OV Social OUTCASTING

OV Social OUTCASTING
A PERCEPTION of the Crime against Humanity.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

❎#2 Citizenship + DOMESTIC Violence = Moral Terpitude = Forced Disappearance




It should be called The Department of HOMELAND OFFENSE.



DEPORTATION? THIS IS HOW HUMAN TRAFFICKING IS USED AS A WEAPON.


IS DOMESTIC VIOLENCE a crime of MORAL TERPITUTUDE? NO. MAYBE.

FAKE FUCK NUMBER ONE
Marissa M Gonzales had been hit by more guys than Tito Ortiz. She liked to make sex tapes of me with her new iPad every "NAKED" Sunday. Then she got a restraining order and I never saw her again.
2011 Marissa M Gonzales: DATE SCAM 2...


(MARK: BFF. ARMY SPEC OPS) FIRST STEP.

Why would an investigator participate in a sexual relationship for 36 months to just get a DOMESTIC VIOLENCE RESTRAINING ORDER? A. SHE IS A PROSTITUTE. B. MORAL TERPITUDE.
C. $57K AND $120K ON TRANSPARENT CALIFORNIA.COM PAY OR, D.)⬇️
Los Angeles is now home to many noncitizens throughout the county. Unfortunately, should these noncitizens face criminal prosecution, it can lead to potentially devastating immigration consequences. Crimes that noncitizens are accused of often relate to domestic violence. Noncitizens should be aware that being arrested or detained for a domestic violence offense can trigger an automatic immigration hold.

Whenever a noncitizen ends up in custody, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is notified and an immigration hold can be placed on the noncitizen which will prevent them from being released from custody. This hold tells the jail to not release the noncitizen even at the end of the noncitizen’s custody sentence. Instead, DHS will place the noncitizen in federal custody once the term of imprisonment is completed and removal proceedings will begin. This is why it is important for noncitizens to contact a skilled criminal defense attorney if they suspect they might be arrested, detained, or accused of a domestic violence offense.

Being convicted of any domestic violence related offense has many collateral consequences that defendants may often overlook, especially immigration consequences. Even a single conviction of domestic violence can lead to severe immigration consequences. Defendants who are not citizens of the United States should be advised that in many cases a single conviction of domestic violence can lead to removal, deportation, or denial of naturalization.

Domestic Violence and Crimes of Moral Turpitude
The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has provided a non-exhaustive list of certain criminal convictions that would make a noncitizen deportable from the United States and bar them from any immigration relief. Although domestic violence is not specifically mentioned in this list, the conduct that is required for a domestic violence conviction can be considered a crime of moral turpitude. In some cases, the conduct required for a domestic violence conviction can even be classified as an aggravated felony, which may trigger a noncitizen’s removal proceedings from the United States.

Any crime in California that carries a potential sentence of imprisonment for one year or longer, for immigration purposes can be considered a crime of moral turpitude. This means that virtually all domestic violence convictions can be considered crimes of moral turpitude since even the most basic misdemeanor domestic violence penalty for willful infliction of corporal injury has a potential one-year term in county jail. Therefore, any conviction involving domestic violence can lead to deportation for a noncitizen.
Misdemeanor Domestic Violence and Deportation
In 2016, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) unambiguously concluded that even a single misdemeanor domestic violence conviction will make a noncitizen removable from the United States under Section 237 of the Immigration and Nationality Act. This means that even a conviction of a misdemeanor domestic violence offense can make noncitizens face removal proceedings. Therefore, those charged with domestic violence should know that deportation is a real possibility even if they are not imprisoned for a year or longer. Besides being deported, noncitizens should know that a conviction may also lead to them being denied any other forms of immigration relief should they try to apply.
Due to the serious collateral consequences that noncitizens accused of domestic violence face, it is extremely important if you or a loved one has been arrested or charged with a domestic violence offense that you meet and discuss your case with an experienced criminal defense attorney as soon as possible. As a former Deputy District Attorney with over 14 years of prosecutorial experience, Michael Kraut understands how to effectively defend clients charged with domestic violence. 

FAKE FUCK NUMBER FOUR
***
In this next email sent to our HERO from Lisa T., it is a sweet piece of the puzzle of the FAKE DOMESTIC RELATIONSHIP she has nurtured with a man she out classes during a 36 month scam.

"Hey. That's Marissa Gonzales. She got a restraining order too. Wait. Lisa knows Marissa? Payback? Or, payback for the payback?" 

