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DOJ opposition to amendments on immigration and trafficking victim parole provisionsDOJ opposition to amendments on immigration and trafficking victim parole provisions
DOJ opposition to amendments on immigration and trafficking victim parole provisions The passage is a routine inter‑agency comment on proposed statutory language, offering no new allegations, financial flows, or misconduct. It merely outlines DOJ's policy preferences and does not identify concrete leads, actors beyond standard departmental titles, or novel controversy. Key insights: DOJ wants the word “Federal” added before “law enforcement official” in a new subsection.; DOJ recommends changing “shall grant parole” to “may grant parole” for DHS Secretary discretion.; DOJ opposes removing references to cooperation with law enforcement and to extending parole during pending civil actions.
Summary
DOJ opposition to amendments on immigration and trafficking victim parole provisions The passage is a routine inter‑agency comment on proposed statutory language, offering no new allegations, financial flows, or misconduct. It merely outlines DOJ's policy preferences and does not identify concrete leads, actors beyond standard departmental titles, or novel controversy. Key insights: DOJ wants the word “Federal” added before “law enforcement official” in a new subsection.; DOJ recommends changing “shall grant parole” to “may grant parole” for DHS Secretary discretion.; DOJ opposes removing references to cooperation with law enforcement and to extending parole during pending civil actions.
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