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Mayors whose cops aren’t helping ICE remove illegal aliens should be defeated

CLEVELAND, OH – Think about the insanity of U.S. mayors telling cops they manage to make cities like Cleveland “sanctuary safe” for illegal alien criminals to live with expired visas, fake drivers licenses and stolen “American” identities while the same cops chase Christian Negro Americans to death over expired license plates. 

Christian Americans Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams were chased to death by cops in “sanctuary city” Cleveland that makes it safe for illegal aliens to live without being arrested for stealing Christian jobs. Catholic police officers thought Russell’s backfiring car engine was gunfire. They were chased into majority Christian East Cleveland and executed in a hail of 147 bullets behind Heritage Middle School in 2012.

These foreign criminals are stealing jobs and educational opportunities from Americans in universities under the guise of their being some kind of “minority.”  All because mayors with “federal criminal law enforcement authority” in illegal “sanctuary cities” somehow value foreign lives over the lives of the nation’s founding American Revolution and pre-Civil War Christian majority.   Mayors and council members who think like this should be run out of Ohio’s municipal offices in 2021.  The same with the rest of the nation.

The 10th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America grants states the authority to determine how federal laws will be enforced.   

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.”

Pursuant to Secton 737.11 of Ohio’s Revised Code municipal police were given “federal” criminal law enforcement authority.  

“The police force of a municipal corporation shall preserve the peace, protect persons and property, and obey and enforce all ordinances of the legislative authority of the municipal corporation, all criminal laws of the state and the United States.

Christian American Jaden Paolino, 15, was the victim of East Cleveland police chasing a Christian man into Cleveland over an expired license plate. It’s safe in Cleveland for illegal aliens as cops target Christians for ruthless law enforcement. Look at what happened to this Christian child in an overwhelmingly majority Christian nation over a $250 minor misdemeanor.

For guidance, law enforcement officers who see the word “obey” first in R.C. 737.11 should also acknowledge the existence of 18 U.S.C. 4 that requires anyone with knowledge of a felony offense to report it.

“Whoever, having knowledge of the actual commission of a felony cognizable by a court of the United States, conceals and does not as soon as possible make known the same to some judge or other person in civil or military authority under the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.”

In a February 20, 2017 memo to Department of Homeland Security personnel former Chief of Staff John Kelly reinforced instructions from Congress to federal law enforcement personnel; and law enforcement officers with the authority to enforce federal laws.

“Congress has defined the Department’s role and responsibilities regarding the enforcement of the immigration laws of the United States. Effective immediately, and consistent with Article II, Section 3 of the United States Constitution and Section 3331 of Title 5, United States Code, Department personnel shall faithfully execute the immigration laws of the United States against all removable aliens,” Kelly wrote.

The words “all removable aliens” sought to end the “exempt classes” that had been created out of unlawful policies self-interested federal workers with foreign origins added.

Kelly continued.  “Except as specifically noted above, the Department no longer will exempt classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcement.  In faithfully executing the immigration laws, Department personnel should take enforcement actions in accordance with applicable law.”

The following language identified the categories of removable aliens.

“In order to maximize the benefit to public safety, to stem unlawful migration and to prevent fraud and misrepresentation, Department personnel should prioritize for removal those aliens described by Congress in Sections 212(a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(6)(C), 235(b) and (c), and 237(a)(2) and (4) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). Additionally, regardless of the basis of removability, Department personnel should prioritize removable aliens who:

(I) have been convicted of any criminal offense;

(2) have been charged with any criminal offense that has not been resolved;

(3) have committed acts which constitute a chargeable criminal offense;

( 4) have engaged in fraud or willful misrepresentation in connection with any official matter before a governmental agency;

(5) have abused any program related to receipt of public benefits;

(6) are subject to a final order ofremoval but have not complied with their legal obligation to depart the United States;

or (7) in the judgment of an immigration officer, otherwise pose a risk to public safety or national security.”

Mayors with immigrant backgrounds seem to think they can bend laws to favor ancestral interests instead of simply remaining loyal to the Christian American house that feeds them. Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther says laws are not enforced against illegal aliens in his sanctuary city but they are against the municipal corporations Christian majority. It means he’s value illegal alien lives more than American lives; and those of Columbus’ American Revolution and pre-Civil War families. His attitude towards this nation’s founding American families, the people who built Columbus from the ground up, is disrespectful.

Municipal and county prosecutors seeking guidance on how to enforce immigration laws can access the U.S. Department of Justice’s online manuals.

