ICE, raids and immigration
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In one post, Trump acknowledged the strain on employers. In another he ordered ICE to 'do all in their power' to deport massive numbers of people.
More than 600 local law enforcement agencies throughout the country are officially partnering with ICE to arrest and detain undocumented immigrants.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said the former Baldwin prison is "set to start accepting detainees."
Monica Ruiz is the head of Casa San José, a nonprofit that serves Pittsburgh's Latino immigrants. She said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have captured hundreds of people, both undocumented and documented,
California State Sen. Scott Wiener introduces the No Secret Police Act to ban law enforcement from covering faces amid increased ICE arrests and protests.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has characterized the long tail of the immigration raids as dealing “a body blow” to the city’s economy, with many people scared to go to school, work or out in their communities. Whole sectors of the economy can’t function without immigrant labor, the mayor said.
He is one of the 100,000 people in the 2024 fiscal year who sought asylum in the U.S. because of their LGBTQ identity and one of the 1 million asylum cases pending determination.
Jails in Ste. Genevieve, Phelps and Greene counties are housing hundreds of immigration detainees. Three spoke with the.
Immigration attorney Farhad Sethna spoke about how the crackdown by ICE is affecting people and what they can do to prepare.
Federal immigration detainee Emerson Colindres, who is facing deportation to Honduras, is no longer in custody at the Butler County Jail. Colindres was moved out around 1:30 or 2:30 a.m., according to a jail supervisor.
State senators Scott Wiener and Jesse Arreguin want law enforcement working in California to be identifiable and to restrict mask wearing in public operations; federal officials have said their