California Governor Gavin Newsom’s workplace handed the buck on President Donald Trump on the problem of unlawful alien Harjinder Singh who has been charged with vehicular murder after his unsuitable U-turn killed three individuals in Florida. 35-year-old Harjinder, who’s from India, has a business driver’s license in Dem-ruled California that triggered a political slugfest with Republicans blaming Dem states of turning into the sanctuaries of unlawful aliens. Newsom’s workplace stated Singh entered the US in 2018 when Trump was the president. Beneath California’s legislation, one will get a business driver’s license solely once they have a lawful presence within the nation, Newsom’s workplace stated.
Deportation after felony proceedings
The video of Harjinder and a co-passenger contained in the truck moments earlier than taking the unsuitable flip went viral. The accident occurred on August 12 close to Fort Pierce on the Florida Turnpike when Singh turned his tractor-trailer by means of an “unauthorized location” which was meant of workplace use solely. After the video went viral, it was discovered that Singh entered the US illegally by means of the southern border in 2018. It isn’t clear how he managed a driver’s license if he was an unlawful alien. Singh faces three counts of vehicular murder. Beneath Florida legislation, vehicular murder is a second-degree felony, punishable by as much as 15 years in jail. He faces deportation after felony proceedings.
California driver’s license rule
California’s Meeting Invoice 60 (AB 60), enacted in 2015, permits undocumented immigrants to use for a driver’s license if they will present proof of identification and California residency. These licenses are marked “not for federal identification.”“This incident underscores the significance and urgency of the work that the Trump Administration is doing to audit CDL issuances nationwide, along with its enhanced enforcement of English-language proficiency—a basic requirement for working business automobiles in interstate commerce,” chief operation officer of American Trucking Affiliation Dan Hovrath advised Newsweek.












