ReportWire

Tag: Immigration

  • North Carolina city declares itself a ‘Fourth Amendment Workplace’ to protect illegal immigrants from ICE

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A North Carolina city has approved a measure declaring itself a “Fourth Amendment Workplace” and boosting protections for illegal immigrant workers targeted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    The Durham City Council passed the resolution on Tuesday with a unanimous vote to shield city workers against raids and arrests carried out by federal officials, according to The Duke Chronicle.

    The Fourth Amendment protects citizens against unreasonable searches and arrests, and requires warrants with probable cause of a crime before seizing a person or property.

    The resolution instructs city staff to “uphold the 4th amendment at their workplace and city agencies and report back to Council any barriers to effective training on the 4th Amendment for any departments,” The Chronicle reported.

    NEW MEXICO MAYOR SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER TO ‘COUNTERACT’ TRUMP’S IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT

    The Durham City Council passed a resolution protecting illegal immigrants from ICE raids with a unanimous vote. (David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)

    The city has “historically pursued equity and safety for all residents,” the resolution stated, adding that having the trust of residents is essential to carrying out its operations.

    The measure emphasizes that the threat of “unconstitutional seizure” has prevented migrants in the city from “safely engaging in public life, including pursuing employment and education.”

    The resolution comes after four ICE agents in plain clothes showed up without warning at the Durham County Courthouse in July to detain an illegal immigrant facing a felony charge for domestic violence, although the man did not make it to his scheduled court appearance and no arrests were made, WRAL reported.

    “Our residents witnessed ICE agents in our community, instilling widespread fear and uncertainty,” Mayor Leo Williams said in a statement after the incident. “While local leaders cannot legally override the federal government’s use and weaponization of ICE, we can and must stand in strategic solidarity with our neighbors.”

    Residents also organized a demonstration on the day of the incident to protest ICE raids and arrests.

    PORTLAND CITY COUNCIL CONSIDERS HOW TO BOOT ICE OUT OF CITY FACILITY

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers

    The city passed a resolution to declare itself a “Fourth Amendment Workplace” and boost protections for migrant workers targeted by ICE. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    “This is a direct threat to the safety and dignity of our communities. The Courthouse should be a place where people can seek justice, not where they’re hunted down by federal agents,” Durham County Board of Commissioners Chair Nida Allam, who was part of the demonstration, said at the time.

    At the council meeting for the resolution, several migrants and their families spoke in favor of its passage, expressing their anxieties in day-to-day life, according to The Chronicle. Other residents also pushed for added protections for illegal immigrants and training for city staff to enforce the new measure.

    “Durham celebrates a rich diversity of residents, and we understand that the Trump administration’s mass deportation targets a completely manufactured panic surrounding immigrants, puts anyone who does not appear white, anyone who does not speak English or has an accent, anyone regardless of papers or immigration status, at risk of abuse, abduction and even deportation to [a] country they have no ties to,” Elise Ballan, chair of the Durham Workers’ Rights Commission, said at the meeting.

    Durham joins Carrboro, which became the first North Carolina town to adopt a Fourth Amendment Workplace resolution in May.

    In February, ICE arrested 11 people in Durham who were in the U.S. illegally, according to federal officials. Some Durham residents reported being concerned about the safety of their family members after the arrests.

    homeland security logo

    The resolution emphasizes that the threat of “unconstitutional seizure” has prevented migrants in the city from “safely engaging in public life.” (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The federal government accused Durham in April of being a so-called “sanctuary” community for allegedly failing to cooperate with immigration officials

    Local officials have since said the “sanctuary” label had “no legal or factual basis,” according to The Chronicle.

    Last year, the North Carolina General Assembly overrode Democrat Gov. Josh Stein’s veto of a bill that forces sheriffs to cooperate with federal immigration efforts.

    Mayor Pro Tempore Mark Anthony Middleton said at a candidate forum earlier this week that he would never back collaboration between Durham police and ICE, The Chronicle reported.

    Source link

  • Raid on upstate New York food manufacturer leads to dozens of detentions

    CATO, N.Y. — Federal agents forced open the doors of a snack bar manufacturer and took away dozens of workers in a surprise enforcement action that the plant’s co-owner called “terrifying.”

    Video and photos taken at the Nutrition Bar Confectioners plant Thursday showed numerous law enforcement vehicles outside the plant and workers being escorted from the building to a Border Patrol van. Immigration agents ordered everyone to a lunchroom, where they asked for proof the workers were in the country legally, according to one 24-year-old worker who was briefly detained.

    The reason for the enforcement action was unclear. Local law enforcement officials said the operation was led by U.S. Homeland Security Investigations, which did not respond to requests for information. Nutrition Bar Confectioners co-owner Lenny Schmidt said he was also in the dark about the purpose of the raid.

    “There’s got to be a better way to do it,” Schmidt told The Associated Press on Friday at the family-owned business in Cato, New York, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) west of Syracuse.

    The facility’s employees had all been vetted and had legal documentation, Schmidt said, adding that he would have cooperated with law enforcement if he’d been told there were concerns.

    “Coming in like they did, it’s frightening for everybody — the Latinos, Hispanics that work here, and everybody else that works here as well, even myself and my family. It’s terrifying,” he said.

    Cayuga County Sheriff Brian Schenck said his deputies were among those on scene Thursday morning after being asked a month ago to assist federal agencies in executing a search warrant “relative to an ongoing criminal investigation.”

    He did not detail the nature of the investigation.

    The lack of explanation left state Sen. Rachel May, a Democrat who represents the district, with questions.

    “It’s not clear to me, if it’s a longstanding criminal investigation, why the workers would have been rounded up,” May said by phone Friday. “I feel like there are things that don’t quite add up.”

    The 24-year-old worker, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he feared retribution, said that after he showed the agents he is a legal U.S. resident, they wrote down his information and photographed him.

    “Some of the women started to cry because their kids were at school or at day care. It was very sad to see,” said the worker, who arrived from Guatemala six years ago, then became a legal resident two years ago after working with an immigration attorney.

    He said his partner lacked legal status and was among those taken away.

    The two of them started working at the factory about two years ago. He was assigned to the snack bar wrapping department and she to the packing area. He said he couldn’t talk to her before she was led away by agents and didn’t know Friday where she had been detained.

    “What they are doing to us is not right. We’re here to work. We are not criminals,” he said.

    Schmidt said he believed immigration enforcement agents are singling out any company with “some sort of Hispanic workforce, whether small or large.”

    The raid came the same day that immigration authorities detained 475 people, most of them South Korean nationals, at a manufacturing site in Georgia where Korean automaker Hyundai makes electric vehicles.

    Without his missing employees, Schmidt estimated production at the food manufacturer would drop by about half, making it a challenge to meet customer demand. The plant employs close to 230 people.

    “We’ll just do what we need to do to move forward to give our customers the product that they need,” he said, “and then slowly recoup, rehire where we need.”

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, said the workers detained included parents of “at least a dozen children at risk of returning from school to an empty house.”

    “I’ve made it clear: New York will work with the federal government to secure our borders and deport violent criminals, but we will never stand for masked ICE agents separating families and abandoning children,” she said in a statement.

    The advocacy group Rural and Migrant Ministry said between 50 and 60 people, most of them from Guatemala, were still being held Friday. Among those released late Thursday, after about 11 hours, was a mother of a newborn child who needed to nurse her baby, said the group’s chief program officer, Wilmer Jimenez.

    The worker who was briefly detained said he has been helping to support his parents and siblings, who grow corn and beans in Guatemala.

    He said he took Friday off but plans to get back to work on Monday.

    “I have to go back because I can’t be without work,” he said.

