Prosecutors toss immigrant's burglary conviction

Michael Waithe, 52, says it's a 'new dawn' after being exonerated of his wrongful conviction of burglary by a woman who accused him of breaking into her apartment in 1986.Kevin C. Downs/for New York Daily News Michael Waithe, 52, says it’s a ‘new dawn’ after being exonerated of his wrongful conviction of burglary by a woman who accused him of breaking into her apartment in 1986.


An
immigrant who was falsely convicted and then threatened with deportation left a Brooklyn courtroom an innocent man Thursday after prosecutors tossed his conviction for a bogus burglary.


“New dawn. New day. New beginning for me,” Michael Waithe, 52, said with a smile after his emotional exoneration.


A woman named Delores Taylor, now 69, accused him of breaking into her Brooklyn apartment in 1986, but admitted to investigators last week she had fabricated the whole thing.


“She told us in a personal interview that no burglary has ever been committed,” said assistant attorney Mark Hale of the conviction review unit. “She did not like him and thought he was responsible for the theft of her automobile.”


Supreme Court justice Neil Firetog then moved to vacate the conviction and throw out the indictment.

Michael Waithe (center), his son Myles Waithe (right-center), his fiance Karen Garrick (left), his sister Cheryl Waithe (far-left) and lawyer Matthew Smalls pictured together after Waithe's wrongful conviction was tossed out.Kevin C. Downs/for New York Daily News Michael Waithe (center), his son Myles Waithe (right-center), his fiance Karen Garrick (left), his sister Cheryl Waithe (far-left) and lawyer Matthew Smalls pictured together after Waithe’s wrongful conviction was tossed out.


Prosecution sources said Taylor would have gotten into trouble for her lie if not for the five-year statute of limitations on perjury that has long passed. Reached by phone in her Georgia home, the woman told the Daily News, “I’m not talking to nobody” and hung up.


“That’s her own cross to bear,” Waithe said when asked about his feelings towards Taylor.


The father-of-four, who works as a union organizer, did a year and a half in prison after a jury convicted him in 1987.


“I’m telling myself, ‘This is a dream and I’m going to wake up,’” he recalled of the long nights behind bars.


When he returned from his native Barbados in 2011, immigration officials who scrutinized his green card flagged him for deportation because of the old felony and he’s been fighting the removal order in court.


With a June deadline looming, Waithe wrote a wrenching letter to the office of Brooklyn DA Kenneth Thompson, who had previously cleared 11 men of murder, asking that they look at his case.


A review showed there was hardly any evidence a burglary took place to begin with and Taylor’s account wasn’t supported by any physical evidence.


“This hardworking and innocent man came to our country for a better life and ended up being framed and went to prison for a crime that he didn’t commit,” Thompson said in a statement Thursday. “Wrongful convictions lead not only to wrongful imprisonment but also can impact a person’s job, housing or immigration status.”


Waithe’s and his lawyer Matthew Smalls profusely thanked the DA.


The joy was compounded by Waithe’s plans to marry fiance Karen Garrick next week.


She can now focus her worries on the reception, Garrick said. She was asked about the fear of her soon-to-be husband being forced to move back to a Caribbean island.


“With the winter we’ve had, I don’t mind,” she joked.


Then the family left court and went back to their home, which will remain here in America.

oyaniv@nydailynews.com

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Prosecutors toss immigrant's burglary conviction
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Prosecutors toss immigrant's burglary conviction

Michael Waithe, 52, says it's a 'new dawn' after being exonerated of his wrongful conviction of burglary by a woman who accused him of breaking into her apartment in 1986.Kevin C. Downs/for New York Daily News Michael Waithe, 52, says it’s a ‘new dawn’ after being exonerated of his wrongful conviction of burglary by a woman who accused him of breaking into her apartment in 1986.


An
immigrant who was falsely convicted and then threatened with deportation left a Brooklyn courtroom an innocent man Thursday after prosecutors tossed his conviction for a bogus burglary.


“New dawn. New day. New beginning for me,” Michael Waithe, 52, said with a smile after his emotional exoneration.


A woman named Delores Taylor, now 69, accused him of breaking into her Brooklyn apartment in 1986, but admitted to investigators last week she had fabricated the whole thing.


“She told us in a personal interview that no burglary has ever been committed,” said assistant attorney Mark Hale of the conviction review unit. “She did not like him and thought he was responsible for the theft of her automobile.”


Supreme Court justice Neil Firetog then moved to vacate the conviction and throw out the indictment.

Michael Waithe (center), his son Myles Waithe (right-center), his fiance Karen Garrick (left), his sister Cheryl Waithe (far-left) and lawyer Matthew Smalls pictured together after Waithe's wrongful conviction was tossed out.Kevin C. Downs/for New York Daily News Michael Waithe (center), his son Myles Waithe (right-center), his fiance Karen Garrick (left), his sister Cheryl Waithe (far-left) and lawyer Matthew Smalls pictured together after Waithe’s wrongful conviction was tossed out.


