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61 Sentences With "worked illegally"

How to use worked illegally in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "worked illegally" and check conjugation/comparative form for "worked illegally". Mastering all the usages of "worked illegally" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Sherman is an environmentalist who formerly worked illegally dumping toxic chemicals.
She later briefly worked illegally at the restaurant that employed her husband.
Melania appears to have entered the US legally and then worked illegally.
Update: Melania Trump denies that she worked illegally in the United States. pic.twitter.com/U3VTY05mzc
He lived in the shadows and worked illegally as a shoe salesman for $250 a month.
After it was discovered that he had worked illegally, he was convicted under a state identity theft law.
On The Trail: Three former models say they worked illegally in the U.S. while employed by Donald Trump's modeling agency.
He says illegal immigrants should all be deported — but his own wife perhaps once worked illegally in the United States.
The Post reported in December that it had directly interviewed 49 undocumented people who have worked illegally at 11 Trump properties.
The crusade was spurred by reports that three former Trump models had allegedly worked illegally in the United States, and under dire conditions.
The father worked, illegally at first, to send money home for his wife and child in Shkoder, in the northwest of the country.
He says illegal immigrants should all be deported — but, according to this report, his own wife once worked illegally in the United States.
This Is Not A Drill: A senator wants Donald Trump's modeling agency to be investigated after claims that models worked illegally in the U.S.
The Post interviewed 48 people who said they worked illegally for the Trump Organization at 11 properties across Florida, New Jersey, New York, and Virginia.
Othman's father, Mohammad, said he had barely been around at the time because he worked illegally in Israel and slept at construction sites for weeks on end.
For decades, Mr. Syarafuddin and thousands of small-scale miners like him have worked illegally in West Sumbawa on land the government leases to large mining companies.
Butina came to the United States on a student visa in July of 2016, but worked illegally as an unregistered foreign agent at the direction of the unnamed Russian official.
Blais, a former Canadian model, said she first signed with the mogul's agency in April 2004 when she arrived in New York City and worked illegally for about four months.
Flynn also assisted the Eastern District of Virginia and prosecutors from the Justice Department's National Security Division with a now-open case against his former lobbying partner, who allegedly worked illegally for Turkey.
Two years before, he had boarded a plane to Curaçao and worked illegally as a barber there, earning several thousand dollars that he sent to his wife and two children in La Vela.
Donald Trump may have centered his campaign around his opposition to illegal immigration, but three former models say they worked illegally in the United States while employed by his modeling agency, Mother Jones exclusively reported.
Last Tuesday, Democrats in the House and Senate said they would introduce a bill to give farmworkers who have worked illegally in the country for two consecutive years a "blue card" to protect them from deportation.
Update: September 7, 2016: A U.S. senator wants Donald Trump's modeling agency to be investigated after allegations surfaced last month that three former models had worked illegally in the U.S. while employed by Trump Model Management, Mother Jones reported.Sen.
But their relationship soon soured as Mr. Sessions, an adviser to Mr. Trump's first presidential campaign, decided to recuse himself from overseeing the Justice Department's investigation into whether Mr. Trump and his associates worked illegally with Russians to interfere in the 2016 election.
He emphasized his loyalty to President Trump, who forced him from office a year ago after Mr. Sessions recused himself from overseeing the Justice Department's investigation into whether Mr. Trump and his associates worked illegally with Russians to interfere in the 2016 election.
Four models that were formerly signed to the GOP candidate's agency have spoken out recently about how they worked illegally and violated immigration rules while on Trump's roster; one, Canadian model Rachel Blais, even compared the experience to "modern-day slavery," speaking with MotherJones.
But Mother Jones's James West reports that Trump cared a lot less about the proper papers for employees at his modeling agency, Trump Model Management, where three former models said they and their peers came to the US on tourist visas and worked illegally.
The reticence to speak about the issue is likely linked to lingering unanswered questions about Melania's immigration history — in particular, reporting from November 19903 by Alicia Caldwell of the Associated Press that suggests Melania may have worked illegally while in the United States on a tourist visa.
That Donald Trump, a man who has shown skepticism about immigration in general and extreme hostility to illegal immigration in particular, either didn't know or didn't care that his own wife initially came to the United States and worked illegally without a proper visa should be, on one level, shocking.