    ——

    Olga Rodriguez in San Francisco and Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, New York, contributed to this report.

    Source link

  • Judge blocks Trump from ending TPS for Venezuelans and Haitians



    Judge blocks Trump from ending TPS for Venezuelans and Haitians – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A federal judge in California ruled that the Trump administration’s attempt to end the Temporary Protected Status program for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan and Haitian migrants was unlawful. Camilo Montoya-Galvez explains.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Judge says Trump administration’s effort to end TPS protections for Venezuelans and Haitians is illegal

    Washington — A federal judge in California ruled Friday that the Trump administration’s attempt to end the Temporary Protected Status program for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan and Haitian migrants was unlawful.

    The move by U.S. District Judge Edward Chen effectively sets aside the administration’s attempt to end temporary legal protections and work permits for certain people from Venezuela and Haiti — unless his ruling is overturned on appeal. Chen ruled in favor of the National TPS Alliance, an organization that represents TPS holders across the country, and a group of Venezuelan migrants who received protections under the program.

    “This case arose from action taken post haste by the current DHS Secretary, Kristi Noem, to revoke the legal status of Venezuelan and Haitian TPS holders, sending them back to conditions that are so dangerous that even the State Department advises against travel to their home countries,” Chen wrote in a 69-page decision. “The Secretary’s action in revoking TPS was not only unprecedented in the manner and speed in which it was taken but also violates the law.”

    In May, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end the TPS program for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, freezing an earlier ruling by Chen.

    Chen said that decision concerned only preliminary relief he ordered that postponed the Department of Homeland Security’s actions. The high court’s order, he said, did not bar him from adjudicating the case on the merits or issuing relief under the Administrative Procedure Act, a federal law that governs the agency rulemaking process.

    The Justice Department will likely appeal the decision.

    The Department of Homeland Security criticized the ruling in a statement, and said Noem will “use every legal option at the Department’s disposal to end this chaos and prioritize the safety of Americans.”

    “For decades the TPS program has been abused, exploited, and politicized as a de facto amnesty program. Its use has been all the more dangerous given the millions of unvetted illegal aliens the Biden Administration let into this country,” the statement read.

    Congress in 1990 established the Temporary Protected Status program, which allows the federal government to provide temporary immigration protections for migrants from countries experiencing wars, natural disasters, or other “extraordinary and temporary” conditions that make it dangerous to send deportees there. The program lets TPS holders temporarily remain in the U.S. and apply for renewable work permits. 

    During the Biden administration, the Department of Homeland Security designated Venezuela, which is the largest country included in the TPS program, covering roughly 600,000 migrants. It also created or expanded programs for Afghanistan, Cameroon, Haiti and Ukraine. The Biden administration had extended the TPS designations for Venezuela and Haiti.

    After President Trump returned to the White House for his second term, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem first sought to reverse the TPS extension for Venezuela, and then moved to terminate the designation altogether. She also sought to unwind TPS protections for Haitians and migrants of several other countries.

    The National TPS Alliance and Venezuelan TPS holders filed their lawsuit challenging Noem’s decisions in February and argued she did not have the authority to unilaterally roll back the extension granted by her predecessor.

    In his decision against the Trump administration, Chen said Noem’s attempts to reverse the TPS extensions granted by the Biden administration were “extraordinary and unusual,” and marked the first time in the program’s 35-year-history that such a step had been taken. He called the decision-making process surrounding the move “truncated and condensed,” and said Noem failed to consult the appropriate agencies.

    “As a matter of law, the Secretary lacked the implicit authority to vacate. Even if she had such authority, there is no genuine dispute that she exceeded that authority,” he wrote.

    Source link

  • Kemp sending Georgia National Guard troops to join crackdown on D.C. crime

    ATLANTA – Gov. Brian Kemp announced Friday that he is sending 316 members of the Georgia National Guard to Washington, D.C., to support President Donald Trump’s use of troops to crack down on crime in the nation’s capital.

    The Georgia Guard contingent heading to Washington will include 300 soldiers and 16 support staff.

    “Georgia is proud to stand with the Trump administration in its mission to ensure the security and beauty of our nation’s capital,” Kemp said. “We share a commitment to upholding public safety and are grateful to these brave Guardsmen and women, for the families that support them, and for their dedication to service above self.

    “As they have demonstrated again and again, our Georgia Guard is well equipped to fulfill both this mission and its obligations to the people of our state.”

    With Kemp’s announcement, Georgia becomes the eighth state to deploy more than 2,200 Guardsmen from around the nation to provide a visible presence in support of local law enforcement in Washington. All eight are led by Republican governors.

    Trump issued an executive order last month declaring a crime emergency in the District of Columbia, which has prompted criticism from Democrats who argue violent crime rates are higher in other cities that have not drawn the president’s attention and that using the military to police U.S. civilians is illegal.

    “The uniform should never be used to intimidate and divide but to protect and serve,” said state Sen. Kenya Wicks, D-Fayetteville, one of several military veterans in the General Assembly who spoke out against the deployment Friday at a news conference inside the state Capitol. “Not only is it unconstitutional. It is a violation of the oath Guard members are sworn to uphold.”

    “This is not about public safety,” added state Rep. Eric Bell, D-Jonesboro. “It’s an erosion of American freedom.”

    Kemp said Friday that sending Georgia National Guard troops to Washington is a separate mission from his decision late last month to deploy about 75 soldiers and airmen to help support U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations across Georgia.

    The 300 Georgia Guard troops heading to Washington will relieve service members who have been stationed in the District of Columbia from the start of the mission. They are scheduled to mobilize by the middle of this month and will be on active duty in Washington shortly thereafter, barring any changes to the schedule that may arise.

    The 16 support staff personnel were sent earlier this week to Joint Base Anacostia-Boiling in Washington where they will work with other military personnel providing support for the broader mission. They are not expected to have any direct interaction with civilians.

    Dave Williams and Capitol Beat News Service

    Source link

  • Allegations of ‘inhumane’ treatment prompt ACLU of Virginia to demand changes at Chantilly ICE Field Office – WTOP News

    The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office in Chantilly, Virginia, “is failing to maintain safe and lawful conditions” for immigrants held at the facility, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia and the National Immigration Project.

    The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office in Chantilly, Virginia, “is failing to maintain safe and lawful conditions” for immigrants held at the facility, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia and the National Immigration Project.

    In an interview with WTOP, Sophia Gregg, a senior immigration attorney with ACLU of Virginia, said the ICE field office, which is designed to process immigrants, is instead serving as a makeshift holding facility.

    “We’re hearing of reports of upwards of eight days people are being held there in overcrowded rooms with anywhere from 12 to 100 other people,” she said, adding there have been reports of no beds, no showers and inadequate toilet facilities.

    The ACLU of Virginia also alleges that people being held at the Chantilly field office have been barred from having contact with their attorneys.

    “There’s very limited information coming out about the conditions because ICE is prohibiting attorneys from witnessing, viewing and advocating for their clients who might be held there in unsafe and inhumane conditions,” Gregg said.

    “They’re being told that you can’t talk to your attorney until you get to a long-term holding facility. They’re being told that attorneys can’t visit them there. This is patently unconstitutional,” Gregg said. “Everyone, regardless of immigration status, is afforded access to counsel.”

    Gregg’s organization and the National Immigration Project have sent a letter to ICE officials demanding the conditions be rectified.

    At minimum, Gregg said, the immigrants being held should be released or detained at a long-term facility “that has an entire infrastructure to address medical needs, to address attorney access and can provide them with safe conditions, presumably.”

    WTOP has reached out to the ICE Field Office in Chantilly. The facility is described on ICE’s website as having the District of Columbia and Virginia as its “Area of Responsibility.”

