A Georgia costs that asks local jailmates to collaborate with immigration authorities is headed for the governor’s office for his trademark. By a ballot of 99 to 75, Georgia’s House of Representatives voted on Thursday to approve changes to House Bill 1105. Local law enforcement organizations who fail to collaborate with immigration officers face losing state financing as a result of the legislation. Misdemeanor fees may also be brought against local officials. Republicans backed the initiative, which gained momentum after authorities accused a Venezuelan man of fatally beating a medical student on the University of Georgia college. Democrats feared that it would turn neighborhood law enforcement into recruitment officers, causing neighborhoods to be less eager to cooperate with them when it comes to reporting crimes.
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