Prosecution sources said Taylor would have gotten into trouble for her lie if not for the five-year statute of limitations on perjury that has long passed. Reached by phone in her Georgia home, the woman told the Daily News, “I’m not talking to nobody” and hung up.


“That’s her own cross to bear,” Waithe said when asked about his feelings towards Taylor.


The father-of-four, who works as a union organizer, did a year and a half in prison after a jury convicted him in 1987.


“I’m telling myself, ‘This is a dream and I’m going to wake up,’” he recalled of the long nights behind bars.


When he returned from his native Barbados in 2011, immigration officials who scrutinized his green card flagged him for deportation because of the old felony and he’s been fighting the removal order in court.


With a June deadline looming, Waithe wrote a wrenching letter to the office of Brooklyn DA Kenneth Thompson, who had previously cleared 11 men of murder, asking that they look at his case.


A review showed there was hardly any evidence a burglary took place to begin with and Taylor’s account wasn’t supported by any physical evidence.


“This hardworking and innocent man came to our country for a better life and ended up being framed and went to prison for a crime that he didn’t commit,” Thompson said in a statement Thursday. “Wrongful convictions lead not only to wrongful imprisonment but also can impact a person’s job, housing or immigration status.”


Waithe’s and his lawyer Matthew Smalls profusely thanked the DA.


The joy was compounded by Waithe’s plans to marry fiance Karen Garrick next week.


She can now focus her worries on the reception, Garrick said. She was asked about the fear of her soon-to-be husband being forced to move back to a Caribbean island.


“With the winter we’ve had, I don’t mind,” she joked.


Then the family left court and went back to their home, which will remain here in America.

oyaniv@nydailynews.com

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Prosecutors toss immigrant's burglary conviction
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Immigrant accused of killing store clerk was out on bond

PHOENIX (AP) — Federal authorities say an immigrant was out on bond and awaiting deportation hearings when he killed a Phoenix-area convenience store clerk over a pack of cigarettes.

Apolinar Altamirano, 29, pleaded guilty in 2012 to a burglary charge but did not serve time in prison. U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement took Altamirano into custody on Jan. 3, 2013, after learning of his conviction in Maricopa County in Arizona. But after reviewing his case, ICE found he was eligible for bond, a spokeswoman said in a statement issued Monday.

“After reviewing his immigration and criminal history, which showed only this conviction, ICE determined that under applicable law Mr. Altamirano was eligible for bond. Mr. Altamirano posted a $10,000 bond on January 7, 2013. Mr. Altamirano’s removal case was still pending with the immigration courts at the time of his most recent arrest,” the statement said.

Altamirano was free on bond when two injunctions against harassment were issued against him in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa. An injunction against harassment is similar to a protection order.

In one order, a woman accused Altamirano of threatening to kill her several times and of pointing a gun at her boyfriend, The Arizona Republic reported.

The last order was issued against Altamirano on Jan. 14.

Altamirano is now facing a first-degree murder charge, among others, after the shooting death of 21-year-old Grant Ronnebeck last week.

Critics say the shooting is an example of the lax immigration policies put into place by the Obama administration. Directives issued by former ICE director John Morton in 2011 provided new guidelines for deportations that focused on dangerous criminals with gang ties or who had been convicted of “serious felonies.”

“This administration has taken the position that you have to use violence against an American and be convicted of it before they will take notice if you are an illegal alien,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for more immigration restrictions.

The administration late last year issued new guidelines for deportation that prioritize immigrants who pose a danger to public safety and national security. Immigrants with a felony conviction also are a top priority for deportation under the new orders, which were issued nearly two years after Altamirano was granted bond.

Immigrant advocates say the guidelines protect immigrants who lack legal status but who have no criminal records and who have ties to their communities and U.S.-born children.

Police say the suspect dumped change on the counter from a jar to pay for cigarettes while repeatedly telling Ronnebeck, “You’re not gonna give me my cigarettes.” Then, the assailant pulled out a gun and repeated the same statement — even as Ronnebeck tried to hand him a pack — before opening fire.

The victim was shot in the face.

Altamirano was arrested after a pursuit across much of the Phoenix area that ended with a crash. In arguing against bail, the prosecutor cited the fact that the suspect is in the country illegally and has a criminal record.

Police searched his car after the killing and found a 9 mm handgun, two packs of Marlboros and several casings of ammunition.

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60 millionaire immigrant investors to be offered permanent residency

Canada will start accepting applications from millionaire immigrant investors and their families on Wednesday under a revamped version of a program critics once denounced as “cash for citizenship.”

The government announced in December it would give permanent residency to international investors who can invest $2 million in Canada, in an effort to attract experienced business people who could give the Canadian economy a boost.

The new Immigrant Investor Venture Capital program will open on Jan. 28 to Feb. 11 or until a maximum of 500 applications are received, the government quietly announced before MPs returned to Ottawa this week.