According to a new report from Mother Jones, three foreign models who came to the United States to work for the company claim that they not only worked illegally for the agency on tourist visas but also faced sweatshop-like conditions and, in some instances, were encouraged to lie to immigration services.
On Wednesday morning, the former model addressed the claims by releasing a letter from Michael J. Wildes, the Managing Partner of the Law Offices of Wildes & Weinberg P.C.  The letter presents a history of Trump's visa statuses, dismisses claims that suggested she worked illegally as a model in America in 1995 and confirms she obtained legal U.S. work visas from 1996 to 2001.
Foreign models came to the United States and worked illegally through the modeling agency owned by Republican presidential nominee Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE, according to a new report.
It also states that according to evaluations, up to 30,000 worked illegally without a work permit.
During the early 1940s he worked illegally with both the French Resistance and the Soviet sponsored National Committee for a Free Germany.
At this point jobless, he occupied himself intensively with writing. After the Machtergreifung of the Nazis, he worked illegally for the KPD from 1933. He emigrated to Paris in mid 1933.
Alexej graduated with distinction from a high school in Kiev. Between 1919 and 1923 he studies at the Kiev Theological Academy. Throughout this period the Academy was shut by Bolsheviks and worked illegally. In 1926 he married Tatiana Pavlovna, née Bulashevich, a daughter of the owner of the sugar plant.
Between 1933 and 1934, he was head of the KJVD-UB Berlin-Friedrichshain and an instructor at Siemens. From the end of 1934, he attended the International Lenin School in Moscow for a year and then worked illegally under the code names Fritz Anders and Walter Schwarz together with Gerhard Rolack, Erich Honecker and Kurt Hager.
Many fled abroad during March while many others were arrested. Eugen Schönhaar continued to be politically active in Berlin, though by February 1933 he was identifying himself under the pseudonym, "Ewald Rackwitz". He worked (illegally) for a party leadership team ("Inlandsleitung") under John Schehr. On 11 November 1933 Eugen Schönhaar was arrested, along with fellow party activists John Schehr and Rudolf Schwarz.
The 15-year-old was part of joint terrorist cell of Tanzim and Palestinian Islamic Jihad from Yamon village near Jenin. The four were Palestinians who worked illegally in Israel. The 15-year-old was allegedly paid 1000 shekels in order to blow himself up in Afula. According to a Shabak report published on September 26, 2004, about 292 Palestinian children have been involved in terrorism.
As the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis unfolded, the RNU militantly supported the Russian parliament over President Boris Yeltsin. In 1993, it also took part in defending and patrolling the White House, the residence of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation, against the President's troops. Following Yeltsin's victory, the RNU worked illegally for several months. While underground, the movement continued to publish their newspaper Russian Order.
He was arrested in 1904 and again in 1905, for helping organise a strike by the city's railway workers, but soon released on both occasions. Injured during a demonstration, he sought treatment in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to Russia in 1906, and worked illegally as Bolshevik organiser in St-Petersburg, Kostroma, and Baku. In 1913, he settled near St Petersburg to organise the smuggling of Bolshevik literature into Russia.
The Reichstag fire at the end of February 1933 was immediately blamed on "communists". Meanwhile, the new government lost no time in converting Germany into a one-party dictatorship. Nevertheless, between January 1933 and April 1935 Wiedmeier worked (illegally) as a party instructor in Berlin. From 1934 she was actively engaged with the "Anti-militarist" group around Emil Pietzuch, undertaking several covert trips to Moscow as a courier.
Only small local organizations, which communicated via intermediaries such as stewards, who worked illegally or semi-legally, survived. This form of organization was easier to protect against state repression.Vogel 1977, p. 39 and Schönhoven 1985, p. 220. After the laws were sunset in 1890, the General Commission of the Trade Unions of Germany was founded on November 17 at a conference in Berlin to centralize the socialist labor movement.
In the mid-1970s he moved to California, where he worked illegally as a welder without a green card. In 1977, he put his name down for Brown University, where he graduated with a Ph.D. in 1981. He taught French and literature in Dartmouth College, Brown University, and is now in Duke University, after being invited to teach in Berkeley and Harvard universities. In 1983, he created the review called "Poésie-Bretagne" (Poetry-Brittany).