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kate Ryan

    Source link

  • 475 arrested during federal raid of Hyundai battery site in South Georgia

    Federal authorities say 475 people were detained this week in what Homeland Security Investigations called the largest single-site enforcement operation in its history.

    The raid took place Thursday at the HLGA battery plant site in southeast Georgia, a joint venture between Hyundai Motor Group and LG Energy Solution, as part of a months-long probe into alleged unlawful employment practices and other federal crimes.

    U.S. Attorney Meg Heap and Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent in Charge Steve Schrank said the operation followed a judicial search warrant and focused on employers suspected of exploiting undocumented workers. Officials stressed the effort was not a “round-up” but the result of extensive evidence-gathering, interviews and court approval.

    Of those encountered, 475 people were found to be in the country illegally or otherwise in violation of their status and were turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. A majority were Korean nationals, according to Schrank, though investigators are still reviewing nationality breakdowns.

    The arrests involved a network of contractors and subcontractors at the site, not just the parent company, Schrank said. The individuals are being held in ICE custody, with many transferred to the Folkston ICE Processing Center.

    Schrank said no serious injuries were reported during the operation. One worker was treated for overheating at the scene, and one agent sustained a minor cut.

    ATF Atlanta posted photos on their X account, saying they joined HSI, FBI, ICE and Georgia State Patrol for the raid.

    The investigation remains ongoing, and no criminal charges have yet been filed. Authorities confirmed they are also examining potential labor trafficking, subcontracting practices and employer accountability.

    Hyundai is reportedly cooperating with law enforcement and is “committed to abiding by all labor and immigration regulations,” according to spokesperson Michael Stewart. 

    WATCH PRESS CONFERENCE

    What they’re saying:

    According to the BBC, multiple Korean nationals were detained. The South Korean foreign ministry is calling it an “unjust infringement” on their rights. 

    Diplomats are reportedly being dispatched from the South Korean embassy in Washington and the consulate in Atlanta to the site, according to The Associated Press

    The battery plant, which is currently under construction, is located next to Hyundai’s Metaplant America facility. The new plant has promised to create around 8,500 jobs by 2030. 

    PREVIOUS STORY: Hyundai’s massive new plant celebrating opening today in south Georgia

    The other side:

    In response to ICE raids at the Hyundai Metaplant in and around Savannah, Georgia, AFL-CIO President Yvonne Brooks has issued the following statement:

    Georgia’s labor movement is outraged by ICE’s escalating presence at workplaces across the state. This raid is the latest in an ongoing campaign of harassment that has targeted immigrant Georgians as they try to earn an honest living. Arresting and detaining workers, who are exploited every day and risk their lives every day on the job, creates an atmosphere of fear that terrorizes workers and their families and increases the workload burden on their coworkers. And when multiple workers have died during the construction of this very plant, the only federal action that could possibly be justified is to strengthen enforcement of occupational safety and health protections and other labor rights—a far cry from ICE raids.

    The Georgia AFL-CIO stands with every worker who has been targeted by these politically-motivated raids. Our movement will do everything we can to support all working families. That’s what solidarity looks like, and it cannot be broken. Workers in our state will not be pitted against each other.

    ImmigrationNewsGeorgiaNews

    Joyce.Lupiani@fox.com (Joyce Lupiani)

    Source link

  • Gregory Bovino, head of Los Angeles campaign, shows how immigration agents rack up arrests

    LOS ANGELES — Gregory Bovino’s distinguished Border Patrol career was in a downward spiral. In August 2023, he was relieved of command of the agency’s El Centro, California, sector, where he rose to be one of 20 regional chiefs across the country.

    Bovino blamed a batch of perceived transgressions, details of which have not been previously reported: an online profile picture of him posing with an M4 assault rifle; social media posts that were considered inappropriate; and sworn congressional testimony that he and other sector chiefs gave on the state of the border during a record surge of migrants.

    Thirty minutes after his second congressional hearing, Bovino said, he was removed from his position and asked, “Are you going to retire now?”

    He did not retire, the profile photo with the assault rifle is back online and, at 55, he is leading immigration enforcement in Los Angeles, which the federal government has called “ground zero for the effects of the border crisis.” Bovino’s fall and rise illustrates how fundamentally immigration policy, tactics and messaging have changed under President Donald Trump.

    While Trump’s aggressive deportation plans accelerate, Bovino carefully hones his image, both his own and the one projected to the country that shows well-armed officers moving swiftly into place to make arrests.

    On a recent August morning, several unmarked SUVs with tinted windows sped to the curb outside a Home Depot in the Van Nuys area of Los Angeles. A Guatemalan tamale vendor was handcuffed while men with M4 rifles and military-style gear watched over and day laborers fled. Protesters sounded sirens and whistles. One briefly blocked a Border Patrol vehicle, but agents left in a little more than four minutes.

    The same team, dressed as civilians with faces masked and badges on their waists, stormed a car wash in the suburb of Montebello around 11:30 a.m. They made four arrests, including a Guatemalan worker who fled down an alley and a Mexican employee who was tackled after running into the office. It was over in seven minutes.

    These were just the kind of fast-paced, blunt maneuvers that Bovino relishes. With a knack for made-for-TV moments, Bovino’s operation has riven parts of Los Angeles and given Trump allies fodder for boasts.

    In a city famous for second acts, Bovino is certainly having one. The North Carolina native with ample biceps and hair spiked with gel is an avatar of the Trump era, once scorned for his tactics, now praised because of them.

    With the change from President Joe Biden to Trump, Bovino has gone from nearly being forced to retire to a MAGA-world hero who sends holiday cards to colleagues that show agents with heavy weapons.

    Undeterred by court orders over racial profiling, Bovino also revels in breaking norms. Agents have smashed car windows, blown open a door to a house and patrolled the fabled MacArthur Park on horseback. Bovino often appears in tactical gear, as he did outside Gov. Gavin Newsom’s news conference on congressional redistricting on Aug. 14.

    He also knows the power of a good slogan, calling the pacing of his operation “turn and burn.”

    “We’re not going to hit one location, we’re going to hit as many as we can,” Bovino said in an interview in a seventh-floor conference room of the federal building in West Los Angeles, where an unused office wing serves as a sparsely furnished temporary base. “All over — all over — the Los Angeles region, we’re going to turn and burn to that next target and the next and the next and the next, and we’re not going to stop. We’re not going to stop until there’s not a problem here.”

    Elliot Spagat

    Source link

  • DHS: 475 detained in immigration raid at Georgia Hyundai plant

    SAVANNAH, Ga. — About 475 people were detained in an immigration enforcement action at a Hyundai factory in Georgia on Thursday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

    In a press briefing Friday, the special agent in charge of the effort said the department executed a judicial search warrant as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of unlawful employment practices at the factory where the South Korean auto giant manufactures electric vehicles.


    What You Need To Know

    • About 475 people were detained in an immigration enforcement action at a Hyundai factory in Georgia on Thursday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
    • In a press briefing Friday, the special agent in charge of the effort said the department executed a judicial search warrant as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of unlawful employment practices at the factory where the South Korean auto giant manufactures electric vehicles.
    • No criminal charges have been filed in what Homeland Security Special Agent in Charge Steven Schrank said was the largest single-site enforcement operation in the history of DHS investigations
    • A majority of the 475 people who were detained were South Korean nationals, and all were illegally present in the United States or working unlawfully in the country, Schrank said

    “This operation underscores our commitment to protecting jobs for Georgians and Americans, ensuring a level playing field for businesses that comply with the law, safeguarding the integrity of our economy and protecting workers from exploitation,” Homeland Security Special Agent in Charge Steven Schrank said Friday.