“This pilot program is designed to attract immigrant investors who will significantly benefit the Canadian economy and better integrate into our society, which will contribute to our long-term prosperity and economic growth,” Immigration Minister Chris Alexander said in a written statement.

No more than 60 principal applicants will receive permanent resident visas under the pilot program, even though the government says it will accept up to 500 applications.

Each investor will be required to make a non-guaranteed investment of $2 million over approximately 15 years into a fund managed principally by BDC Capital, the investment arm of the Business Development Bank of Canada.

The government said the fund “will invest in innovative Canadian startups with high growth potential.”

“Proceeds from the IIVC fund will be distributed to the immigrant investors periodically… based on the performance of the investments,” a spokesman for Alexander said in an email to CBC News.

The details of the program along with the selection criteria to apply appear in the latest ministerial instructions published in a government publication over the weekend.

Investors contributed ‘little’

The government is hoping to have better luck with this program than it did with the last one.

“Under the former Immigrant Investor Program (IIP), immigrant investors had to invest $800,000 in Canada’s economy in the form of a repayable loan, without meeting skills and abilities requirements of most of Canada’s economic immigration programs,” the government acknowledged in a public statement before MPs returned to Ottawa this week.

“Research indicated that immigrant investors under the previous program were less likely than other immigrants to stay in Canada over the medium to long term. Also, they contributed relatively little to the Canadian economy, earning very little income and paying very little tax.”

The pilot immigrant investor program comes after the government said it scrapped the old program — which critics had described as “cash for citizenship — because it had been riddled with fraud.

The program had also been put on hold in 2012 because of a huge backlog of applications. 

Thousands of millionaires who had been waiting for permanent residency under the program sued the federal government after it wiped out the backlog of applications.

A Federal Court judge ruled against the more than 1,000 would-be investor immigrants last June.

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South African looters target immigrant shops in Johannesburg area, exposing social tensions

South African authorities have re-established order — for now — in Soweto and other Johannesburg townships, after a week of looting of foreign-owned shops and violence in which four people were killed.

The 19-year-old mother of an infant who died after being trampled by a mob during the looting said she was accidentally caught in the street chaos. Some witnesses, however, said the mother was herself pillaging when she was knocked down with her baby strapped to her chest.

The dispute about the baby boy, Nqobile Majozi, echoes conflicting stories about what motivated some of the worst unrest in Soweto and nearby areas since protests swept the same districts before white racist rule ended in 1994. The casualty toll was higher during mass rallies and bloody, apartheid-era crackdowns, but the new upheaval raises concerns about anti-immigrant sentiment, the frustration of the poor and the government’s handling of social tensions.

In a separate incident, a truck carrying livestock overturned on a highway in the Johannesburg area last week, and people carrying knives and buckets descended on the injured cattle and slaughtered nearly three-dozen for their meat, according to Eyewitness News, a South African media outlet. The driver alleged that people on a bridge threw objects at his vehicle, causing it to crash.

Such episodes reflect the predicament of South Africa, a regional hub with gleaming infrastructure projects where many people nevertheless feel marginalized by high unemployment, a lack of opportunity and a gap between rich and poor that is starkly visible in leafy, spacious suburbs, on the one hand, and the shacks and so-called “matchbox” homes of the townships where blacks were confined under apartheid.

Soweto came under the world’s gaze in 1976 when it erupted in student-led protests. Parts of it are relatively affluent today, as malls, gyms and new homes attest. But poverty is still widespread. The violence there started Jan. 19 in an area called Snake Park when a Somali national allegedly shot and killed a 14-year-boy who was among a group of people attempting to break into his shop.

Crowds hit the streets, targeting immigrant-owned shops in riots recalling anti-foreigner violence in 2008 that killed about 60 people. President Jacob Zuma, who was attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, instructed his government to restore order. Police arrested more than 160 people. Several people had been fatally shot by this past weekend, when the unrest abated.

Zanele Majozi, the mother of the baby who died, said she came across a crowd looting a so-called “spaza” shop, a type of informal store where township residents buy basic necessities so they don’t have to travel long distances to supermarkets and malls.

“I was watching them when a group of boys came running out of the shop with a crate,” Times LIVE, a news website, quoted Majozi as saying. “One of them knocked me down and I fell on my baby. Two more ran over me.”

But witness Phindile Shabangu said Majozi was caught in a stampede after emerging from the shop with eggs and drinks, and that the mother didn’t even notice her baby’s dire state while she was trying to pick up fallen items, according to Times LIVE.

“Blood was coming out of his ears, nose, mouth,” Shabangu told the news outlet. “The baby was messed up.”

Elsewhere, video footage showed looters loading stolen goods onto trucks, hopping over fences and ransacking shelves, sometimes in view of police. One clip showed a police vehicle parked outside a looted shop, and an officer apparently participating in the free-for-all. Also, schoolchildren attacked Pakistani-owned shops as they boarded a train for home, according to police.