The theater was established in 1973, but the authorities of the former Yugoslav state did not permitted its registration under the name "Correspondence Theatre". Thus, the theater worked illegally for over a year. On March 3, 1974, the license was obtained and the society entered into the register under the name "KUD Drama Art Scene" ("КУД Позорница драмске уметности" / "KUD Pozornica dramske umetnosti"). The seat of the society was in Novi Sad.
The new government lost no time in transforming Germany into a one-party dictatorship. After the Reichstag fire at the end of February 1933 communists, in particular, were targets of officially sanctioned persecution. Many were arrested or fled abroad. Käthe Lübeck nevertheless returned from Moscow to Germany at the end of 1934, making her base in Berlin where she worked illegally for the Communist Party leadership, her responsibilities centred on "women's work" ("Frauenarbeit").
The prohibition of underground female labour caused much suffering and hardship and was greatly resented in south-west Lancashire. The employment of women did not end abruptly in 1842, with the connivance of some employers, women dressed as men continued to work underground for several years. Penalties for employing women were small and inspectors were few and some women were so desperate for work they willingly worked illegally for less pay. Children continued working underground at some pits.
Ahmad Behzad was forced to leave Afghanistan and moved to Iran during the war with the Talibans. During his stay in Iran, he worked illegally and in bad conditions. When he returned to Afghanistan, he started to work as a journalist for Radio Azadi. Ahmad Behzad was instrumental in the progress of the Personal Status Law for Shi’ite Muslims in Afghanistan, the Media Code, and the Law for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.Ahmad Shah Behzad: “Open minds are the key to a safe, sustainable future”, Huffingtonpost.
In September 2004, Long went on an "unexpected" one year hiatus from pornographic productions in the U.S. when she was not allowed entry into the country at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas. She was stopped by airport officials and told that she was barred from entry. Long's agent stated she was denied entry due to suspicions that she had worked illegally in the United States. Long has also worked with Jenna Jameson's Club Jenna production company and appeared in the 2009 release Jenna Confidential.
Brězan was born in Räckelwitz near Kamenz, the son of a quarry worker and smallholder. He had three younger sisters whose insatiable appetite for new stories encouraged him to exercise his narrative talents from an early age. He attended school in Bautzen and then studied political economics. However, he was excluded from his studies in 1936. After 1933, he worked illegally for Domowina and was active in a Sorbian resistance group. Domowina was closed down by government in 1937, and in 1937–38, Brězan emigrated to Prague.
From 1933, the group's members worked illegally against Nazism. In his home town of Lübeck, the young Herbert Karl Frahm, later known as Willy Brandt, joined the SAPD against the advice of his mentor Julius Leber. In his autobiography, Brandt wrote: > In autumn 1931, Nazis and German nationalists, the SA and Der Stahlhelm > joined together to form the "Harzburg Front". [...] It was just at this time > that the left wing of the social democrats split off, as a result of > measures connected to organisation and discipline by the party leaders.
Soon after the NSDAP won the election in 1933, she together with 111 other students signed a "Call for the Defence of Democratic Rights and Freedoms" and was therefore reprimanded and expelled by the university on 11 July 1933. From that time, she worked illegally against Germany's Nazi government and socialized with the armed resistance within the KPD organisation. She temporarily took a job as a nanny and on 15 May 1934, her son Walter was born. The boy's father, Fritz Rau, a KPD official, had died in Gestapo custody.
Kate Taylor, "The Thorny Path to a National Black Museum", The New York Times, January 22, 2011, Accessed January 31, 2011. Excavations reveal island communities existing until the Civil War. Charlie, a maroon who worked illegally in a lumber camp in the swamp, later recalled that there were whole families of maroons living in the Dismal Swamp, some of whom had never seen a white man and would be terrified if they did. The swamp's role in the history of slavery in the United States is reflected in Harriet Beecher Stowe's second novel, Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp.
On 19 January 1946 she married Reinhold Popall who had worked illegally for the Communist Party during the Nazi years until 1935 when he had received a 15 year prison sentence. Käthe Popall became the women's section leader for the party. She joined the local "Fight against Fascism association" ("Kampfgemeinschaft gegen den Faschismus"), an organisation dominated by Communists and Social Democrats which at this stage was the only organisation with any resemblance to a political party that the British occupying forces would permit to operate. On 17 April 1946 she was appointed a member of the nominated Bremen regional parliament.
