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Tag: FIEL Houston

  • Ken Paxton Sues Harris County Over Immigrant Legal Services Fund – Houston Press

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    In a move that Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee referred to as a “cheap political stunt,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued county commissioners this week, alleging they violated the Texas Constitution by spending $1.3 million on immigration assistance programs. 

    Paxton’s 17-page legal filing, submitted Monday evening in a Harris County District Court, names Judge Lina Hidalgo and all four county commissioners, saying they funneled taxpayer money to “radical leftist organizations that will use the money to oppose the lawful deportations of illegal aliens.” 

    The AG says the allocation is a violation of the Texas Constitution’s “gift clause,” because the funds serve no public purpose and instead “subsidize the legal defense of illegal aliens who ought to be deported.”

    “We must stop the left-wing radicals who are robbing Texans to prevent illegals from being deported by the Trump Administration,” Paxton said in a press release. “Beyond just being blatantly unconstitutional, this is evil and wicked. Millions upon millions of illegals invaded America during the last administration, and they must be sent back to where they came from.”

    Paxton is running for U.S. Senate, challenging incumbent Sen. John Cornyn and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, both Houston Republicans, in the March primary.

    Menefee, who is in a runoff with former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards to fill the unexpired term of the late Sylvester Turner in U.S. Congressional District 18, said the program funded by county commissioners is “perfectly legal.”

    “It ensures that people in our communities have access to due process, something every American should support,” Menefee said in a statement. “My office will fight back and defend Harris County’s right to lead with fairness, compassion, and common sense, no matter how many times Republican state officials try to erase that.”

    Harris County created the Immigrant Legal Services Fund in 2020 to provide deportation defense services for immigrants. Last month, the court voted to renew a contract with five agencies: BakerRipley, the Galveston-Houston Immigrant Representation Project, Justice for All Immigrants, KIND, Inc. and the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Service. Distribution of the funds was set to begin January 1, but Paxton filed a temporary injunction to halt any money from changing hands. 

    Menefee, who has successfully sued the Trump administration multiple times this year, appeared confident that Harris County would prevail. 

    “This lawsuit is a cheap political stunt,” Menefee said. “At a time when the president has unleashed ICE agents to terrorize immigrant neighborhoods, deport U.S. citizens, and trample the law, it’s shameful that Republican state officials are joining in instead of standing up for Texans.”

    Commissioner Lesley Briones said in a statement that, in Harris County, “we proudly respect constitutional rights, we will fight this lawsuit and trust justice will prevail in the courts.” 

    “Unlike Ken Paxton, who brazenly allows the Trump Administration’s masked ICE agents to arrest U.S. citizens in violation of the law, we believe people who have a legal right to remain in the country deserve access to justice and due process,” she said. “This lawsuit is an unjustified attack on our legal system and fundamental fairness.”

    “Violent criminals can and should be deported,” Briones added. “At the same time, we will fight to protect everyone who has a legal pathway to citizenship and avoid needless family separations in the pursuit of the American dream.” 

    Harris County’s Immigration Legal Services Fund is for residents who have been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, based on household income. For example, a single individual must make less than $52,200 per year to qualify for assistance. 

    Assistant Attorney General Anthony Dolcefino is representing Paxton’s office in the lawsuit and said the defense fund doesn’t benefit the public and was motivated by the commissioners’ opposition to the Trump administration’s immigration policies. 

    The lawsuit quotes Commissioner Rodney Ellis saying in court, “As  ICE raids ramp up and federal attacks target communities of color, it’s essential for Harris County to do everything we can to protect our residents, no matter their immigration status.”

    Commissioner Adrian Garcia, a former sheriff, asked whether the commissioners court could “make some request short of a demand that [Harris County] law enforcement not cooperate with ICE,” the lawsuit states. 

    “[Garcia’s] remarks further illustrate that Harris County’s decision to fund deportation-defense services is driven by opposition to federal immigration enforcement rather than by any legitimate public purpose,” according to Paxton’s legal filing.

    Commissioner Tom Ramsey, the lone Republican on the court, voted against funding the immigration defense services but was sued anyway. 

    Immigration rights advocates have argued that it costs more to incarcerate people accused of immigration violations than to provide legal counsel. 