KEY NOTE: THE GOAL ORIENTED MORAL TERPITUTUDE DATE SCAM PROSTITUTES ARE MULTI-PRONGED WITH BEING REMOVED AS A U.S. CITIZEN, AND TO DEPORT JOHN DRIVER. 

QUESTION: WHAT COUNTRY WOULD A U.S. BORN.CITIZEN IN THAT SITUATION BE DEPORTED TO?
2017 MARISSA M GONZALES: TSA
(I was unaware that the Goldigger GONZALES was a TSA employee, and, I was also unaware that Marie Dunaway and Lisa Marie Traudt were associates, putting me in a cyber dating love triangle.)

KEY NOTE: HOMELAND SECURITY HAS BEEN CONDUCTING A PURGE IN PREPARATION FOR MAGA, YEAR ZERO.
But, specifically, in light of the MORAL TERPITUDE, AND, DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, making citizenship a Multi-Pronged strategy with an outcome that was totally sinister and Machevellian evil. Deportation is an invisible sucker punch if you are a citizen. This is how it goes:

THE U.S. CAN DEPORT A CITIZEN IF:
Only after an immigrant has successfully become a U.S. citizen, is he or she safe from the grounds of deportability. U.S. citizens cannot be removed unless they used fraud to gain their green card or citizenship.
Briefly summarized, a person may be deportable from the U.S. if he or she:

  • Was inadmissible at time of U.S. entry or of adjustment of status, or violates the terms of his or her visa, green card, or other status. (Permanent residents who have been absent from the United States for fewer than 180 continuous days don’t have to worry about admissibility upon their return except if they have committed certain crimes).
  • Had conditional permanent resident status (applicable to certain spouses, sons, and daughters of U.S. citizens as well as investor/entrepreneurs, with their spouses, and children) but had this status terminated.
  • before, during, or within five years of the date of any U.S. entry, knowingly helped smuggle any other alien trying to enter the United States.
  • Committed marriage fraud.
  • Got married less than two years before getting a U.S. green card on that basis, then had the marriage annulled or terminated within the following two years, unless the immigrant can prove that the marriage was not a fraud, meant to evade any provision of the immigration laws.
  • Is convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude that was committed within five years after the date of U.S. admission (or ten years if the person received a green card as a criminal informant) and is punishable by a sentence of at least one year.
  • Has been convicted of two or more crimes involving moral turpitude at any time after U.S. admission, where the two crimes did not arise out of a single scheme of misconduct.
  • Has been convicted of an aggravated felony at any time after U.S. admission.
  • Has been convicted of high-speed flight from an immigration checkpoint.
  • Fails to register as a sex offender.
  • Has been convicted of a drug crime (or a conspiracy or attempt to commit one), whether in the U.S. or another country, at any time after U.S. admission. There’s an exception for a single offense involving possession for personal use of 30 grams or less of marijuana.
  • Is, or at any time after U.S. admission has been, a drug abuser or addict. Notice that no actual court conviction is needed to be deportable under this section. The person’s own confession to drug use, or evidence on a medical report, could be enough.
  • Has been convicted of illegally buying, selling, possessing, or engaging in other transactions concerning firearms, weapons, or destructive devices, at any time after U.S. admission.
  • Has been convicted of committing, or conspiring to commit espionage, sabotage, treason, or sedition, if punishable by at least five years in prison.
  • Has violated the Military Selective Service Act or the Trading With the Enemy Act.
  • has violated certain travel and documentation restrictions or imported aliens for immoral purposes.
  • has been convicted of domestic violence, stalking, child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment, at any time after U.S. admission.
  • Has violated the portion of a protective order that is meant to stop credible threats of violence, repeated harassment, or bodily injury.
  • Has committed or conspired to commit human trafficking inside or outside the U.S. or has apparently been a knowing aider, abettor, assister, conspirator, or colluder with someone else in severe forms of human trafficking; or is the trafficker’s spouse, son, or daughter who, within the past five years, knowingly received any financial or other benefit from the illicit activity.
  • Failed to advise U.S. immigration authorities, in writing, of a change of address within ten days of the move, unless the person can prove that such failure was reasonably excusable or not willful.
  • Has been convicted of providing false information in connection with a requirement to register with immigration authorities or of other violations relating to fraud and misuse of visas, permits, and other entry documents.
  • Has received a final order of deportation for document fraud, forgery, counterfeiting, or related violations.
  • Falsely represents himself or herself as a U.S. citizen in order to gain any immigration or other benefit. An exception is made if the person’s parents (natural or adoptive) are or were U.S. citizens, the person lived in the U.S. before age 16, and the person reasonably believed himself or herself to be a U.S. citizen.
  • Is engaged, or at any time after admission engages in espionage, sabotage, or violations or evasions of any law prohibiting export of goods, technology, or sensitive information, or in any other criminal activity that is a danger to public safety or national security, or acts in opposition to, or attempts to control or overthrow the U.S. government by force, violence, or other unlawful means.
  • Has engaged in or appears likely to engage in terrorist activity, or has incited terrorist activity, or is a representative a terrorist organization or group that endorses or espouses terrorist activity, or is a member of a terrorist organization (unless the person proves that he had no idea of its terrorist aims), or endorses or espouses terrorist activity or persuades others to do so, or has received military-type training from or on behalf a terrorist organization, or is the terrorist’s spouse or child, if the relevant activity took place within the last five years.
  • By being present in the U.S., would create potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences.
  • Participated in Nazi persecution, genocide, torture, or extrajudicial killings, severe violations of religious freedom, or recruitment or use of child soldiers.
  • Within five years after U.S. entry, has become a public charge (dependent on need-based government assistance) for reasons that did not arise after the person’s U.S. entry.
  • Has voted in violation of any federal, state, or local law. An exception is made for people who, based on parentage, reasonably believed themselves to be U.S. citizens
KEY NOTE: HUMAN TRAFFICKING IS A DEPORTABLE CRIME AND IT MAY BE WORTH A LIFE AND DEATH DECISION TO FINISH STRONG IF SHE IS GOAL ORIENTED.

