Special Registration rumor

nhusain

Registered Users (C)
(Starting next year) I heard DOJ will not require SR for people in US and only have SR done for people coming into the country. Anyone else heard anything along these lines...?
 
Originally posted by nhusain
(Starting next year) I heard DOJ will not require SR for people in US and only have SR done for people coming into the country. Anyone else heard anything along these lines...?

I have heard a rumor that says that the yearly interviews will be dropped.

Please note, however, that the resrictions on WHERE you can exit the USA and the exit interview requirement would still be in place. The penalties for violating the special registration requirements are very severe so I'd be really careful until we hear more, and then make sure that you are completely certain of what is still required.
 
My understanding is that the VISIT program (starting Jan 2004) will replace the SR. It is applicable to everyone coming to the country with non-immigrant visas.
I could be wrong though ...
 
Originally posted by GC012002
My understanding is that the VISIT program (starting Jan 2004) will replace the SR. It is applicable to everyone coming to the country with non-immigrant visas.
I could be wrong though ...

But VISIT program does not require any re-registration once you are admitted into US.
 
U.S. Changes Post-9/11 Foreign Registration Rule
Mon December 1, 2003 02:58 PM ET

(Page 1 of 2)
By Deborah Charles
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government said on Monday it was scrapping a controversial control on foreign visitors, mainly men from the Middle East, introduced after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, saying resources could be better used in the war on terrorism.

The Department of Homeland Security said with immediate effect, men from 25 nations, who will still be photographed and fingerprinted on arrival, will no longer have to re-register after 30 days and then one year after entering America.

Asa Hutchinson, Homeland Security's undersecretary for border and transportation security, said the move freed up resources to target more effectively potential terrorists based on individual and not geographic factors.

"It was a significant resource commitment to handle these re-registrations," Hutchinson told reporters. "The resources can be better used in individual targeting."

Re-registration had only minimal benefits in terms of national security, Hutchinson said, adding officials never received any national security "leads" from re-registration.

Critics accused the government of unfairly targeting thousands of people on grounds of nationality. The registration program, like other measures implemented in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, was also attacked for being intrusive.

Under the original program, males 16 years or older and nationals of the 25 countries had to be fingerprinted and photographed at the border. They had to re-register 30 days later and on the year's anniversary of original registration.

NO NEED TO RE-REGISTER

Now males from the 25 countries will undergo special border registration, but will not have to re-register.

When it launched the program in 2002 the Justice Department said the countries selected were places where Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network or other terror groups had been active or where the United States had national security concerns.

The countries affected were Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Egypt, Eritrea, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Lebanon, Morocco, North Korea, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.


Homeland Security inherited the program when the department was created earlier this year.
The new rules give Homeland Security the right to select men from those 25 nations for further interviews, but it is done on an individual basis based on specific information.

Under the old rules, some 82,000 visitors would be required to report in the next five months for either their 30-day or annual re-registration, Hutchinson said. Those people no longer have to re-register.

More than 290,000 registrations were reported through Sept. 30, and 2,870 people were detained as a result of registrations with 23 people still in custody, Hutchinson said. Previous 1| 2
 
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