    No criminal charges have been filed in what Schrank said was the largest single-site enforcement operation in the history of Homeland Security investigations.

    A majority of the 475 people who were detained were South Korean nationals, and all were illegally present in the United States or working unlawfully in the country, Schrank said. He added that they had entered the country through a variety of means, including illegally crossing the border, entering through a visa waiver that prohibited them from working and overstaying visas. 

    “Each individual was questioned on their status,” Schrank said. “Their documents were checked.”

    Those determined to be illegally present have been turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for removal.

    The arrests were the result of a monthslong investigation conducted through a collaboration of agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security; ICE; the U.S. Labor Department; the FBI; the Drug Enforcement Administration; U.S. Customs and Border Protection; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; the IRS; the U.S. Marshals Service; and the Georgia State Patrol. 

    Thursday’s raid targeted one of Georgia’s largest and most high-profile manufacturing sites, touted by the governor and other officials as the largest economic development project in the state’s history. Hyundai Motor Group, South Korea’s biggest automaker, began manufacturing EVs a year ago at the $7.6 billion plant, which employs about 1,200 people, and has partnered with LG Energy Solution to build an adjacent battery plant, slated to open next year.

    ICE spokesman Lindsay Williams confirmed that federal authorities conducted an enforcement operation at the 3,000-acre site west of Savannah, Georgia. He said agents were focused on the construction site for the battery plant.

    In a televised statement, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lee Jae Myung said the country is taking active measures to address the case, dispatching diplomats from its embassy in Washington and consulate in Atlanta to the site, and planning to form an on-site response team centered on the local mission.

    “The business activities of our investors and the rights of our nationals must not be unjustly infringed in the process of U.S. law enforcement,” he said.

    At an event with President Donald Trump earlier this year, Hyundai announced it would invest an additional $5 billion in the United States, on top of an already announced $21 billion it had committed for U.S. investments from 2025 to 2028. The company plans to build a new steel plant in Louisiana, expand its U.S. auto production and create a robotics innovation hub.

    Trump’s administration has undertaken sweeping ICE operations as part of a mass deportation agenda. Immigration officers have raided farms, construction sites, restaurants and auto repair shops.

    The Pew Research Center, citing preliminary Census Bureau data, says the U.S. labor force lost more than 1.2 million immigrants from January through July. That includes people who are in the country illegally as well as legal residents.

    Hyundai and LG’s battery joint venture, HL-GA Battery Company, said in a statement that it’s “cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities” and paused construction of the battery site to assist their work.

    Operations at Hyundai’s EV manufacturing plant weren’t interrupted, said plant spokesperson Bianca Johnson.

    Susan Carpenter, Associated Press

    Source link

  • South Korea expresses ‘concern’ over US immigration raid at Hyundai’s Georgia plant

    SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea on Friday expressed “concern and regret” over a major U.S. immigration raid at a sprawling Georgia site where South Korean auto company Hyundai manufactures electric vehicles, which officials said led to the detainment of an unspecified number of South Korean nationals.

    South Korea’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Lee Jaewoong, read a statement following South Korean media reports that the raid by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement resulted in the detainment of around 450 people, including 30 South Korean nationals. Lee did not specify exactly how many South Koreans were detained but called the number “large.”

    Thursday’s raid targeted one of Georgia’s largest and most high-profile manufacturing sites, touted by the governor and other officials as the largest economic development project in the state’s history. Hyundai Motor Group, South Korea’s biggest automaker, began manufacturing EVs a year ago at the $7.6 billion plant, which employs about 1,200 people, and has partnered with LG Energy Solution to build an adjacent battery plant, slated to open next year.

    ICE spokesman Lindsay Williams confirmed that federal authorities were conducting an enforcement operation at the 3,000-acre (1,214-hectare) site west of Savannah, Georgia. He said agents were focused on the construction site for the battery plant.

    “The business activities of our investors and the rights of our nationals must not be unjustly infringed in the process of U.S. law enforcement,” Lee said.

    Lee said the ministry is taking active measures to address the case, dispatching diplomats from its embassy in Washington and consulate in Atlanta to the site, and planning to form an on-site response team centered on the local mission.

    The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that agents executed a search warrant “as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of unlawful employment practices and other serious federal crimes.”

    It did not say whether anyone was detained or arrested.

    President Donald Trump’s administration has undertaken sweeping ICE operations as part of a mass deportation agenda. Immigration officers have raided farms, construction sites, restaurants and auto repair shops.

    The Pew Research Center, citing preliminary Census Bureau data, says the U.S. labor force lost more than 1.2 million immigrants from January through July. That includes people who are in the country illegally as well as legal residents.

    Hyundai and LG’s battery joint venture, HL-GA Battery Company, said in a statement that it’s “cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities” and paused construction to assist their work.

    Operations at Hyundai’s EV manufacturing plant weren’t interrupted, said plant spokesperson Bianca Johnson.

    __

    Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia.

    Source link

  • 450 detained in major raid by ICE, others at huge Hyundai site in Georgia, officials say

    Savannah, Ga. — U.S. immigration authorities on Thursday raided the sprawling site where Hyundai manufactures electric vehicles in southeast Georgia, conducting a search that shut down construction on an adjacent factory being built to produce EV batteries.

    In a post on X, the Atlanta office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said it “joined HSI, FBI, DEA, ICE, GSP and other agencies in a major immigration enforcement operation at the Hyundai mega site battery plant in Bryan County, GA, leading to the apprehension of 450 unlawful aliens, emphasizing our commitment to community safety.”

    The operation targeted one of Georgia’s largest and most high-profile manufacturing sites, touted by the governor and other officials as the biggest economic development project in the state’s history. Hyundai Motor Group began manufacturing EVs a year ago at the $7.6 billion plant, which employs about 1,200 people.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Lindsay Williams confirmed that federal authorities were conducting an enforcement operation at the 3,000-acre site west of Savannah. He said agents were focused on the construction site for the battery plant.

    The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that agents executed a search warrant “as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of unlawful employment practices and other serious federal crimes.”

    The South Korean Foreign Ministry said in a statement that, “The economic activities of Korean investment companies and the rights and interests of Korean citizens must not be unfairly infringed upon during U.S. law enforcement operations.

    “We are actively responding to this incident by dispatching the Consul General of the U.S. Embassy in Seoul and the Consulate General in Atlanta to the site and instructing the formation of an on-site response team centered around the local embassy.

    “In Seoul, we also conveyed our concerns and regrets today through the U.S. Embassy in Korea and urged them to exercise extreme caution to ensure that the legitimate rights and interests of Korean citizens are not infringed upon.”

    Georgia State Patrol troopers blocked roads to the Hyundai site. The Georgia Department of Public Safety confirmed they were dispatched to assist federal authorities.

    Video posted to social media Thursday showed workers in yellow safety vests lined up as a man wearing a face mask and a tactical vest with the letters HSI, which stands for Homeland Security Investigations, tells them: “We’re Homeland Security. We have a search warrant for the whole site.”

    “We need construction to cease immediately,” the man says. “We need all work to end on the site right now.”

    The Trump administration has undertaken sweeping ICE operations as part of a mass deportation agenda. Immigration officers have raided farms, construction sites, restaurants and auto repair shops.

    The Pew Research Center, citing preliminary Census Bureau data, says the U.S. labor force lost more than 1.2 million immigrants from January through July. That includes people who are in the country illegally as well as legal residents.

    In addition to making electric vehicles at the site facing Interstate 16 in Bryan County, Hyundai has also partnered with LG Energy Solution to build the battery plant. It’s slated to open sometime next year.