    Paxton sued immigration rights group FIEL Houston last year, alleging that they violated federal rules that govern nonprofits’ political involvement by criticizing Trump and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. The case was initially dismissed by a trial court but a Court of Appeals judge ruled last month that legal action can proceed. 

    “Anti-American organizations like FIEL’s aim is to destroy our country and flood our nation with foreign invaders,” Paxton said at the time. 

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    April Towery

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  • Houston Advocate Says Immigrants Are In The Civil Rights Fight of Their Lives – Houston Press

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    Cesar Espinosa has been championing civil rights for immigrants for more than two decades, and the battle is becoming increasingly more dangerous under President Donald Trump’s aggressive approach to deportation, the FIEL Houston leader said this week. 

    “I believe to my core that this is the civil rights fight of our time,” Espinosa said. “Just like other people before us gave it their all to make sure that their community was respected, that is what we are willing to do for our immigrant community. Unfortunately, there is some worry about myself and our families, but at the end of the day, I’m fighting for a bigger cause and we’re fighting to make sure other people don’t have to suffer.” 

    Undeterred by a federal government shutdown announced Wednesday morning, it appears Texas and U.S. leaders are more committed than ever to deporting undocumented individuals, whether or not they have violent criminal histories. 

    Tension geared toward Immigration and Customs Enforcement has mounted since President Trump took office in January and tasked officers with removing what he refers to as “illegal aliens” from their job sites and immigration court rather than detaining them as they cross the border. 

    Trump has hailed the effort as an initiative to deport violent criminals from the United States, but Espinosa says the government’s approach is heavy-handed and has prompted the immigrant-led FIEL Houston to ramp up its efforts. Last year the organization received one or two calls a month for legal assistance; now they’re getting 15 to 20 calls a day, he said. 

    College students have had their visas revoked and people have been placed under ICE holds for minor driving infractions, and in one case, fishing without a license. Houstonians have reported that they are uncomfortable reporting domestic violence situations, even though their lives may be in danger, for fear of being deported. 

    “We’re seeing it in real life,” Espinosa said. “Just last week, we had a woman who was suffering from schizophrenia. [Her family] called the police to try to get help for this woman, and she was just deported, with no regard for her mental health. She had no criminal convictions. She should have been taken to a hospital.”

    More than 70 percent of the people being detained have no criminal record, Espinosa said, citing statistics from Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a nonprofit research organization that compiles government data on immigration. 

    More than 70 percent of the people being detained by ICE have no previous criminal history, according to the nonprofit research organization Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. Credit: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse
    More than 13,000 people are currently detained in ICE facilities in Texas, according to the nonprofit research organization Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. Credit: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse

    A majority of Harris County residents surveyed earlier this year said they generally support the deportation of undocumented violent criminals, but thousands gathered in June to protest Trump’s immigration policies at a No Kings rally at Houston City Hall. More than 2,000 No Kings protests are scheduled across the country on October 18. 

    Shooting at Dallas ICE Facility

    Two detainees at an ICE facility in Dallas were killed on September 24 when 29-year-old Joshua Jahn allegedly opened fire from the roof of a building, striking people in a van at the facility’s sally port entrance area. A third detainee was released from the hospital on Thursday and returned to ICE custody. Authorities said Jahn then turned the gun on himself and died at the scene. 

    Officials at the time said Jahn fired “indiscriminately,” and left behind handwritten notes indicating he “hoped his actions would give ICE agents real terror of being gunned down.” 

    Jahn was a white U.S. citizen who “likely acted alone” and “indicated he did not expect to survive the attack,” authorities said at a press conference after the incident, adding that the alleged shooter did not appear to be affiliated with any political group. 

    The Dallas Morning News reported that Jahn was registered as an Independent in Oklahoma. The suspect’s brother told NBC News that Jahn was not interested in politics and had not voiced opposition to ICE. 

    That brings up the issue of media accountability, said Harris County Democratic Party precinct chair, blogger and radio host Egberto Willies

    “Mainstream media has long served as a guardrail for establishment interests,” Willies wrote on his Substack blog, Egberto Off the Record, the day of the ICE shooting in Dallas. “When stories of political violence emerge, this machinery filters which facts amplify, which narratives dominate, and which doubts swirl in public discourse.”

    “In this case, early reporting emphasized whether the shooter was left or right, rather than centering [on] victims or demanding complete transparency,” Gillies said. “They omitted details — such as weapon type and race — in the initial framing, knowing that such omissions would direct the viewer’s assumptions.” 