A group representing immigrants said it believed the attacks were xenophobic and “not purely criminal,” as some officials have said. The Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa urged the government to approve hate crimes legislation that it said would curb a culture of “impunity.”

Prince Linda Dube, a 19-year-old Soweto resident, described immigrant shop-owners as “greedy,” arguing that they undermine locally owned shops.

“They are taking job opportunities,” he said. “It’s better if they hire our local people to help them out.”

___

Associated Press journalist Thomas Phakane in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

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South Africa Shaken by Anti-Immigrant Riots

South African authorities have re-established order — for now — in Soweto and other Johannesburg townships, after a week of looting of foreign-owned shops and violence in which four people were killed.

The 19-year-old mother of an infant who died after being trampled by a mob during the looting said she was accidentally caught in the street chaos. Some witnesses, however, said the mother was herself pillaging when she was knocked down with her baby strapped to her chest.

The dispute about the baby boy, Nqobile Majozi, echoes conflicting stories about what motivated some of the worst unrest in Soweto and nearby areas since protests swept the same districts before white racist rule ended in 1994. The casualty toll was higher during mass rallies and bloody, apartheid-era crackdowns, but the new upheaval raises concerns about anti-immigrant sentiment, the frustration of the poor and the government’s handling of social tensions.

In a separate incident, a truck carrying livestock overturned on a highway in the Johannesburg area last week, and people carrying knives and buckets descended on the injured cattle and slaughtered nearly three-dozen for their meat, according to Eyewitness News, a South African media outlet. The driver alleged that people on a bridge threw objects at his vehicle, causing it to crash.

Such episodes reflect the predicament of South Africa, a regional hub with gleaming infrastructure projects where many people nevertheless feel marginalized by high unemployment, a lack of opportunity and a gap between rich and poor that is starkly visible in leafy, spacious suburbs, on the one hand, and the shacks and so-called “matchbox” homes of the townships where blacks were confined under apartheid.

Soweto came under the world’s gaze in 1976 when it erupted in student-led protests. Parts of it are relatively affluent today, as malls, gyms and new homes attest. But poverty is still widespread. The violence there started Jan. 19 in an area called Snake Park when a Somali national allegedly shot and killed a 14-year-boy who was among a group of people attempting to break into his shop.

Crowds hit the streets, targeting immigrant-owned shops in riots recalling anti-foreigner violence in 2008 that killed about 60 people. President Jacob Zuma, who was attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, instructed his government to restore order. Police arrested more than 160 people. Several people had been fatally shot by this past weekend, when the unrest abated.

Zanele Majozi, the mother of the baby who died, said she came across a crowd looting a so-called “spaza” shop, a type of informal store where township residents buy basic necessities so they don’t have to travel long distances to supermarkets and malls.

“I was watching them when a group of boys came running out of the shop with a crate,” Times LIVE, a news website, quoted Majozi as saying. “One of them knocked me down and I fell on my baby. Two more ran over me.”

But witness Phindile Shabangu said Majozi was caught in a stampede after emerging from the shop with eggs and drinks, and that the mother didn’t even notice her baby’s dire state while she was trying to pick up fallen items, according to Times LIVE.

“Blood was coming out of his ears, nose, mouth,” Shabangu told the news outlet. “The baby was messed up.”

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New far-right anti-immigrant sentiment hits German streets

Ahmed, a 36-year-old Moroccan, hoped to find a better life in Europe’s economic powerhouse, Germany. But these days in Dresden, he said, he is afraid to walk the streets.

This urban phoenix rebuilt from ashes after World War II is the center of a movement against immigrants — Muslims in particular — that has shocked much of the rest of Germany even as anti-immigration marches have spread to 10 cities nationwide. Downtown Dresden, Ahmed and other immigrants here say, has become a no-go zone for them on Monday nights, when the Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West — or Pegida, in German — stages its weekly rallies.

Since the movement was founded here last October, refugee advocates say the number of aggressive acts against foreigners has sharply increased. After one Pegida rally just before Christmas, for instance, demonstrators chased a group of young refugees, leaving a 15-year-old girl battered and bruised.

“When I go out, I put on a hat and wear it low over my face,” said Ahmed, a resident in a shelter for asylum seekers who was too frightened to give his last name. “I don’t want them to see I’m not from here.”

Devastated in a firestorm caused by Allied bombing in 1945, Dresden is a symbol of perseverance, emerging in the years after German reunification as a beacon for tourists drawn to its museums and beautifully reconstructed city center. But especially after the attacks in France staged by Islamist extremists this month, this city also stands as a bellwether of the friction between local communities and the fastest-growing religion in Europe: Islam.

Last year, Pegida was born amid a Europe-wide surge of asylum seekers, many of them arriving from war-torn Muslim countries including Syria and Libya. Germany alone received 200,000 new asylum applications in 2014 — a 60 percent jump from a year earlier.

