no prenatal care
the child died inside her, but ICE waited three days to send her to the hospital
ICE shackled her to the bed while she delivered the corpse
https://nashvillebanner.com/2025/05/...m_medium=email
no prenatal care
the child died inside her, but ICE waited three days to send her to the hospital
ICE shackled her to the bed while she delivered the corpse
https://nashvillebanner.com/2025/05/...m_medium=email
deporting foster children of US caregivers?
de able
Trump isn't Hitler, that comparison is passe
He's worse than Hitler
the description fits
ICE's das ly crimes are aggravated by committing them under color of law
https://sherrilyn.substack.com/p/mas...dRedirect=trueThis country has a unique history with the particular terror of masked attackers. The Ku Klux Klan, the violent white supremacist organization terrorized Black people in the American South in the first years after the end of the Civil War and through much of the 20th century. So rampant was Klan violence in the years immediately after the Civil War, that it threatened to derail the promise of the 14th Amendment, which was ratified in 1868 and was designed to ensure that Black people would equal citizens in post-Civil War America.
In the first decade after the end of the Civil War, the violence of the Klan grew to such an alarming level that President Grant encouraged Congress to address the growing problem by passing a statute that would give federal authorities the ability to prosecute those interfering with the cons utional rights of Black people.[iii]
In response Congress enacted the Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871,[iv] which gave the federal government authority to prosecute crimes committed by the Klan. For this reason, the Enforcement Acts are colloquially referred to as the “Ku Klux Klan Acts.” Among its other protections designed to ensure access to voting for Black people, the Enforcement Act of 1870 made it a felony when:
…two or more persons to band or conspire together, or go in disguise upon the public highway, or the premises of another, with intent to ….injure, press, threaten or intimidate any citizen with intent to prevent or hinder his free exercise and enjoyment of any right or privilege granted or secured to him by the Cons ution or laws of the United States.
I'm sure if you ask ICE, the child was never an American citizen so no harm no foul
Eh, he's getting there but that's a little much. I'll wait until he actually invades Canada and sets up an American style Auschwitz
If he's not, he will be
Defunding USAID, PEPFAR and the Global Fund may lead to 20 million+ deaths
The BBB will kill thousands of Americans/year
It's only a matter of time until we have immigrant concentration camps
another hardened criminal detained
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unleashing ICE to hunt down brown people in the street is Gestapo-like to say the least
refusing to consider proof of citizenship
I spoke to employers who were seeking to help employees abducted by ICE - including one boss seeking freedom for a U.S. citizen staffer who was arrested in the space between their uber and the front door of their workplace.
Their boss had their U.S. passport in hand, pleading for their release.
whoops, did it again
Trumplandia s up everything
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime...le/ar-AA1Hly9OAnother man who the Trump administration admittedly deported in violation of a court order must now be returned to the United States, a New York City-based appeals court ruled Tuesday.
Attorneys with the U.S. Department of Justice admitted to deporting Jordin Melgar-Salmeron, a Salvadoran immigrant, in early May, citing "a confluence of administrative errors," including a breakdown in communications, Law&Crime previously reported.
Somewhat aberrational, the case has been before the Second Circuit Court of Appealsfor roughly two years – having exhausted relevant lower court proceedings for quite some time. All of the latest action has been on a docket before the same panel since April.
Now, that panel is ordering the government to bring the man back to the country so that his longstanding case can revert to the status quo.
"Accordingly, upon due consideration, the Government is hereby ordered to facilitate the return of Pe ioner to the United States as soon as possible to 'ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador,'" the two-page order reads.
dry eyes here
y'all are not ready for how hard you're gonna lose because of this
and really, all the things y'all are ing up
American citizens detained by ICE spend an average of 180 days in detention
If Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests you for an immigration-related offense, and you tell the agency you are a citizen, it might not release you. Citizenship isn’t something that you wear on your body. Maybe you pull an ID, a passport, or even a birth certificate, but agents frequently assume these are fake. In that case, you will be taken to a detention center run by a private prison company. You can tell the guards there that you’re a citizen, but they’ll likely respond with some version of “tell it to the judge.” Your immigration-court appearance could be weeks, or even months, away. You will wait behind bars. There’s no right to counsel in immigration court — if you can’t afford a lawyer, you’ll have to represent yourself. When you finally see the inside of a courtroom, it could be what ICE calls a “mass removal” hearing with dozens of other defendants. You won’t have a chance to talk to a judge.
The U.S. citizens I’ve spoken to who have spent time in immigration jail describe fighting against a feeling of resignation — not just the temptation to give up on their legal case, but to give up on their belief that they are actually a citizen. Their sense of citizenship, with all its protections, dematerializes as soon as the government begins insisting they were in the country illegally. Peter Brown, a Philadelphia-born resident who spent three weeks in a local jail after ICE targeted him for deportation in 2019, told me he got whiplash: One day he was a free citizen, the next the government could keep him behind bars indefinitely. In his case, the agency’s error was simple — it had confused him with another Peter Brown, a Jamaican fugitive. In jail, he was staring down a deportation to a country he had only visited once, for a day trip on a cruise. “I really went into a state of panic,” Brown says. He repeated to his jailers that he was a citizen, and he offered to provide his birth certificate. He signed every do ent with, “Peter Sean Brown, United States Citizen.” It didn’t make a difference. Brown says that the last guard he saw before he was placed into the transport van ahead of deportation to Jamaica smirked at him and said, in a fake Jamaican accent, “Yeah, whatever, mon, everything’s gonna be all right.” After he was transferred to a detention center in Miami, an agent finally agreed to look at his birth certificate, and ICE released him.https://nymag.com/intelligencer/arti...hip-proof.htmlUnlike police, ICE agents almost never have to testify in court. In Watson’s case, the officers who made the mistakes that kept him in jail remained anonymous in all court do ents; even the judges who incorrectly ruled that Watson should be deported remained anonymous, thanks to a Department of Justice arrangement that keeps immigration proceedings opaque. While the law is clear — ICE is not to arrest U.S. citizens — agents have such significant discretion, and such little accountability, that, in practice, the first opportunity a citizen will have to meaningfully contest their arrest is at their first court appearance. And that can take a while.
“When U.S. citizens sue for damages for wrongful imprisonment, and the government pays millions of dollars, no one gets fired; no ICE agents lose salaries,” says Jacqueline Stevens, a professor of political science at Northwestern University and director of the school’s Deportation Research Clinic. “It’s the U.S. taxpayers who are on the hook when ICE screws up.”
In 2017, Stevens began studying cases like Watson’s, combing through court records for instances of ICE detainees being released after the government acknowledged they were citizens. She connected with dozens, including many who had been deported before the government could correct its error, and who got in touch with her from other countries. “This is happening all the time,” she says. In her study, she found that, on average, U.S. citizens detained by ICE spent 180 days behind bars.
Maryland stands up for due process
https://thedailyrecord.com/2025/05/2...tation-freeze/The federal government may not remove immigrants with cases pending in Maryland after they file a pe ion for writ of habeas corpus under a standing order issued Wednesday.
The order preventing deportations, signed by Maryland District Court Chief Judge George Russell III, applies until 4 p.m. two business days after the pe ion is filed. It comes as the Trump administration has removed hundreds of people without due process, violated court orders in immigration cases, and floated the idea of suspending habeas corpus.
The order is intended to preserve the court’s jurisdiction over immigration cases and guarantee due process. It applies only to cases in Maryland, not nationwide.
It states that after an “alien detainee” files a pe ion for writ of habeas corpus, “the Government/Respondents, including all those acting for them or on their behalf, are ENJOINED and RESTRAINED from removing Pe ioners in such cases from the continental United States or altering their legal status.”
Trumplandia lies about everything
At Senate appropriations hearing, AG Pam Bondi says she was previously unaware that law enforcement are covering their faces during immigration enforcement. Sen. Gary Peters says people might resist unidentified individuals putting them in a van.
1/25/2025
this could lead to a Christie/Trump cage match
Co-President Miller may go to war against NJ
reality outstrips the imagination, part eleventy-kajillion
One of the four escapees from Delaney Hall attempted to turn himself in to the New Jersey State Police last week but was turned away, according to federal authorities.
https://nj1015.com/nj-santuary-migrant-arrest-delaney/One day after his recent escape, Castaneda tried to turn himself in to the New Jersey State Police at the station in Bridgeton.However, DHS officials say State Police declined to arrest him and turned him away because of New Jersey's sanctuary state policies that forbid them to work with ICE.
3 out of four have been caught, if i read that right
drooling at the prospect of US concentration camps
you ing ghoul
You're soft.
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