You can report them to your State or Federal franchise board to report unauthoriazation of employment and for possiably not paying their taxes. You can also NOTIFY your local ICE aka INS about their illegal status. If you suspect they are using a fraudulent SSN or ID you can also notify your local police. Also if they have signed I-9 form for employment. You can notify your local police and ICE officials.
AnswerSuch a matter falls under the jurisdiction of the USCIS, not an individual. If the person in question has committed a crime local authorities should be notified. However, an individual cannot nor should they take it upon themselves to attempt having a non-citizen deported because of personal issues. It is very possible that such action could create numerous legal problems for all parties involved both criminal and civil.Yes, someone who has violated immigration laws can be deported from a country.
The word deport is not a noun, it is a verb.The verb to 'deport' means to remove a person forcibly from a country; to expel; to conduct oneself or behave in a certain manner; a word for an action.The noun forms of the verb to deport are deportment, deportation, and the gerund, deporting.
No.
Report them to immigration with as much information as you can about their location and work.
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The press's attention to the politician's private life may lead to a public outcry to deport his housemaid.It is not a simple feat to deport unwanted foreign nationals.Example sentence - This country will deport people who enter illegally.
He was illegally in the country, so he knew the authorities could deport him. It was not his fault that there was a delay in getting his documentation processed, so he could not believe it when they said they were going to deport him.
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