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nitinreddy88 | 5 months ago

Isn't it how it supposed to be? Valid Visa -> free to enter No valid Visa -> should be behind the bars

discuss

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graeme|5 months ago

If you've ever traveled abroad and replied to a work email or worked on anything at your hotel there's a chance you violated visa rules in some form. Very easy to find a violation if you want to find one, following the letter and not the spirit of the law.

orwin|5 months ago

It was an ESTA, and yes, technically working from the US with an ESTA isn't allowed. I'm not invited to the CES since I've left the first company I worked for in 2020, but I definitely would have cancelled all my plans to do so until this is clarified. If I needed a full visa to get there, I probably wouldn't have.

Also that's not what happened. The ones responsible for the breach, IE Hyundai execs and management who took care of the visa waivers and asked their employees to setup production lines were not arrested, only the people who had little to say about capital allocation were. In a way, Hyundai investors would have been a better target than their workers since they choose the execs who chose to build in the USA.

standardUser|5 months ago

That a gross misunderstanding of immigration laws, considering nearly all immigration violations are civil matters, not criminal.

wasabi991011|5 months ago

Why behind bars? Isn't the obvious step to deport them?

dpkirchner|5 months ago

The first step is to get them in front of a judge.

wasabi991011|5 months ago

The comment specifically mentions visa waivers and ESTA