Anti-immigrant nationalists have been soaring in polls from Britain to Hungary, France to Greece. But until the rise of Pegida, such voices had been largely drowned out in Germany — Western Europe’s most populous nation and a place where memories still run deep about what happened the last time the far right held sway in Europe.

Globally — according to a new Gallup poll previewed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland — Europeans are the most negative on immigration in a world where most other regions, including North America, show a significantly higher level of tolerance. Europe had the highest portion of respondents, 52.1 percent, calling for a decrease in immigration as well as the lowest number, 7.5 percent, voicing support for increasing it.

Yet with a low birth rate and the need for more future workers to keep its factories humming, Germany has been something of an outlier in the region. It has adopted a relatively more positive official stance toward immigration — and witnessed less grass-roots opposition — than many of its neighbors.

Enter Pegida.

As the movement has grown, tens of thousands of Germans also have risen up to condemn Pegida, taking to the streets in counter-demonstrations that have often been far larger that the anti-Islamic, anti-immigrant rallies they are opposing. Yet the Pegida movement has seemed to tap into a hidden vein of German angst.

Some here are worried not only about the new asylum seekers, but also about the growing numbers of other migrants entering Europe’s largest and strongest economy. Equally vexing to many is the lack of assimilation among a significant number of Muslim immigrants, some of whom came to Germany decades ago. Last September, for example, Germans were outraged after a stunt in the city of Wuppertal in which 11 devout Muslims wearing the words “Sharia Police” on bright orange vests approached Turkish nightclubs and cafes and warned young partygoers that they were violating Islamic law by drinking.

Such fears have surfaced as security concerns are mounting in Germany and across Europe over the threat of homegrown terror. As in France, hundreds of radicalized young Germans — many of them the second- and third-generation sons and daughters of Muslim immigrants — have left to fight with extremists in Syria and Iraq.

“How is it possible that parallel societies are forming in Germany?” Pegida spokeswoman Kathrin Oertel said on German TV last week. “That Islamic judges have the right to administer justice, and that Islamic schools are inciting hatred against German citizens?”

Nevertheless, senior German politicians — led by Chancellor Angela Merkel — have blasted Pegida supporters as intolerant extremists for whom there is no place in modern German society. “Every exclusion of Muslims in Germany, every general suspicion is out of the question,” Merkel said in the days after the Paris attacks. “We will not let ourselves be divided.”

Other politicians, however, have seemed to suggest subtly that Pegida may have a point. Thomas Strobl, an influential parliamentarian from the center right, called this week for Germany to quickly deport refugees who are without legitimate asylum claims. “If some countries carry out almost no deportations anymore, this verges on a surrender of the rule of law,” he told the Rheinische Post newspaper.

Yet the Pegida movement is also facing serious setbacks, raising doubts as to whether it may ultimately emerge as a true political force. In recent days, it has been plagued by infighting as its controversial leader, Lutz Bachmann — a former sausage seller and convicted burglar — was forced to step down. He resigned after leaks from his Facebook account showed he had referred to asylum seekers as “scumbags” and “animals.” Punctuating the leak was a photo of him dressed as Adolf Hitler — an image that, despite Pegida’s claims that the photo was meant only as satire, sparked widespread condemnations.

The wave of protests has brought new tension to German streets, including swarms of riot police seeking, sometimes in vain, to separate pro- and anti-Pegida demonstrators.

“We saw what happened 75 year ago,” said Willi Lübke, 64, a pharmaceuticals salesman who turned out on the streets of the nearby city of Leipzig on Wednesday night. He joined a crowd of 20,000 people rallying against Pegida, whose protest Wednesday evening in the same city drew roughly 15,000, according to police.

“I see these Pegida people now and I think, did they learn nothing from our history?” he said. “Germany now must be a place of acceptance and tolerance.”

Across a metal barrier and lines of riot police separating the two groups, Thomas Renner, 60, a taxi driver, insisted it was time for Germans to take a stand.

“This is not about racism but about control,” he said. In the Pegida crowds, one protester held a placard depicting Merkel in a Muslim veil. Another sign blamed perceived German woes on the “lying policies of the Synagogues.”

“They come here, wanting to force their mentalities on Germans,” Renner scoffed. “All these women in veils. We need a new immigration law.”

Nowhere in Germany are tensions running higher than in Dresden, where local authorities say the movement gained steam after they floated a proposal to add 12 new shelters for asylum seekers. German authorities have been totally overwhelmed by the surge, and have shuttled new arrivals to cities across the nation, including Dresden, to await processing. Yet the new faces particularly stand out in Dresden, where less than 10 percent of the population is non-German.

Dresden is also no stranger to far-right extremism in the streets. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, it became, for a time, a staging area for anti-immigrant skinheads and neo-Nazi groups. But Pegida’s ranks have included a more diverse grouping, including middle-class housewives and business owners. The movement has additionally become a hodgepodge of general discontent, tapping into old East German resentment in a part of the country with a higher unemployment rate than the national average. It has also become a home for both pro-Russian and anti-European Union sentiments.