    The joint venture, HL-GA Battery Company, “is cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities,” the company said in a statement. “To assist their work, we have paused construction.”

    But LG Energy Solution Ltd. in South Korea declined to comment on the raid to CBS News.

    Operations at Hyundai’s EV manufacturing plant weren’t interrupted, said plant spokesperson Bianca Johnson.

    “This did not impact people getting to work,” Johnson said in an email. “Production and normal office hours had already begun for the day” when authorities shut down access.

    Source link

  • Operations at ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ back on after appeals court halts judge’s order

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A federal appeals court on Thursday halted a lower court judge’s order to end operations indefinitely at the “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration detention center built in the Florida Everglades.

    The panel voted 2-1 to stay the judge’s order pending the outcome of an appeal, allowing the facility to continue holding migrant detainees – for now.

    Last month, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams issued a preliminary injunction blocking Florida from further expanding the detention center and ordering operations to dwindle by the end of October. The judge also ordered the state to transfer detainees to other facilities and to remove equipment and fencing.

    The rulings came after a lawsuit brought by Friends of the Everglades, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Miccosukee Tribe accused the state and federal officials of not following federal law requiring an environmental review for the detention center, which the groups argue threatens sensitive wetlands that have protected plants and animals.

    FEDERAL JUDGE BLOCKS FLORIDA FROM FURTHER EXPANSION OF ‘ALLIGATOR ALCATRAZ’ IMMIGRATION DETENTION FACILITY

    A federal appeals court halted a lower court judge’s order to end operations indefinitely at the “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration detention center. (Alon Skuy/Getty Images)

    “This is a heartbreaking blow to America’s Everglades and every living creature there, but the case isn’t even close to over,” Elise Bennett, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement.

    In June, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration moved quickly to build the facility at a single-runway training airport in the middle of the Everglades to support President Donald Trump’s efforts to detain and deport migrants. DeSantis has said the facility’s location was intended to deter escape plans.

    Trump toured the facility in July and suggested it could be used as a model for future facilities across the country to support his mass deportation plan.

    Reacting to Thursday’s ruling, DeSantis said that claims that the facility would soon shutter were false.

    “We said we would fight that. We said the mission would continue. So Alligator Alcatraz is in fact, like we’ve always said, open for business,” he said on social media.

    LAWSUITS THREATEN TO UPEND ALLIGATOR ALCATRAZ OPERATIONS

    Trump, Noem, DeSantis tour migrant detention facility in Everglades

    President Donald Trump toured the facility in July and suggested it could be used as a model for future facilities across the country to support his mass deportation plan. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    The Department of Homeland Security described the ruling as “a win for the American people, the rule of law and common sense.”

    “This lawsuit was never about the environmental impacts of turning a developed airport into a detention facility,” DHS said in a statement. “It has and will always be about open-borders activists and judges trying to keep law enforcement from removing dangerous criminal aliens from our communities, full stop.”

    Florida officials said in court papers this week that it would resume accepting detainees at the facility if the request for a stay was granted.

    Though plaintiffs say the case is far from over, claiming that the facility will eventually be shut down.

    Workers install a permanent Alligator Alcatraz sign. The facility is within the Florida Everglades, 36 miles west of the central business district of Miami, in Collier County. Florida, on Thursday, July 3, 2025. (Photo via Getty Images)

    Plaintiffs in the lawsuit against “Alligator Alcatraz” say the case is far from over, claiming that the facility will eventually be shut down. (Getty Images)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “In the meantime, if the DeSantis and Trump administrations choose to ramp operations back up at the detention center, they will just be throwing good money after bad because this ill-considered facility — which is causing harm to the Everglades — will ultimately be shut down,” Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades, said in a statement.

    The plaintiffs have argued that because Florida financed the project itself and the federal government hasn’t directly contributed, “Alligator Alcatraz” falls outside federal environmental review requirements, even though it houses federal detainees.

    In Thursday’s ruling, the appeals court largely accepted those claims.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Source link

  • Defense Dept. to send up to 600 military attorneys to serve as temporary immigration judges

    Washington — The Defense Department is considering authorizing up to 600 military attorneys to serve as temporary immigration judges, a defense official confirmed.

    Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement that at the request of the Justice Department, the Defense Department is in the process of “identifying qualified Judge Advocates and civilian attorneys for details to serve as Temporary Immigration Judges.”

    Parnell said the Defense Department attorneys would help with the backlog of cases “by presiding over immigration hearings.” The Associated Press first reported the Pentagon’s plans.

    The immigration courts are struggling with a backlog of more than 3.4 million cases. But the plan to turn possibly hundreds of military lawyers into immigration judges comes after the Trump administration has fired more than two dozen immigration judges nationwide so far this year. Unlike federal district court judges, immigration judges work for the Justice Department.

    Judge Advocate General Corps officers are tasked with providing legal support to service members and their families or advising commanders on the legalities of warfare. The defense lawyers would likely need to undergo some training in immigration law, procedure and policy. 

    CBS News on Thursday obtained an email that the Defense Department sent to military lawyers in the U.S. Army Reserve on Wednesday seeking 100 volunteers to serve as immigration judges in the Justice Department for a period of 179 days.

    “Applicants must demonstrate a record of sound judgment, legal expertise, analytical ability, wisdom, discernment, and impartiality, along with a professional demeanor, a suitable temperament for the role of a TIJ [Temporary Immigration Judge], and strong written and oral communication skills,” the email reads.

    In the email, the Defense Department urged military lawyers to volunteer because they “will be directly contributing to the resolution of millions of pending immigration cases, reinforcing the Army Reserve’s value to the Nation.” 

    The Trump administration loosened the job requirements for temporary immigration judges last month, allowing a wider group of government lawyers to handle cases in immigration court. Its new rule, published in the Federal Register in late August, states that the Justice Department “no longer believes the restriction of [temporary immigration judges] to current Department employees with a threshold level of immigration law experience serves [the Executive Office for Immigration Review’s] interests.” 

    Previously, only Justice Department lawyers with a decade of immigration law experience or former immigration judges could fill those roles.

    The American Immigration Lawyers Association criticized the plan in a statement after the new rule was published.

    “While DoD attorneys may be well suited to handle military matters, immigration law is entirely different and exceptionally complex,” AILA said. “It makes as much sense as having a cardiologist do a hip replacement.”

    “The work of immigration judges has been described as life and death decisions in traffic court conditions,” the statement continued. “Expecting fair decisions from judges unfamiliar with the law is absurd. This reckless move guts due process and further undermines the integrity of our immigration court system.” 

    The group called on Congress to use its oversight powers “to defend the rule of law and protect the independence of the immigration judiciary.”

    In Florida, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has already proposed loaning National Guard troops to the federal government for use as immigration judges. He said in May that his office had submitted a proposal to the Trump administration that would activate the nine Florida National Guard members who are Judge Advocate General Corps officers to serve as immigration judges, which legal experts told CBS News is unprecedented.

    Typically, when National Guard troops help after a hurricane or secure a protest site, they remain under the command of their state governor, under Title 32 of the U.S. Code. Under DeSantis’ plan, the state would relinquish control of these officers to Washington. Title 10 would snap into place, reassigning the JAG officers under the command of the president and defense secretary. This grants them eligibility to serve as federal immigration judges, appointed by the U.S. attorney general. 

    The Justice Department will pick up the tab for the operation if adopted. It plans to train the officers over six weeks — a crash course in immigration law, procedure and policy. Each officer would need to pass a written exam before donning the judge’s robe.

    Camilo Montoya-Galvez and Josh Gross contributed to this report.  

