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Crazy that restaurants in the area would want to make money delivering to a large military population.

Marriage to a citizen gives you the opportunity to apply for citizenship, that’s all. There are still legal hurdles and lots of fees.

Many years ago, I had to manage a project that involved installation at an air base. I was contracted by a govt agency and did these hundreds of places, but usually in office buildings or other sites.

11 years in BOH did wonders for my world view. Working 10-12 hour days with cats from El Salvador (or Guatemala, or pick one) and hearing what they went through to get to America versus me just being born here can change your perspective quick. Don’t fuck with service industry folks; it’s a goddamn hard enough way to

Yeah, but those guys will get sick of Papa Johns pretty quick.

If something comes up during the background check, the sentries might be under orders to detain the individual for civilian law enforcement. I’ve stood armed watches before, but not at a base gate so I don’t know what information comes up during the background. It’s more common for sentries to just tell the driver to

Like 15 years in a military prison and a dishonorable discharge that will keep them from working at even McDonald’s the rest of their life? Yes legal consequences.

We had something similar happen when I was stationed in San Diego. A company showed up with a delivery truck and they ran the background checks on everyone. Two of the guys had warrants for their arrest and were detained on the spot. I later saw ICE being involved as well.

“Did every single one of them check every box and do everything legally?”

Great and obvious point. Anyone here illegally is thumbing their nose at all of us who came her legally.

“They treated me like a criminal. I did not commit a crime. My daughters need me. My wife needs me.” His family told PIX 11 that Villavicencio might be deported as early as next week.

That he had delivered before wouldn’t matter if the security policy was only upped recently.

You do realize for allowing someone into a secure location like this, they could themselves actually go to jail, or get a less than honorable discharge? Were they really supposed to go to jail and get kicked out to allow some pizza on base?

Especially in regards to matters of base security, which this would fall into.

Yeah, it’s called the UCMJ and they will slam you with it the moment you mess up, especially while standing an armed watch.

If an MP makes a decision not to enforce a security policy that he is specifically directed to enforce, then yes: there are UCMJ consequences.

I did the Ft. Hood gate guard training in 2013 when I was active and everyone without a DoD ID or other federal issued ID card/drivers license with appropriate decal had to go to the visitors center for their pass which included a background check. I don’t know how exactly how it was handled but there’s very limited

I should point out that, if in the course of their background investigation due to new base policing, if an ICE warrant was discovered, the MPs were obligated to hand this individual over: if they failed to do so, they would have faced legal consequences themselves for the decision. As military law enforcement agents,

The article makes it clear: “an active Immigration and Customs Enforcement warrant was discovered on file.”

Some culpability should be put on his employer, who never should have hired someone who cannot legally drive in the state of New York. There are no non-citizen drivers licenses available in NY, unlike 12 states that do allow it. The pizza place, Nonna Delia’s, was setting him up for fines, arrest, or deportation every