN A
DOCUMENT REQUIRED
UNDER THE IMMIGRATION LAWS OR KNOWINGLY PRESENTING
DOCUMENT WHICH FAILS TO CONTAIN REASONABLE BASIS IN LAW
OR FACT.
The fourth paragraph of section 1546(a) of title 18, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Whoever knowingly makes under
oath, or as permitted under penalty
of perjury under section 1746 of title
28, United States Code,
knowingly subscribes as true, any false statement
with respect to a
material fact in any application, affidavit, or other
document required
by the immigration laws or regulations prescribed
thereunder, or
knowingly presents any such application, affidavit, or other
document
which contains any such false statement or which fails to contain
any
reasonable basis in law or fact--''.
SEC. 136. NEW EXCLUSION FOR
DOCUMENT FRAUD AND FOR FAILURE TO PRESENT
DOCUMENTS.
Section
212(a)(6)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1182(a)(6)(C))
is amended--
(1) by striking ``(C) Misrepresentation'' and inserting the
following:
``(C) Fraud, misrepresentation, and failure to
present
documents''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new clause:
``(iii) Fraud, misrepresentation, and
failure to present documents.--
``(I) Any alien who, in seeking
entry to the United States or boarding
a common carrier for the purpose of
coming to the United States,
presents
any document which, in the
determination of the immigration
officer, is forged, counterfeit,
altered, falsely made, stolen, or
inapplicable to the person presenting
the document, or otherwise
contains a
misrepresentation of a material fact,
is excludable.
``(II) Any alien who is required to
present a document relating to the
alien's eligibility to enter the United
States prior to boarding a
common
carrier for the purpose of coming to
the United States and who
fails to
present such document to an immigration
officer upon arrival at
a port of entry
into the United States is
excludable.''.
SEC.
137. LIMITATION ON WITHHOLDING OF DEPORTATION AND OTHER BENEFITS
FOR ALIENS
EXCLUDABLE FOR DOCUMENT FRAUD OR FAILING TO
PRESENT DOCUMENTS.
(a)
Section 235 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1225) is
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d)(1) Subject
to paragraph (2), any alien who has not been
admitted to the United States,
and who is excludable under section
212(a)(6)(C)(iii), is ineligible for
withholding of deportation
pursuant to section 243(h), and may not apply
therefor or for any other
relief under this Act, except that an alien found
to have a credible
fear of persecution or of return to persecution in
accordance with
section 208(e) shall be taken before a special inquiry
officer for
exclusion proceedings in accordance with section 236 and may
apply for
asylum, withholding of deportation, or both, in the course of such
proceedings.
``(2) An alien described in paragraph (1) who has been
found
ineligible to apply for asylum under section 208(e) may be returned
under the provisions of this section only to a country in which (or
from
which) he or she has no credible fear of persecution (or of return
to
persecution). If there is no country to which the alien can be
returned in
accordance with the provisions of this paragraph, the alien
shall be taken
before a special inquiry officer for exclusion
proceedings in accordance
with section 236 and may apply for asylum,
withholding of deportation, or
both, in the course of such proceedings.
(b) Section 237(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1227(a)) is amended--
(1) in
the second sentence of paragraph (1) by striking
``Deportation'' and
inserting ``Subject to section 235(d)(2),
deportation''; and
(2) in the
first sentence of paragraph (2) by striking
``If'' and inserting ``Subject
to section 235(d)(2), if''.
SEC. 138. DEFINITION OF ``FALSELY MAKE ANY
DOCUMENT''.
Section 274C(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C.
1324c), as amended by sections 132 and 133 of this Act, is further
amended by inserting at the end the following new sentence: ``For the
purposes of this subsection, the phrase `falsely make any document'
includes the preparation or provision of any application for benefits
under this Act, with knowledge or in reckless disregard of the fact
that
such application contains a false, fictitious, or fraudulent
statement or
material representation, or has no basis in law or fact,
or otherwise fails
to state a fact pertaining to the applicant which is
material to whether the
application should be approved.''.