    Source link

  • December trial set for Milwaukee judge accused of helping man to evade arrest in courtroom

    A Wisconsin judge accused of helping a man evade arrest in her courtroom by U.S. immigration agents will stand trial in December after she decided against appealing a federal judge’s ruling rejecting her attempt to dismiss the case.

    Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan’s attorneys said in federal court on Wednesday that she would not appeal the ruling at this time, but could later. U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman then scheduled her trial to begin Dec. 15. It is expected to last about a week. Jury selection is set for Dec. 11 and Dec. 12.

    Dugan’s case has highlighted the push by President Donald Trump’s administration to confront state and local authorities who resist his sweeping immigration crackdown.

    Democrats have accused the administration of trying to make a national example of Dugan to chill judicial opposition to its deportation efforts.

    She was arrested at the county courthouse in April and indicted on federal charges in May. Dugan argued that the charges should be dismissed, saying that she was acting in her official capacity as a judge and is therefore immune from prosecution.

    Adelman last week rejected that argument and upheld the July recommendation of a magistrate judge who also ruled that the case could proceed.

    Dugan is charged with concealing an individual to prevent arrest, a misdemeanor, and obstruction, which is a felony. She has pleaded not guilty and faces up to six years in prison and a $350,000 fine if convicted on both counts.

    Prosecutors say Dugan escorted Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, 31, and his lawyer out of her courtroom through a back door on April 18 after learning that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were in the courthouse seeking to arrest him for being in the country without permanent legal status.

    Agents arrested Flores-Ruiz outside the courthouse after a brief foot chase.

    Dugan, 66, was suspended with pay by the Wisconsin Supreme Court after she was indicted.

    Originally Published:

    Scott Bauer

    Source link

  • Bondi says human smuggling is ‘getting people killed’ across US as she announces crackdown

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Attorney General Pam Bondi has announced the expansion of Joint Task Force Alpha (JTFA), an initiative to thwart transnational criminal organizations and cartels that fuel human trafficking and smuggling.

    At a press conference in Tampa, Florida Thursday, Bondi warned that “the cost of human smuggling is huge” and that the deadly networks “are getting people killed.”

    She went on to describe JTFA as a key weapon in the war against organized smuggling networks, often led by cartels and “coyotes” who profit from migrants trying to cross U.S. borders.

    “We are investigating and prosecuting their crimes more aggressively than ever. And Joint Task Force Alpha is the tip of the spear,” she added.

    US ACCUSES VENEZUELAN REGIME OF NARCO-TERRORISM OVER ALLIANCES WITH TREN DE ARAGUA, SINALOA CARTEL

    Pam Bondi announces expansion of Joint Task Force Alpha to combat human trafficking and smuggling by cartels at U.S. borders. (AP)

    “These operations are getting people killed,” Bondi said. “The cost of human smuggling is huge. So many families are dying.”

    The Attorney General also detailed how one smuggling ring coached their clients, including children who came to airports alone and were put on planes for connecting flights.

    “They charged up to $40,000 per victim,” she said. “They used Zelle to transfer over $7 million over the course of this scheme, and I believe they had cash profit of over 18 million.”

    Bondi told reporters that since President Donald Trump took office, JTFA had already charged 56 defendants tied to smuggling conspiracies. 

    She highlighted one case involving what she called a “monster” who tried to transport migrants across the U.S.-Canada border, resulting in deaths from exposure.

    AMERICANS IN VACATION HOT SPOT MAY SEE MORE MILITARY THAN MARGARITAS THIS SUMMER

    Soldiers patrol for cartel

    Soldiers patrol the streets of Aguililla, Michoacan state, Mexico, on March 11, 2022 after violent cartel activity.  (Getty Images)

    Other Texas officials at the press event outlined specific cases underscoring the cruelty of smuggling operations.

    U.S. Attorney Justin R. Simmons, Western District of Texas said children as young as three had suffered THC poisoning after traffickers gave them drug-laced gummies to keep them calm and “compliant throughout the process.”

    “The cartels see kids like cocaine,” he said, describing how children are treated as expendable in the billion-dollar illicit trade.

    U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei, Southern District of Texas added the cartels “do not care if you or your children have access to food, water, or even air to breathe. They do not care if you live or die.”

    Launched in June 2021 under then Attorney General Merrick Garland, JTFA was created to target the most prolific human-smuggling and trafficking networks in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras. 

    The task force has since expanded to cover operations in Panama, Colombia, and now northern and maritime U.S. borders.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    JTFA has been credited with over 300 arrests, over 240 convictions, and more than 170 sentencing outcomes, while seizing millions in illicit profits, vehicles, weapons, and property from smuggling organizations.

    Source link

  • State Department Agents Are Now Working With ICE on Immigration

    The DSS employee says that it is common to log all activities as part of a DSS investigation, but until now, immigration enforcement was never a category that could be logged in the system.

    “The system before was always [tracking] for passport fraud, visa fraud, or internal investigation for malfeasance, misfeasance, or for human trafficking,” they say. “But this Title 8, it is veering off from our authority, from our training.”

    A former DSS agent, who worked in one of the State Department’s US offices and spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect their privacy, says that DSS agents based in the US never had the authority to enforce immigration before the second Trump administration. If DSS did work with DHS, it would be because “there’s a nexus in our investigations,” the former agent says.

    DSS agents, the source adds, would have no experience executing on administrative warrants, the kind of warrants that allow a person to be arrested for an immigration violation. “We know what to do for an arrest warrant, all the steps we take and all that,” they say. “We don’t do administrative warrants; we do criminal warrants.”

    Last week, The New York Times reported that DSS officers were participating in the federal takeover of Washington, DC, including in at least one arrest. This also appears to have been an assignment outside their remit.

    Under the Trump administration, the State Department has undergone a major overhaul. In May, the department notified Congress that it intended to create an Office of Remigration as a “hub for immigration issues and repatriation tracking.” The concept of remigration is a far-right plan that calls for immigrants and minorities to be kicked out of Western countries. Last month, some 1,350 State Department employees received termination notices, as the Trump administration has said it aims to cut 15 percent of the department’s staff.

    The DSS agent suspects that participating in and documenting efforts toward immigration enforcement could allow the agency to demonstrate its value in executing the president’s agenda and allow it to protect some of its budget.

    “This definitely only started after Trump took office,” they say.

    The DSS employee, who has worked at other law enforcement agencies, says that “DSS agents are the least trained” and worries that “agents who are ill-trained are now enforcing the immigration law and are trampling on people’s civil rights, and they don’t probably even know about it.”

    Vittoria Elliott

    Source link

  • DHS opens new immigration detention facility inside Louisiana’s Angola prison

    A new immigration detention facility designed to house hundreds of undocumented immigrants convicted of serious crimes opened in Louisiana this week as part of what Attorney General Pam Bondi called a “historic agreement” between the state and federal government.

    The new facility — which is located inside the Louisiana State Penitentiary, commonly known as Angola — is designed to house more than 400 detainees.

    The facility was given the name Camp 57 after Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry being the 57th governor of the state. Federal officials have also dubbed Camp 57 as “Louisiana Lockup.” In a news release, the Department of Homeland Security described it as part of a “new partnership” between the Trump administration and the state of Louisiana.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, center, tours “Camp 57,” a facility to house immigration detainees at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana, on Sept. 3, 2025.

    Gerald Herbert / AP


    U.S. Immigrations Customs and Enforcement officials said that 51 detainees had already arrived at Camp 57 as of Tuesday. 

    “This is not just a typical ICE detention facility that you will see elsewhere in the country,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said during a news conference Wednesday in front of Camp 57, alongside Bondi and Landry.

    She said some of the men who have already transferred there were convicted of serious crimes, including murder and rape. 