According to the victim’s assistance group RAA Sachsen, racially motivated attacks in Dresden rose to 12 in October and December last year, four more than during the same period a year earlier. The immigrant community here was particularly rattled last week by the stabbing death of a 20-year-old asylum seeker from Eritrea. Police initially misidentified his death as a possible accident, later changing their assessment and opening a homicide case. The episode sparked indignation among immigrants as well as fears that the killing might have been a xenophobic attack.

As it turned out, one of the man’s Eritrean roommates confessed to the crime, a fact on which the Pegida movement immediately seized. “YOU ARE HIPOCRITES AND LIARS!” read a post on its Facebook page Thursday in a statement apparently addressed to those who had pointed the finger at its followers.

In a shelter for asylum seekers, though, fears had been building well before the slaying. A 26-year-old Moroccan, who gave his name only as Mustafa, said he was punched last year by a German man in a railway station, “just for being there.”

“This is not what I expected when I came to Germany,” he said. “In other parts of Germany, I think the people must be nicer. But not here. Here, they are against us.”

Deputy Mayor Dirk Hilbert, who has a Korean wife, said it is wrong to paint all of Dresden in the colors of Pegida.

“My wife has almost never had any negative problems here,” he said. “And the only time she did, it came from a Turkish man on the street.”

Stephanie Kirchner contributed to this report.

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New far-right anti-immigrant sentiment hits German streets
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New far right anti-immigrant sentiment hits German streets

Ahmed, a 36-year-old Moroccan, hoped to find a better life in Europe’s economic powerhouse, Germany. But these days in Dresden, he said, he is afraid to walk the streets.

This urban phoenix rebuilt from ashes after World War II is the center of a movement against immigrants — Muslims in particular — that has shocked much of the rest of Germany even as anti-immigration marches have spread to 10 cities nationwide. Downtown Dresden, Ahmed and other immigrants here say, has become a no-go zone for them on Monday nights, when the Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West — or Pegida, in German — stages its weekly rallies.

Since the movement was founded here last October, refugee advocates say the number of aggressive acts against foreigners has sharply increased. After one Pegida rally just before Christmas, for instance, demonstrators chased a group of young refugees, leaving a 15-year-old girl battered and bruised.

“When I go out, I put on a hat and wear it low over my face,” said Ahmed, a resident in a shelter for asylum seekers who was too frightened to give his last name. “I don’t want them to see I’m not from here.”

Devastated in a firestorm caused by Allied bombing in 1945, Dresden is a symbol of perseverance, emerging in the years after German reunification as a beacon for tourists drawn to its museums and beautifully reconstructed city center. But especially after the attacks in France staged by Islamist extremists this month, this city also now stands as a bellwether of the friction between local communities and the fastest growing religion in Europe: Islam.

Last year, Pegida was born amid a Europe-wide surge of asylum seekers, many of them arriving from war-torn Muslim countries including Syria and Libya. Germany alone received 200,000 new asylum applications in 2014 — a 60 percent jump from a year earlier.

Anti-immigrant nationalists have been soaring in polls from Britain to Hungary, France to Greece. But until the rise of Pegida, such voices had been largely drowned out in Germany — Western Europe’s most populous nation and a place where memories still run deep about what happened the last time the far right held sway in Europe.

Globally — according to a new Gallop poll previewed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland — Europeans are the most negative on immigration in a world where most other regions, including North America, show a significantly higher level of tolerance. Europe had the highest portion of respondents, 52.1 percent, calling for a decrease in immigration as well as the lowest number, 7.5 percent, voicing support for increasing it.

Yet with a low birth rate and the need for more future workers to keep its factories humming, Germany has been something of an outlier in the region. It has adopted a relatively more positive official stance toward immigration — and witnessed less grass roots opposition — than many of its neighbors.

Enter Pegida.

As the movement has grown, tens of thousands of Germans also have risen up to condemn Pegida, taking to the streets in counter demonstrations that have often been far larger that the anti-Islamic, anti-immigrant rallies they are opposing. Yet the Pegida movement has seemed to tap into a hidden vein of German angst.

Some here are worried not only about the new asylum seekers, but also about the growing numbers of other migrants entering Europe’s largest and strongest economy. Equally vexing to many is the lack of assimilation among a significant number of Muslim immigrants, some of whom came to Germany decades ago. Last September, for example, Germans were outraged after a stunt in the city of Wuppertal in which 11 devout Muslims wearing the words “Sharia Police” on bright orange vests approached Turkish nightclubs and cafes and warned young partygoers that they were violating Islamic law by drinking.

Such fears have surfaced as security concerns are mounting in Germany and across Europe over the threat of homegrown terror. As in France, hundreds of radicalized young Germans — many of them the second and third generation sons and daughters of Muslim immigrants — have left to fight with extremists in Syria and Iraq.

“How is it possible that parallel societies are forming in Germany?” Pegida spokeswoman Kathrin Oertel said on German TV last week. “That Islamic judges have the right to administer justice, and that Islamic schools are inciting hatred against German citizens?”