    FBI Director Kash Patel said after the Dallas shooting that the “initial review of the evidence shows an ideological motive behind this attack.”

    Trump wrote on social media after the Dallas incident: “This violence is the result of the Radical Left Democrats constantly demonizing Law Enforcement, calling for ICE to be demolished, and comparing ICE Officers to Nazis.” 

    The divisive rhetoric only deepens the negative feelings that people have toward institutions and agencies, Espinosa said. “As things play out in such a public manner, with social media, of people getting arrested, assaulted, beaten up, kids getting pushed to the ground, it’s going to cement ill feelings toward the government from a lot of people,” he said. 

    “We want to say that something’s got to give and we have to find common ground, but unfortunately, this administration is not making it easy to do so,” he added. 

    The detainees who died in the Dallas shooting were not violent criminals, their family members told CNN. However, El Salvadoran national Norlan Guzman-Fuentes, 37, had prior arrests for battery, improper exhibit of a firearm or dangerous weapon, criminal mischief, driving while intoxicated, and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. 

    Miguel Angel Garcia-Hernandez, a 32-year-old Mexican immigrant, had lived in the United States since he was 13 years old. He was arrested for suspicion of driving under the influence in August and was later detained by immigration authorities. A CNN report said Garcia-Hernandez had previous convictions for “giving fictitious information, evading arrest, driving while intoxicated, and fleeing police.”

    Cesar Espinosa rallies a crowd at a May protest in Houston. Credit: FIEL Houston

    Espinosa said FIEL Houston does not condone violence and the organization’s leaders are worried that “politics has become so volatile that people on all sides of the aisle are turning to acts of violence to make their voices heard.”

    “We have to emphasize that the victims of this shooting ended up being immigrants,” he said. “At the end of the day there are more questions, still, than there are answers. Why were they detained? Should they have been detained? We don’t believe that should be the case, but we need to know more.” 

    The politically driven narratives about the shooter have added to confusion and neglected to address gun control and mental health issues, Espinosa added. 

    “The constant in all of this is people with mental health issues who have access to guns,” he said. “Yet we as a society and as a country refuse to address that. Whether it’s immigration or politics, anybody can be a victim to one of these scenarios.”

    Dallas City Councilman Adam Bazaldua said after the ICE shooting that the country is “spiraling into a place where hate and violence are becoming the answer far too often.”

    “We are all witnessing terror each and every day, and we know that our immigrant neighbors are bearing the brunt of it,” he said. “I’m seeing some of our political leaders rush to exploit this tragedy for political gain instead of acknowledging the pain and fear it represents.” 

    “I want to be abundantly clear: Here in Dallas — and across this country — immigrants are our friends, our neighbors, our colleagues, and our family,” the councilman added. “At a time when our communities are desperate for healing, leadership, and real solutions, we are instead met with more division and finger-pointing. We cannot continue down this path of hate and violence.”

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday a joint task force between state and local law enforcement that will crack down on violent crimes committed by repeat offenders throughout the Houston area. Credit: Office of the Governor

    Hours after the Dallas shooting, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said, “We will not let this cowardly attack impede our efforts to secure the border, enforce immigration law, and ensure law and order. The Texas Department of Public Safety and Texas National Guard will continue our work with the Department of Homeland Security and ICE to arrest, detain, and deport any individuals in this country illegally — without interruption.” 

    Abbott held a press conference in Houston on Wednesday, announcing the addition of state police to focus on repeat violent offenders. Neither Houston Mayor John Whitmire nor Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez was there, and those in attendance said the governor, a Republican, bashed Democratic judges for not being tough on crime. 

    Neil Aquino, founder of the Houston Democracy Project, said it was clear that “these additional state police are more resources for ICE as they terrorize the Latino working and laboring class and are more resources for Trump to enforce the suspension of civil liberties.” 

    Espinosa spoke to the Houston Press prior to Abbott’s press conference but said he expected it would result in more people getting turned over to ICE.

    “The Trump administration has made it very clear that because ICE is funded by the Department of Defense that they will not back down in terms of escalating their deportation machine,” he said. “In fact, the opposite has happened. When everybody is worrying about what’s next for our country, they have kept their focus on going after hard-working immigrant people.” 

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    April Towery

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