    “Louisiana is one of several states stepping up to solve these problems,” Noem said. 

    Noem also indicated that Angola’s “notorious” history was one of the reasons that it was chosen for Camp 57.

    “This is a facility that’s notorious, it’s a facility, Angola Prison is legendary — but that’s a message that these individuals that are going to be here, that are illegal criminals, need to understand,” Noem told reporters.

    Camp 57

    An outside look at Camp 57, an immigration detention facility located inside the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana. Sept. 3, 2025. 

    CBS News


    During Wednesday’s news conference, Landry said the facility is next to a lake “full of alligators” and surrounded by a “forest full of bears.” An officer with the Louisiana Department of Corrections told CBS News Wednesday there are alligators as big as 10 feet in the lake. 

    img-7428.jpg

    The lake outside Camp 57, an immigration detention facility located inside the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana. Sept. 3, 2025.   

    CBS News


    Camp 57 has a chapel and law library, law enforcement officials familiar with the project told CBS News Wednesday. 

    The facility, which will house only men, is separated from the rest of the Louisiana state prisoners incarcerated in the Angola complex, which spans 18,000 acres. 

    Camp 57 was shuttered for many years before renovations started about a month ago. DHS officials said it was renovated into working order in about 30 days.

    Prior to its closure, Camp 57 had been used for disciplinary actions against state prisoners, according to law enforcement officials familiar with the project. 

    Transferring ICE detainees between facilities isn’t new but has increased under the current administration. A CBS News analysis of government data found that more than half of immigrants detained by ICE between Jan. 20, 2025, and July 29, 2025, were transferred to another facility two or more times — a greater share than during the Biden administration, the first Trump administration or the second Obama administration. 

    ICE detention transfers increase under second Trump administration (Bullet Bars)

    Detainees are also getting shuffled further away during these transfers, CBS News found. Under the current administration, about 61% of detainees who started their stay were transferred more than 100 miles at least once. That’s also a higher figure than in past administrations. 

    ICE detainees transferred more than 100 miles increase under second Trump administration (Bar Chart)

    Some immigration advocates are concerned this practice could make it more difficult for detainees to contact loved ones or their attorneys. 

    Asked about the increase in detention transfers and how and when ICE determines someone should be transferred, Noem said Wednesday that “this specific facility is going to host most dangerous criminal illegal aliens in the country, because it is so secure. Those individuals are being moved from other facilities around the country…because it is so secure behind these fences. I would say that we move people to other facilities for logistics, based on what country they’re being repatriated from, where their flights are going, what we need to do to build deficiencies, and we will continue to do that as we need to in order to deport them out of the country and take them back home.”

    Last month, a federal judge ordered that the Trump administration dismantle a state-run immigration detention center in the Florida Everglades dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz.” DHS began moving detainees out of the facility last week.

    Regarding “Alligator Alcatraz,” Noem said Wednesday the White House will continue to appeal the judge’s orders, because she believes the judge “made the wrong decision.”

    Source link

  • Fifth Circuit Rules Trump’s Use of Alien Enemies Act is Illegal

    A prison guard transfers Alien Enemies Act deportees from the U.S., alleged to be Venezuelan gang members, to the Terrorism Confinement Center in Tecoluca, El Salvador. Mar. 16, 2025 (El Salvador Presidential Press Office)

     

    Yesterday, in W.M.M. v. Trump, the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that President Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 as a tool to deport Venezuelans is illegal. While multiple federal district courts have issued similar rulings, as have individual concurring opinions by judges on two other circuit courts, this is the first full-blown appellate court decision on the subject. It is therefore an important precedent. There is a lengthy 130 page dissenting opinion by Judge Andrew Oldham. But it’s serious flaws merely confirm the weaknesses of the government’s position.

    The AEA allows detention and deportation of foreign citizens of relevant states (including legal immigrants, as well as illegal ones) “[w]henever there is a declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government, or any invasion or predatory incursion is perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the United States by any foreign nation or government.” Trump has tried to use the AEA to deport Venezuelan migrants the administration claims are members of the Tren de Aragua drug gang.

    The Fifth Circuit majority opinion by Judge Leslie Southwick (a Republican George W. Bush appointee) holds that TdA’s activities – drug smuggling, illegal migration, and related crimes – don’t qualify as an “invasion” or a “predatory” incursion and therefore the AEA cannot be used here. Everyone agrees there is no declared war.

    On the definition of “invasion,” Judge Southwick concludes, after a review of the evidence:

    Congress’s use of the word in the AEA is consistent with the use in the Constitution, that “invasion” is a term about war in the traditional sense and requires military action by a foreign nation. Petitioners have the sense of the distinctions in saying that responding to another country’s invasion is defensive; declaring war is an offensive, assertive action by Congress; and predatory incursion is for lesser conflicts. Of course, after this country has been attacked by an enemy with invading forces, Congress might then declare a war. That occurred in World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Still, when the invasion precedes a declaration, the AEA applies when the invasion occurs or is attempted. Therefore, we define an invasion for purposes of the AEA as an act of war involving the entry into this country by a military force of or at least directed by another country or nation, with a hostile intent.

    Every other court to have ruled on the definition of “invasion” has reached similar conclusions, and I argue for that conclusion in the amicus brief I coauthored in W.M.M. on behalf of the Brennan Center, the Cato Institute, and others.

    Here is the Fifth Circuit on the definition of “predatory incursion”:

    These different sources of contemporary meaning that we have identified from dictionaries, the writings of those from the time period of the enactment, and from the different requirements of the Alien Enemies Act and the Alien Friends Act, convince us that a “predatory incursion” described armed forces of some size and cohesion, engaged in something less than an invasion, whose objectives could vary widely, and are directed by a foreign government or nation. The success of an incursion could transform it into an invasion. In fact, it would be hard to distinguish some attempted invasions from a predatory incursion.

    This too is similar to previous court decisions, and to the approach outlined in our amicus brief, which explains that a “predatory incursion” is a smaller-scale act of war. The one exception is a district court opinion that adopted an extremely broad definition of “predatory incursion,” which I critiqued here.

    The majority also persuasively argues that the definitions of “invasion,” “predatory incursion” and other statutory terms are not unreviewable issues  simply left to executive discretion.

    The majority does, however, rule that courts must, to a degree, defer to presidential fact-finding regarding whether an “invasion” or a “predatory incursion” is occurring. It concludes, here, that the facts alleged in the President’s Proclamation do not meet the requirements of the correct definition of that term. This may leave open the possibility that the president could simply legalize the AEA by claiming the existence of different (more egregious) “facts,” even if the claims are patently false. I have criticized excessive deference on such factual issues in this recent article, and in the amicus brief. Deference on factual questions should not allow the president to invoke extraordinary emergency powers merely by mouthing some words and making bogus, unsubstantiated claims.

    That said, the majority does suggest that factual deference must be limited:

    The Supreme Court’s recent J.G.G. opinion shows Ludecke is to be understood as requiring courts to interpret the AEA after the President has invoked it…. Interpretation
    cannot be just an academic exercise, i.e., a court makes the effort to define a term like “invasion” but then cannot evaluate the facts before it for their fit with the interpretation. Thus, interpretation of the AEA allows a court to determine whether a declaration of war by Congress remains in effect, or whether an invasion or a predatory incursion has occurred. In other words, those questions are justiciable, and the executive’s determination that certain facts constitute one or more of those events is not conclusive. The Supreme Court informs us that we are to interpret, and we do not create special rules for the AEA but simply use traditional statutory interpretive tools.

    If courts must “use traditional… interpretive tools” and “determine… whether an invasion or a predatory incursion has occurred,” they cannot simply blindly acquiesce to whatever factual claims the government might make, no matter how specious. Otherwise, interpretation will indeed become “just an academic exercise.”