Nevertheless, senior German politicians — led by Chancellor Angela Merkel — have blasted Pegida supporters as intolerant extremists for whom there is no place in modern German society. “Every exclusion of Muslims in Germany, every general suspicion is out of the question,” Merkel said in the days after the Paris attacks. “We will not let ourselves be divided.”

Other politicians, however, have seemed to suggest subtly that Pegida may have a point. Thomas Strobl, an influential parliamentarian from the center right, called this week for Germany to quickly deport refugees who are without legitimate asylum claims. “If some countries carry out almost no deportations anymore, this verges on a surrender of the rule of law,” he told the Rheinische Post newspaper.

Yet the Pegida movement is also facing serious setbacks, raising doubts as to whether it may ultimately emerge as a true political force. In recent days, it has been plagued by infighting as its controversial leader, Lutz Bachmann — a former sausage seller and convicted burglar — was forced to step down. He resigned after leaks from his Facebook account showed he had referred to asylum seekers as “scumbags” and “animals.” Punctuating the leak was a photo of him dressed as Adolf Hitler — an image that, despite Pegida’s claims that the photo was meant only as satire, sparked widespread condemnations.

The wave of protests has brought new tension to German streets, including swarms of riot police seeking, sometimes in vain, to separate pro- and anti-Pegida demonstrators.

“We saw what happened 75 year ago,” said Willi Lübke, 64, a pharmaceuticals salesman who turned out on the streets of the nearby city of Leipzig on Wednesday night. He joined a crowd of 20,000 people rallying against Pegida, whose protest Wednesday evening in the same city drew roughly 15,000, according to police.

“I see these Pegida people now and I think, did they learn nothing from our history?” he said. “Germany now must be a place of acceptance and tolerance.”

Across a metal barrier and lines of riot police separating the two groups, Thomas Renner, 60, a taxi driver, insisted it was time for Germans to take a stand.

“This is not about racism but about control,” he said. In the Pegida crowds, one protester held a placard depicting Merkel in a Muslim veil. Another sign blamed perceived German woes on the “lying policies of the Synagogues.”

“They come here, wanting to force their mentalities on Germans,” Renner scoffed. “All these women in veils. We need a new immigration law.”

Nowhere in Germany are tensions running higher than in Dresden, where local authorities say the movement gained steam after they floated a proposal to add 12 new shelters for asylum seekers. German authorities have been totally overwhelmed by the surge, and have shuttled new arrivals to cities across the nation, including Dresden, to await processing. Yet the new faces particularly stand out in Dresden, where less than 10 percent of the population is non-German.

Dresden is also no stranger to far-right extremism in the streets. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, it became, for a time, a staging area for anti-immigrant skinheads and neo-Nazi groups. But Pegida’s ranks have included a more diverse grouping, including middle-class housewives and business owners. The movement has additionally become a hodgepodge of general discontent, tapping into old East German resentment in a part of the country with a higher unemployment rate than the national average. It has also become a home for both pro-Russian and anti-European Union sentiments.

According to the victim’s assistance group RAA Sachsen, racially motivated attacks in Dresden rose to 12 in October and December last year, four more than during the same period a year earlier. The immigrant community here was particularly rattled last week by the stabbing death of a 20-year-old asylum seeker from Eritrea. Police initially misidentified his death as a possible accident, later changing their assessment and opening a homicide case. The episode sparked indignation among immigrants as well as fears that the killing might have been a xenophobic attack.

As it turned out, one of the man’s Eritrean roommates confessed to the crime, a fact on which the Pegida movement immediate seized. “YOU ARE HIPOCRITES AND LIARS!” read a post on its Facebook page Thursday in a statement apparently addressed to those who had pointed the finger at its followers.

In a shelter for asylum seekers, though, fears had been building well before the slaying. A 26-year-old Moroccan, who gave his name only as Mustafa, said he was punched last year by a German man in a railway station, “just for being there.”

“This is not what I expected when I came to Germany,” he said. “In other parts of Germany, I think the people must be nicer. But not here. Here, they are against us.”

Deputy Mayor Dirk Hilbert, who has a Korean wife, said it is wrong to paint all of Dresden in the colors of Pegida.

“My wife has almost never had any negative problems here,” he said. “And the only time she did, it came from a Turkish man on the street.”

Stephanie Kirchner contributed to this report.

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New far right anti-immigrant sentiment hits German streets
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Immigrant licenses top 85,000

SPRINGFIELD — More than 85,000 immigrants obtained special temporary driver’s licenses last year as part of a landmark new state program.

The 2014 tally marks the first full year of the program, which allows undocumented foreigners to obtain a license that is good for three years.

Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White, whose office administers the program, said the process appears to be working well.

“He thinks the program has been very successful,” spokesman Henry Haupt said.

But some groups think the numbers fall short of an earlier goal of getting 100,000 people signed up.