PART 5--EXCLUSION AND DEPORTATION
SEC. 141. SPECIAL PORT-OF-ENTRY EXCLUSION PROCEDURE FOR ALIENS USING
DOCUMENTS FRAUDULENTLY OR FAILING TO PRESENT DOCUMENTS,
OR EXCLUDABLE
ALIENS APPREHENDED AT SEA.
Section 235 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1225),
as amended by sections 137 and 148 of this
Act, is further amended by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(e)(1)(A) Subject to paragraph (d)(2), any alien (including an
alien
crewman) who may appear to the examining immigration officer or
to the
special inquiry officer during the examination before either of
such
officers to be excludable under section 212(a)(6)(C)(iii) of the
Immigration
and Nationality Act may be ordered specially excluded and
deported by the
Attorney General, either by a special inquiry officer
or otherwise; or
``(B) Subject to paragraph (d)(2), any alien (including an alien
crewman) who was brought to the United States in the manner described
in
subsection (d)(3) and who may appear to an examining immigration
officer to
be excludable may be ordered specially excluded and deported
by the Attorney
General without any further inquiry, either by a
special inquiry officer or
otherwise.
``(2) Such special exclusion order is not subject to
administrative
appeal, except that the Attorney General shall provide by
regulation
for prompt review of such an order against an applicant who
claims
under oath, or as permitted under penalty of perjury under section
1746
of title 28, United States Code, after having been warned of the
penalties for falsely making such claim under such conditions, to have
been lawfully admitted for permanent residence.
``(3) A special
exclusion order entered in accordance with the
provisions of this subsection
shall have the same effect as if the
alien had been ordered excluded and
deported pursuant to section 236,
except that judicial review of such an
order shall be available only
under section 106.
``(4) Nothing in this
subsection shall be regarded as requiring an
inquiry before a special
inquiry officer in the case of an alien
crewman.''.
SEC. 142.
LIMITED JUDICIAL REVIEW.
(a) Preclusion of Judicial Review.--Section 106
of the Immigration
and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1105a) is amended--
(1)
by amending the section heading to read as follows:
``judicial review of
orders of deportation and exclusion, and
special exclusion''; and
(2) by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d)(1) Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, and except as
provided in this subsection, no court
shall have jurisdiction to review
any individual determination, or to
entertain any other cause or claim,
arising from or relating to the
implementation or operation of sections
208(e), 212(a)(6)(C)(iii), 235(d),
and 235(e). Regardless of the nature
of the action or claim, or the party or
parties bringing the action, no
court shall have jurisdiction or authority
to enter declaratory,
injunctive, or other equitable relief not specifically
authorized in
this subsection, nor to certify a class under Rule 23 of the
Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure.
``(2) Judicial review of any cause,
claim, or individual
determination covered under paragraph (d)(1) shall only
be available in
habeas corpus proceedings, and shall be limited to
determinations of--
``(A) whether the petitioner is an alien, if the
petitioner
makes a showing that his or her claim of United States
nationality is not frivolous;
``(B) whether the petitioner was ordered
specially
excluded; and
``(C) whether the petitioner can prove by a
preponderance
of the evidence that he or she is an alien lawfully admitted
for permanent residence and is entitled to such further inquiry
as is
prescribed by the Attorney General pursuant to section
235(e)(2).
``(3)
In any case where the court determines that an alien was not
ordered
specially excluded, or was not properly subject to special
exclusion under
the regulations adopted by the Attorney General, the
court may order no
relief beyond requiring that the alien receive a
hearing in accordance with
section 236, or a determination in
accordance with section 235(c) or 273(d).
Any alien excludable under
section 212(a)(6)(C)(iii) who receives a hearing
under section 236,
whether by order of court or otherwise, may thereafter
obtain judicial
review of any resulting final order of exclusion pursuant to
subsection
(b).
``(4) In determining whether an alien has been ordered
specially
excluded, the court's inquiry shall be limited to whether such an
order
was in fact issued and whether it relates to the petitioner. There
shall be no review of whether the alien is actually excludable under
section 212(a)(6)(C)(iii) or entitled to any relief from exclusion.''.
(b) Preclusion of Collateral Attacks.--Section 235 of the
Immigration
and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1225), as amended by sections
137, 141, and
148 of this Act, is further amended by adding at the end
the following new
subsection: