—> ICE / Immigration Catch-All

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“… No reason was given for the numbers, which are a dramatic decrease from last year’s ceiling of 125,000 set under Democratic President Joe Biden. The Associated Press previously reported that the administration was considering admitting as few as 7,500 refugees and mostly white South Africans.

The memo said only that the admission of the 7,500 refugees during 2026 fiscal year was “justified by humanitarian concerns or is otherwise in the national interest.”

… Trump suspended the program on his first day in office and since then only a trickle of refugees have entered the country, mostly white South Africans. Some refugees have also been admitted as part of a court case seeking to allow entry to refugees who were overseas and in the process of coming to the U.S. when the program was suspended.…”
 
nazi chic
White trash picking up Nazi flags
While you was gone, there was war
This is the West, get used to it
They put a swastika over the door

Under the God, under the God
One step over the red line
Under the God, under the God
Ten steps over the crazy crazy

Washington heads in the toilet bowl
Don't see supremacist hate
Right wing dicks in their boiler suits
Picking out who to annihilate

Toxic jungle of Uzi trails
Tribesmen just wouldn't live here
Fascist flare is fashion cool
Well, you're dead, you just ain't buried, yet

Under the God, under the God
Oh yeah
Under the God, under the God

As the walls came tumbling down
So, the secrets that we shared
I believed you by the palace gates
Now the savage days are here

Under the God
 

Illinois appeals court blocks order requiring CBP chief’s check-ins​



“An Illinois appeals court has issued a stay on U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis’ order that requires U.S. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino to appear in person each day to update Ellis on ongoing federal operations.

Ellis issued the order on Tuesday during a 60-minute hearing in which Bovino was questioned about tactics being used by federal officers and agents as part of Operation Midway Blitz. Federal sources told NewsNation on Wednesday that Bovino had arrived at the federal courthouse early for his scheduled meeting with Ellis when the building was placed on lockdown for a reported bomb threat.

A device was reportedly found, and the building was locked down with Bovino and team inside. Sources also say he was instructed by the judge to use the basement entrance versus the street. Chicago Police said that officers responded to the federal courthouse around 3:30 p.m. for a report of a suspicious package.

The package was cleared, and police said the scene was secured. Chicago Police directed any further inquiries to the FBI.

… However, the 7th Circuit Court granted the federal government’s request on Wednesday to have the order stayed and gave attorneys representing a group of journalists, clergy and protesters until Thursday evening to respond to the government’s petition.

In their petition, attorneys for the federal government said Ellis’ order “significantly interferes with the quintessentially executive function of ensuring the nation’s immigration laws are properly enforced by waylaying a senior executive official critical to that mission on a daily basis.”“
 
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Back in the United States, officials at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency were just beginning to realize the brewing problem on their hands: They had mistakenly expelled Mr. Juarez from the United States, placing him on the wrong plane and erroneously dispatching him across a port of entry to Mexico instead of sending him to a detention center in Arizona.

How a Former Trump Golf Club Worker Was Mistakenly Deported to Mexico

Alejandro Juarez stepped off a plane in Texas and stood on a bridge over the Rio Grande, staring at the same border that he had crossed illegally from Mexico 22 years earlier.

As U.S. immigration officials unshackled restraints bound to his arms and legs, Mr. Juarez, 39, pleaded with them. He told them he was never given a chance to contest his deportation in front of an immigration judge after being detained in New York City five days before.

The federal agents told him that they were just following orders. They handed him a small bag with his phone, belt and documents, and forced him to cross the bridge. He thought of the wife and four children, whom he was leaving behind. After a five-minute walk back to his homeland, a highway sign greeted him: “Bienvenidos.”

“And that’s how my journey in the United States ended,” Mr. Juarez, who had worked for more than a decade at a Trump Organization golf club in New York, said through tears during a phone interview from Mexico.

 
It should be the position of every national Democratic candidate that if elected they will push for the complete dissolution and remaking of the Department of Homeland Security as well as ceiminal trials for most if not all officers involved in day to day apprehensions under this administration.
 

Shortly after, the officers stopped their vehicle and jumped out; Trebach says they knelt on her head, handcuffed her and threw her into the back of a black van.

She says ICE “kidnapped” her and told her to stop taking photos.

“I just said, ‘Let me go. We're here. It's our right to monitor you,’” said Trebach. “I'm a citizen.”

Trebach was released without charge hours later.

“As is her constitutional right, Amanda was documenting the movements of the masked kidnappers,” Harbor Area Peace Patrols’ parent organization, Union del Barrio, wrote in a social media post detailing Trebach’s detainment.

ICE officers themselves have leaned into characterizations of their arrests as abductions. In an incident two weeks later, agents were videotaped taunting Peace Patrol activists from their van saying, “Good morning ladies! A-kidnapping we will go.”
 
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