Obama amnesty program sends illegal immigrants in search of criminal records

Posted Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012 0 comments  Print Reprints
A

Tarrant locations

that conduct criminal

records searches

For records searches on misdemeanors, applicants must contact the office of Tarrant County Clerk Mary Louise Garcia.

Tim Curry Criminal Justice Center

401 W. Belknap St., second floor

Fort Worth, TX 76196

For records searches on felonies, applicants must contact the office of Tarrant County District Clerk Tom Wilder.

Tim Curry Criminal Justice Center

401 W. Belknap St., third floor

Fort Worth, TX 76196

Other Tarrant locations for obtaining felony records:

District Clerk Disposed Records

Family Law Building

200 E. Weatherford St., third floor

Fort Worth, TX 76196

Scott D. Moore Juvenile Justice Center -- district clerk's office

2701 Kimbo Road

Ft. Worth, TX 76111

Attn: Vickie Bowers

Subcourthouses -- District Clerk Passports & Court Records:

Northwest Subcourthouse

6713 Telephone Rd, second floor

Lake Worth, TX 76135

Southlake Town Square

1400 Main St., Suite 340

Southlake, TX 76092

Southwest Subcourthouse

6551 Granbury Road

Fort Worth, TX 76133

Southeast Subcourthouse

700 E. Abram St., second floor

Arlington, TX 76010

Source: Tarrant County


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Tarrant County has seen a dramatic spike in the number of requests for criminal record searches from Dream Act hopefuls seeking to gain U.S. citizenship.

The "Dreamers," as some call the illegal immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children, hope to be granted deferred action under an Obama administration directive. As many as 800,000 undocumented young people in the U.S. could qualify under deferred action, some estimates show.

Applicants must submit to a background check and have a clean record without felonies and serious misdemeanors, or any evidence of being a threat to the country.

The guidelines were set up in a June 15 memorandum by Janet Napolitano, United States Secretary of Homeland Security.

As a result, demand for felony record searches has almost tripled over the last two weeks, District Clerk Tom Wilder said Tuesday. In late July, Wilder said his clerks ran 58 searches. By comparison, 169 searches were recorded the week of Aug. 13-17, Wilder said.

"We're trying to handle this with existing personnel," Wilder said. "That remains to be seen if we can do that ... but that's a job we're supposed to do under the law so we're doing it."

Deferred action is not a method that would grant individuals legal status. Only Congress can do that under the Dream Act, which isn't yet law.

Congress has been wrangling for years over specific proposals, but political pundits have said the Act is still "just a dream."

But a clean criminal record will be a step to permanent lawful status. What's more, it will automatically grant an individual the ability to get a job. Some young people with college degrees have been unable to get jobs because of their undocumented status.

Felony case searches in Tarrant County are conducted by the district clerk's office; misdemeanor searches are conducted by the county clerk's office.

Other deferred action prerequisites require that applicants: be under the age of 31 as of June 15; arrived in the U.S. before their 16th birthday; continuously resided in the U.S. since June 15, 2007; be in school, have graduated or obtained a certificate of completion of high school, federal records show.

Department of Homeland Security officials are expected to decide each case. Wilder said it is using the data from Tarrant County as a "screening" tool.

Yamil Berard, 817-390-7705

Twitter: @yberard

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