Illegal entry definition

Illegal entry means crossing borders without complying with the necessary requirements for legal entry into the receiving State;
Illegal entry means entering Nauru or any other country without complying with the requirements for lawful entry of that country;
Illegal entry means crossing the borders of the Fiji Islands or any other country without complying with the requirements for lawful entry of that country;

Examples of Illegal entry in a sentence

  • Illegal entry onto the property of another with the intent to commit a crime.

  • Forced entry Illegal entry into your caravan which includes illegally using keysor picking locks.

  • Illegal entry is criminalized in Article 279 of the Penal Code which can entail up to 6 years’ imprisonment for aggravated offences, plus fine or forfeiture12.

  • Illegal entry across unmanaged borders occurs when a person crosses a national border without undergoing an immigration check.

  • Illegal entry is a misdemeanor and a felony under the INA (§275), while illegal presence (§237) is a civil violation.


More Definitions of Illegal entry

Illegal entry means crossing borders without complying with the necessary requirements for legal entry into the receiving State’. (UNODC, 2004, p54)
Illegal entry means crossing borders without complying with the requirements for legal entry into the receiving State. ``Fraudulent travel or identity document'' means a travel or identity document that has been falsely made or altered without proper authorization, that has been improperly issued or obtained, or that is being used by someone other than the rightful holder. ``Vessel'' means any type of water craft capable of being used-as a means of transportation on water, except for Government vehicles being used for governmental, non-commercial service. Thus, naval vessels being used for military purposes are not covered by the Protocol, but government vessels being used for services that might in other countries be provided by non-governmental, commercial entities are covered. Article 4 (``Scope of application'') is modeled on the analogous article in the Convention. It is one of many provisions in the Protocol that have an analogous provision in the Convention. In all cases, the goal was to make the language in the Protocol consistent with the language in the Convention. Article 4 thus states that the Protocol applies, except as otherwise provided therein, to the prevention, investigation and prosecution of the offenses established in the Protocol, ``where the offenses are transnational in nature and involve an organized criminal group'' (virtually identical language is used in the ``Scope'' article in the Convention), and to the protection of the rights of persons who have been the object of such offenses. Article 5 (``Criminal liability of migrants'') states that migrants must not be subject to criminal prosecution under the Protocol merely because they are the objects of conduct set forth in Article 6 (criminalization). This Article was the key to getting the support of the ``sending'' countries for this Protocol. It makes perfectly clear that the Protocol does not call for the punishment of the migrant merely because he or she has been smuggled. However, as is made explicit later in the Protocol (Article 6(4)), nothing in Article 5 or anywhere else in the Protocol prevents a State Party from taking measures against a smuggled migrant under its domestic law. Also, Article 5 would not apply to a case where the smuggled migrant was also part of the organized criminal group that conducted the smuggling--insuch a case the criminalization obligation of the Protocol would apply to the migrant not because of the migrant's status as a smuggled migrant, but because of his...
Illegal entry means entering the Cook Islands or any other country without complying with the requirements for lawful entry of that country;
Illegal entry means crossing the border of Swaziland, or any other country, without complying with the requirements for lawful entry;
Illegal entry means crossing borders with-out complying with the necessary requirements for le- gal entry into the receiving State;
Illegal entry means crossing border without complying with necessary requirements for legal entry in to state;
Illegal entry means crossing borders without complying with the necessary requirements for legal entry into Grenada;