“I think it shows it’s not nearly enough,” said Ruth Lopez, implementation director for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

In 2013, Illinois came the 10th state to give immigrants a legal path to driving. Since then, other states, including California, have started similar programs.

Although Republicans in the House and Senate largely rejected the proposal, it did draw some GOP support from Senate Minority Leader Christine Radogno of Lemont and state Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington.

The new law makes the licenses available to immigrants who can prove they have lived in Illinois for a year. Immigrants make appointments to go to one of a limited number of Secretary of State offices to start the process to get the license.

When the program began, supporters said as many as 500,000 people might qualify for the licenses. Since the program began in late 2013, Haupt said, nearly 190,000 people have scheduled appointments. A total of 85,121 licenses have been issued.

Lopez said advocates are working with White’s office to see if there are ways to streamline the process. The groups also are looking at how things are working in other states.

In Illinois, the licenses are the same as those issued to diplomats, relatives of overseas businessmen, artists and athletes who live temporarily in the United States without a Social Security number.

They permit the user only to drive and are not valid as an identification document.

The $30 licenses feature a purple border rather than a red border used for regular licenses.

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Immigrant driver's licenses funding debate postponed

Immmigrant driver’s licenses

A day after a Republicans used their newfound legislative power to block money for a program that gives driver’s licenses to immigrants in the country illegally, Democrats blasted the move and immigrant activists rallied to reverse the decision.

The topic dominated a committee hearing Thursday morning as Democrats suggested that the Republicans on the Joint Budget Committee used their power to cripple a program that they oppose.

But lawmakers delayed another JBC discussion in the afternoon.

Sen. Jessie Ulibarri, D-Westminster, said he didn’t want to proceed with Rep. Dave Young absent. The Colorado Springs Democrat missed Wednesday’s meeting and had to attend to a family situation Thursday.

Ulibarri organized a group of about two dozen activists who attended the afternoon hearing to show their opposition to Wednesday’s vote.

Rep. Jovan Melton, D-Aurora, attended the meeting. He said he is disappointed by the “partisan games” being played with the program.

“I think it’s another bite at the apple to undo something that was done two years ago,” he said.

Earlier Thursday, Republicans offered little to explain their decision, except to say they didn’t agree with the 2013 legislation in the first place.

“Now we have a new General Assembly,” said Sen. Kent Lambert, the Republican chairman of the budget committee, in an interview after the meeting. “Frankly, the Senate is under new leadership and we are under a new majority.”

The new majority allowed Republicans to get even billing on the powerful budget committee where policy dictates that a majority must approve a budget provision.

The Division of Motor Vehicles asked state budget writers for the ability to spend $166,000 from the program’s fees to keep the service operating at full strength and additional money to expand it to meet demand. The committee’s 3-2 vote — split along partisan lines with one Democrat missing — failed to get the four votes necessary to win approval.

Republicans reject the suggestion that it was a move to defund the program because the program still has its initial spending authority.

Democrats argue that without the funds only one of the five state DMV offices offering the licenses will remain starting in March. Immigrants and activists had complained that having only five offices — out of the state’s 56 — was unfair and unworkable.

Sen. Mike Johnston, a Denver Democrat, lit into the Republican budget writers in the Joint Finance Committee meeting.

Johnston suggested the budget committee’s decision went against the “public trust” and “subverted government.”

“Since you can’t substantively change the law, you will just try to make it as impossible to access the (program) as you can,” he said.

Lambert didn’t respond directly to the comments in the meeting and afterward took offense at Johnston’s insinuations about treating different classes of Coloradans differently.

“We have certain Senate rules that are typical practices that you don’t malign people’s motivations, so I don’t know that that merits a response at this point,” he said. “We are talking about a political dialogue not a legislative dialogue.”

The uproar is expected to continue when the budget committee meets again at 1:30 p.m. in the Legislative Services Building next to the Capitol.

Sen. Jesse Ulibarri, a Westminster Democrat and the driver’s license program’s original sponsor, took to the Senate floor Thursday morning to ask activists to attend the meeting and urge reconsideration.

The matter is far from finalized. Gov. John Hickenlooper’s administration can ask the committee to rehear the proposal Monday, but so far no request has been made.

“It’s not a surprise that this is a contentious issue,” said Jonathan Blazer, advocacy and policy council for the ACLU’s national office who specializes in immigration issues. “But this type of cowardly maneuver to address a contentious public policy issue is extremely unusual.”

Blazer, who is San Francisco-based, called Wednesday’s vote an “inappropriate way to handle a very serious public policy issue.”

Nine states, Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico have similar programs granting driver’s licenses to those living in the country illegally.

“I haven’t seen anything like this before for a driver’s license program,” Blazer said.

The Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition released a statement Thursday morning calling the funding decision a “betrayal” and “a slap in the face to thousands of Coloradans who depend on a driver’s license for work, school, and family.”

John Frank: 303-954-2409, jfrank@denverpost.com or twitter.com/ByJohnFrank

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