THE RESTRAINING ORDER IS A PIECE OF PAPER THAT STRIPS AM INDIVIDUAL OF HAN RIGHTS WITHOUT A JURY TO DECIDE TESTIMONY.

IN 52 YEARS, I HAVE HAD 8 RESTRAINING ORDERS, 5 IN THE LAST 24 MONTHS. BUT, I GOT LAID  AND NEVER VIOLATED ANY OF THEM UNTIL TRAUDT AND GARCIA SET ME UP WITH BRADLEY. SALAS LITTLE BITCHES.

6 MONTHS AFTER DISENGAGEMENT 
TRAUDT IS CONSIDERED ETC... BECAUSE THIS WAS THE GOAL OF THE DATE SCAM. OCTOBER 4, 2019 was the day the todaye had turned
KEY NOTE: DEPORTATION: FAIL.
KEY NOTE 2: 3 ACTIVE PROs EXIST.
KEY NOTE 3: THESE ARE THE PERPS. CONFIRMED.


THE ONION IS GONNA GET PEELED BACK IF ITS THE LAST TASK I EVER ACCOMPLISH. PEOPLE WILL CRY REAL TEARS.
First tier

Lisa Traudt-COPS -MarieDunaway-Marissa Gonzles-Cybercoder
Chauncey Navarro, Faith-based

Second tier
Amanda Navarro- Joe L Mendez- Micheal Owen Bradley-Heather Dawn Zabel- BIARRITZ street in Menifee- San Marcos drive in Stanton in 1999- to - MARIO D GARCIA- ANA L GARCIA- TO - 

Third tier

Willie Salas Ramirez- Patrick Dayton Mcneal- Les Linkogle- Dori Linkogle- Dan Traudt and CARP UM TRAIDT- TO -UNKNOWN ENTITY.

A PRONGE.
Amanda Navarro-Mendez-Remmen
Joe L Mendez, Repo
Micheal Owen Bradley, Private Investigator
Heather Zabel, Skip tracer, Gateway Lending Wisconsin
Mario Garcia, LACSD
Ana L Garcia, FBI NCIS
Willie Salas Ramirez, FED Criminal
Patrick D Mcneal,-CRooK FAKE-based

Courts


LINKOGLE. 1999 TO 2007. 
THE HIDDEN HOMICIDE OF ENSMINGER AND THE WHITE POWER NAZI SKINHEAD GRAND WIZARD OF THE KKK, THE MAGA AND TRUMP, AND THE COPS.GOV GRANTS.

PLEASE LEAVE A MESSAGE.

The Portland predicament 2022

 Retaliation with another facilitator frequency attack. I win again. Warrants in CA don't count in Idaho