Obviously, there is some challenge in police training that’s limited to less than 700 hours in Ohio.  1500 hours are needed to wash, cut and style hair. 

To satisfy the type of legal knowledge demands needed to obey and enforce all local, state and federal criminal laws requires the General Assembly to develop a level of training standards for Ohio cops they currently don’t get from the Ohio Peace Officer Training Council and the Superintendent of the Ohio Highway Patrol.  As a former mayor I see 2000 hours of legal training as a standard that would significantly improve policing, drive down police violence, unlawful arrests and the costs of civil rights litigation.

Governors have to stop appointing members of the clergy and $8 an hour cops from small townships to establish overall training standards for municipal police.  Currently Ohio cops receive fewer than 40 hours of training in what they think are “laws.”  They review court decisions they’re not capable of comprehending. 

ICE’s law enforcement support center

Ohio Governor Richard Michael DeWine couldn’t even maintain accurate training records for the hundreds of police he let operate and make arrests with expired Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy credentials when he served as the state’s attorney general.  If he’s still looking for additional legislation to solve the problem it’s evidence he doesn’t understand and hasn’t read the current laws he’s supposed to enforce.

Eric Jonathan Brewer

Cleveland's most influential journalist and East Cleveland's most successful mayor is an East Saint Louis, Illinois native whose father led the city's petition drive in 1969 to elect the first black mayor in 1971. Eric is an old-school investigative reporter whose 40-year body of editorial work has been demonstrably effective. No local journalist is feared or respected more.

Trained in newspaper publishing by the legendary Call & Post Publisher William Otis Walker in 1978 when it was the nation's 5th largest Black-owned publication, Eric has published and edited 13 local, regional and statewide publications across Ohio. Adding to his publishing and reporting resume is Eric's career in government. Eric served as the city's highest paid part-time Special Assistant to ex-Cleveland Mayor Michael R. White. He served as Chief of Staff to ex-East Cleveland Mayor Emmanuel Onunwor; and Chief of Communications to the late George James in his capacity as the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority's first Black executive director. Eric was appointed to serve as a member of the state's Financial Planning & Supervision Commission to guide the East Cleveland school district out of fiscal emergency and $20 million deficit. Former U.S. HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson told Eric in his D.C. office he was the only mayor in the nation simultaneously-managing a municipal block grant program. Eric wrote the city's $2.2 million Neighborhood Stabilization Program grant application. A HUD Inspector General audit of his management of the block grant program resulted in "zero" audit findings.

As a newspaper publisher, Eric has used his insider's detailed knowledge of government and his publications to lead the FBI and state prosecutors to investigations that resulted in criminal prosecutions of well-known elected officials in Ohio; and have helped realign Cleveland's political landscape with the defeat of candidates and issues he's exposed. Eric's stories led to the indictments of the late Governor George Voinovich's brother, Paul Voinovich of the V Group, and four associates. He asked the FBI to investigate the mayor he'd served as chief of staff for public corruption; and testified in three federal trials for the prosecution. He forced former Cuyahoga County Coroner Dr. Elizabeth Balraj to admit her investigations of police killings were fraudulent; and to issue notices to local police that her investigators would control police killing investigations. Eric's current work has resulted in Cuyahoga County Judge John Russo accepting the criminal complaint he guided an activist to file against 24 civil rights-violating police officers in the city he once led for operating without valid peace officer credentials. USA Today reporters picked up on Eric's police credentials reporting from his social media page and made it national.

Eric is the author of of his first book, "Fight Police License Plate Spying," which examines the FBI and local police misuse of the National Crime Information Center criminal records history database. An accomplished trumpet player and singer whose friendship with Duke Fakir of the Four Tops resulted in his singing the show's closing song, "Can't Help Myself": Curtis Sliwa of New York's Guardian Angels counts Eric among his founding chapter leaders from the early 1980's role as an Ohio organizer of over 300 volunteer crime fighters in Cleveland, Columbus and Youngstown, Ohio. For his work as a young man Eric was recognized by Cleveland's Urban League as it's 1983 Young Man of the Year.

Known in Cleveland for his encyclopedic knowledge of government and history, and intimately-connected with the region's players, every local major media outlet in Cleveland has picked up on one of Eric's stories since 1979. There is no mainstream newspaper, television or radio outlet in Cleveland that does not include an interview with Eric Jonathan Brewer in its archives over the past 40 years.

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