Julia Ainsley, Didi Martinez, NBC News, Dec. 11, 2024 "The incoming Trump administration intends to rescind a long-standing policy that has prevented Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from...
NIJC Know Your Rights: Prepare for Trump’s Mass Deportation Threats All individuals in the United States have rights, regardless of immigration status What “mass deportations”...
Todd Miller, The Border Chronicle, Dec. 12, 2024 "The prolific author and photographer describes powerful instances of worker resistance and how undocumented labor will be a serious thorn in Trump’s...
Tatyana Dandanpolie, Salon, Dec. 11, 2024 "[I]mmigration law and policy experts told Salon that Trump has no real legal pathway toward repealing birthright citizenship, despite his claims. Instead...
From the Dec. 10, 2024 Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing, How Mass Deportations Will Separate American Families, Harm Our Armed Forces, and Devastate Our Economy : - Testimony of Foday Turay - Testimony...
Zoe Tillman, BuzzFeed News, Feb. 23, 2017 - "In a small, windowless courtroom on the second floor of an office building, Judge Rodger Harris heard a string of bond requests on Tuesday morning from immigrants held in jail as they faced deportation. The detainees appeared by video from detention facilities elsewhere in the state. Harris, an immigration judge since 2007, used a remote control to move the camera around in his courtroom so the detainees could see their lawyers appearing in-person before the judge, if they had one. The lawyers spoke about their clients’ family ties, job history, and forthcoming asylum petitions, and downplayed any previous criminal record. In cases where Harris agreed to set bond — the amounts ranged from $8,000 to $20,000 — he had the same message for the detainees: if they paid bond and were set free until their next court date, it would mean a delay in their case. Hearings set for March or April would be pushed back until at least the summer, he said. But a couple of months is nothing compared to timelines that some immigration cases are on now. Judges and lawyers interviewed by BuzzFeed News described hearings scheduled four, five, or even six years out. Already facing a crushing caseload, immigration judges are bracing for more strain as the Trump administration pushes ahead with an aggressive ramp-up of immigration enforcement with no public commitment so far to aid backlogged courts."