—> ICE / Immigration Catch-All

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Video recording of law enforcement, including ICE, in public places is legal.

Seems like another social media misrepresentation.
According to this administration it is not, and people have been arrested and their phones confiscated for doing it.

You can read about it in a DOJ bulletin from Bondi. Videotaping ICE is considered an arrestable offense. Charges won't stick but who wants to go through that bullshit.
 

At least one of the Korean workers swept up in a huge immigration raid on a Hyundai Motor factory site in Georgia last week was living and working legally in the US, according to an internal federal government document obtained by the Guardian.

Officials then “mandated” that he agree to be removed from the US despite not having violated his visa.

...

The document says that immigration agents from Atlanta “determined that [redacted] entered into the United States in [redacted], with a valid B1/B2 visa and [redacted] was employed at HL-GA Battery Company LLC as a contractor from the South Korean company SFA. From statements made and queries in law enforcement databases, [redacted] has not violated his visa; however, the Atlanta Field Office Director has mandated [redacted] be presented as a Voluntary Departure. [Redacted] has accepted voluntary departure despite not violating his B1/B2 visa requirements.”

...

Although officials say that the people arrested were in some violation of immigration laws, many others with valid legal status were offered voluntary departure, the official claimed. The official added that it was unclear what would happen with any legal immigrants who refuse to be deported voluntarily, since there is “no legal mechanism to remove them if they are not in violation” of US civil immigration laws. There is no suggestion that the Korean man in question has a criminal record in the US.
 
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Hyundai on Thursday said work on its Georgia battery plant where hundreds of workers were detained in an immigration raid will be delayed by up to three months.

Hyundai Chief Executive Officer José Muñoz said the enforcement action leaves the battery plant, which Hyundai operates with LG Energy Solutions, short of workers, Bloomberg first reported.

"This is going to give us minimum two to three months delay, because now all these people want to get back," Muñoz told reporters in Detroit on Thursday. "Then you need to see how can you fill those positions. And for the most part, those people are not in the U.S."

Hyundai told CBS News it had no further comment on the matter. LG Energy Solutions did not immediately responded to CBS News' requests for comment.
 


“… The man, who the authorities said was not legally in the country, dragged the officer as he fled in his car, the agency representative said. The officer was severely injured and is now in stable condition.

The man was identified by ICE as Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez. He was pronounced dead at a local hospital. …”
 
Want to know who tipped ICE off to raid the Georgia SK plant?


Yesterday, I noticed a new, yard political sign for a candidate I had never heard of. So I looked her up. Running for Congress. And wow, she claims to be the one.

She's running as a Republican, against a Republican incumbent whose district will benefit really well from this SK plant. And, the Republican President, who they both worship, did it.
 
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