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Fines For Illegal Workers Will Rise

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Published: February 23, 2008

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration said Friday it plans to raise fines significantly for employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants, part of a broader effort that includes improved border security after Congress failed to pass immigration-related legislation in 2007.

The increase in employer fines would be the first since 1999. The new policy is the latest aimed at the most sensitive pressure point in illegal immigration: the businesses that employ the workers.

The Homeland Security Department has intensified raids on rogue companies in the past three years, prosecuting executives on criminal charges and arresting workers, who often use valid Social Security numbers, for identity theft.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff offered examples Friday of his agency's heightened focus on company executives. He cited the human resources director of a Missouri poultry plant now facing a 10-year prison sentence for hiring illegal immigrants. Chertoff also pointed to the owner of an Indiana construction company sentenced to 18 months in jail and forced to forfeit $1.4 million.

The increased employer fines will take effect March 27. The minimum penalty would increase $100 to $375. The maximum fine for a first-time offender would jump $1,000 to $3,200, and the maximum fine for repeated violations would rise from $5,000 to $16,000.

Fines are assessed on a per-person basis, so an employer with 10 illegal immigrants on staff would pay 10 fines.

Officials said the administration is adding more border agents and prosecutors, as well as extending fencing and vehicle barriers.

Chertoff also announced administration approval of an experimental "virtual fence" that includes cameras powerful enough to spot border crossers 10 miles away. It also can determine whether they are toting weapons or water jugs.

Known as "Project 28" for the 28 miles in Arizona scanned by the technology, it has been criticized in Congress for its rocky progress. Homeland Security officials held back some payments to its contractor, Boeing, in 2007 because the system did not function properly. By that point, the agency had paid $15 million of the $20 million contract and work continued.

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