In May 2008 Reeves made a statement to a Special Commission of Inquiry into the public health system stating that he had worked illegally at the GSAHS hospitals because he felt his help was badly needed. He also expressed regret for his actions. The Commission, headed by Peter Garling, was convened in January 2008 and its scope is to investigate the standard of patient care in public hospitals. On 31 July 2008, Garling handed down his findings on the Reeves case and concluded that his "intentional and calculated dishonesty" was the main reason he was employed by GSAHS.
Because most Afghan workers did not have work permits after 1992 and thus worked illegally, employers could pay them less than the daily minimum wage rates and not provide them with benefits required for Iranian workers. Under both the monarchy and the republic, the government has strictly controlled union activity. After the Revolution, the Ministry of Labor established the Workers’ House to sponsor Islamic unions in large manufacturing concerns. These unions discourage strikes through a combination of cooptation of workers through periodic raises and bonuses and cooperation with authorities to identify and discipline workers who exhibit tendencies toward independence.
Whereas Cole's defeat in Monroe was met with indifference by the press, the Klan's failed confrontation with the Lumbees was highly publicized and led to Cole's arrest and conviction. Cole served a prison sentence (1959-1960) for inciting a riot (the Hayes Pond incident) after which he moved to Portsmouth, Virginia. There, Cole briefly worked illegally as an unlicensed private detective before returning to Kinston, North Carolina, in 1962, to operate a print shop. Cole began the Helping Hands C.B. Club in Greensboro and was also involved in the Committee for Better Government, a political action group with Ku Klux Klan overtones.
The "internationalization" of Japan's society in other ways also divided the bureaucratic elite. MITI, the Ministry of Labor, and the Ministry of Justice had divergent views on how to respond to the influx of unskilled, usually South Asian and Southeast Asian, laborers into the labor-starved Japanese economy. An estimated 300,000 to 400,000 of them worked illegally for small Japanese firms in the late 1980s. Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture revision of guidelines on the writing of history textbooks, ostensibly a domestic matter, aroused the indignation of Japan's Asian neighbors because the changes tended to soften accounts of wartime atrocities (see Japanese history textbook controversies).
Huang Na's father Huang Qingrong, and mother Huang Shuying (), were both born in 1973 to farming families in Putian city in Fujian, China. They met in 1995 and married soon after, as Shuying was pregnant with Huang Na. In 1996, Qinrong left China to seek his fortune in Singapore and worked illegally as a vegetable packer at the Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre. When Shuying found out that he was having affairs in Singapore, she divorced him and was given custody of Huang Na. She later married Zheng Wenhai (),"She always wanted my surname", The New Paper, 4 November 2004. Available from NLB Libraries Multimedia Stations.
Because of intelligence received from the Gestapo in Berlin. local police were already aware of this arrangement by the end of 1933, and of the significance of the phrase "I've come from the Lyon boutique" ("Ich komme vom Modehaus Lyon") which resistance fighters used to identify themselves. Along with her activities in Dortmund, Johanna Metzler worked illegally as a "party instructor" in Bielefeld, Osnabrück and Hagen, in and beyond the eastern part of the Ruhr industrial conurbation. She herself was re-arrested on 26 August 1934 and held under investigatory detention, initially at the infamous "Steinwache" interrogation prison beside the Main Railway Station in Dortmund.
He was allowed to travel on to Belgium in July 1939 where he worked (illegally) for about six months. After the German army invaded Belgium in May 1940, Eikemeier was interned again, taken to France, and detained at the camp in Saint-Cyprien. In August 1940, he was found in Bordeaux by the Gestapo and arrested again. He was taken to Hanover where he spent twelve weeks in police detention before being transferred, on 23 October 1940, to the concentration camp at Sachsenhausen, a short distance to the north of Berlin. As the Soviet army approached and national defeat loomed, plans were implemented to start emptying the Sachsenhausen concentration camp of its surviving internees and, on 20 April 1945 (which was Adolf Hitler's 56th birthday), Fritz Eikemeier was one of a group of 500 prisoners who set off on a Death march towards the Baltic ("Ostsee") Coast. Overnight on 3 May 1945, they found themselves liberated in a wood near Crivitz after their guards fled.

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