    Prominent conservative Judge Andrew Oldham wrote a lengthy 130 page dissent. He’s undoubtedly a highly capable jurist. But his herculean efforts here just underscore the radical and dangerous nature of the government’s position.

    Surprisingly, Judge Oldham doesn’t seriously dispute the definitions of “invasion” and “predatory incursion.” He just argues that these issues are left to the completely unreviewable discretion of the executive. If that’s true, the president could use the AEA to detain or deport virtually any noncitizens he wants, at any time, for any reason, so long as he proclaims there is an “invasion” or “predatory incursion,” regardless of whether anything even remotely resembling these things is actually happening. A power that is supposed to be used only in the event of a dire threat to national security would become a routine tool that can be deployed at the president’s whim.

    And, under Judge Oldham’s analysis, the president also could deport and detain these people with little, if any, due process. He contends the government has no obligation to prove that the people detained are actually TdA members. And in fact there is no evidence that most of those deported under the AEA are members of the gang or have committed any crimes at all.  Thus, Judge Oldham is essentially claiming the AEA gives the president unlimited, unreviewable power to detain and deport non-citizens – including legal migrants – whenever he wants (again, so long as he proclaims the right words).

    Nothing in the text or history of the AEA even approaches this. Instead the text says that the AEA can only be used when a war, invasion, predatory incursion or threat thereof, exists, not merely when the president says so.

    Oldham argues in detail that various precedents require the latter outcome. But, as the majority notes, those precedents – including the Supreme Court’s recent decision in J.G.G. specifically indicate that there is room for judicial review. Moreover, if the AEA really did grant the president such unlimited power, one would have expected contemporaries in 1798 to point that out and object on constitutional grounds, as they did in the case of the contemporaneous Alien Friends Act, which really did give the president sweeping deportation and detention powers, even in peacetime, and which was duly denounced as unconstitutional by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, among others. The Alien Enemies Act, by contrast, was far less controversial, precisely because it was understood to be limited to genuine wartime situations, not anything the president might speciously label as such.

    Moreover, under Suspension Clause of the Constitution, in the event of an “invasion,” the federal government can suspend the writ of habeas corpus, and thereby detain people – including US citizens – without any due process. There is no way the Founders understood themselves to have given the president unreviewable authority to trigger that power anytime he wants.

    I won’t try to go through all of Judge Oldham’s analysis of precedent here. But I will give one example of how problematic it is. The judge argues that Supreme Court’s 1862 decision in The Prize Cases gives the president unreviewable authority to determine there is a war going on, and exercise war powers accordingly. The majority opinion in that case does no such thing. Rather, it emphasized the fact that then-ongoing Civil War was a conflict “which all the world acknowledges to be the greatest civil war known in the history of the human race.” Thus, President Lincoln’s power to establish a blockade in response could not be negated by “by subtle definitions and ingenious sophisms.”

    The Court then went on to make the point cited by Oldham:

    Whether the President, in fulfilling his duties as Commander-in-chief in suppressing an insurrection, has met with such armed hostile resistance and a civil war of such alarming proportions as will compel him to accord to them the character of belligerents is a question to be decided by him, and this Court must be governed by the decisions and acts of the political department of the Government to which this power was entrusted. “He must determine what degree of force the crisis demands.” The proclamation of blockade is itself official and conclusive evidence to the Court that a state of war existed which demanded and authorized a recourse to such a measure under the circumstances peculiar to the case.

    But notice the president only gets deference on the question of whether the “insurrection” he is “fulfilling his duties” by combatting is one of “such alarming proportions” as to justify a wartime blockade. He does not get deference on the question of whether an insurrection exists in the first place (in that case, as the Court noted, it obviously did). Had Lincoln instead imposed a blockade to prevent, say, illegal smuggling of contraband goods  and then claimed smuggling qualifies as war, he would not get the same deference.

    Judge Oldham’s reliance on other precedents has similar flaws. Nearly all of them also arose from genuinely massive wars, not attempts to pass off drug smuggling or other similar activity as an “invasion.” Oldham complains that “[f]or over 200 years, courts have recognized that the AEA vests sweeping discretionary powers in the Executive,” and that “until President Trump took office a second time, courts had never countermanded the President’s determination that an invasion, or other similar hostile activity, was threatened or ongoing.” But the AEA has previously only been invoked in connection with three indisputable international conflicts: the War of 1812, World War I, and World War II. You don’t have to be an expert to see the difference between these conflicts and the activities of a drug gang.

    The majority, the concurring opinion by Judge Ramirez, and the dissent also address a number of other issues, particularly various procedural questions. I will pass over them for now, as this post is already long.

    The Trump administration may well appeal this case to the Supreme Court. If the Court takes it, I hope they, too, will recognize that the AEA doesn’t give the president a blank check to wield sweeping extraordinary power whenever he wants.

    In the meantime, litigation over this issue continues in various federal courts around the country.

     

    Ilya Somin

    Source link

  • Detroit father of 5 released from ICE detention after federal court order

    Steve Neavling

    The Patrick V. McNamara Federal Building in downtown Detroit, where immigration hearings take place.

    A longtime Detroit resident and father of five U.S. citizen children was released from immigration detention on Wednesday after a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration unlawfully denied him due process.

    Juan Manuel Lopez-Campos, who has lived in the U.S. for 26 years and has no criminal record, was arrested during a traffic stop in June and held for more than two months without a chance to seek bond.

    The ACLU of Michigan took up his case and sued on his behalf. In response to the suit, U.S. District Judge Brandy R. McMillion ruled that the Trump administration’s new directive to deny bond hearings is “not only wrong but also fundamentally unfair.”

    Lopez-Campos walked free Wednesday.

    “I am happy to finally be with my family with the help of my legal team,” Lopez-Campos said in a statement. “I hope to continue to fight my case.”

    The Trump administration’s directive in July attempted to reverse decades of policy by eliminating access to bond hearings for immigrants facing civil detention. If left in place, the directive would have subjected immigrants to mandatory detention without judicial review, a process that can take months or even years, legal experts said.

    “There are hundreds, if not thousands, of others still being wrongly denied what Juan just experienced: the opportunity to fight your immigration case from home,” Ramis J. Wadood, staff attorney for the ACLU of Michigan, said. “Because of that, we will not rest until every affected individual is allowed to exercise the same right to due process and has a chance to come home to their families.”

    Lopez-Campos’s attorney, Shahad Atiya, who worked with the ACLU on the case, said the government had “no legitimate reason” to keep him locked up.”

    “The cruelty was the point, but we’re glad that justice prevailed,” Atiya said.

    Lopez-Campos was one of more than 1,400 immigrants who were arrested by federal agents since President Donald Trump took office in January. Most of them had no criminal convictions.

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • ICE arrested more than 1,400 undocumented immigrants in Michigan under Trump, and most had no criminal convictions

    Steve Neavling

    Protesters rally outside the U.S. District Court in Detroit after an undocumented immigrant was arrested.

    Since President Donald Trump took office in January, federal agents arrested 1,432 undocumented immigrants in Michigan as of the end of July, and most had no criminal convictions, according to data from the Deportation Data Project.

    The total is nearly triple the 523 arrests recorded during the same period in 2024, when Joe Biden was president, according to a Metro Times review of the data.

    Despite Trump’s claims that his administration is targeting criminals, only 420 – or 29% – of those arrested by his administration in Michigan have been convicted of a crime. Another 31% had “pending criminal charges,” and most notably, about 40% had never been convicted of a crime.

    Among those arrested were 11 children, including a girl no older than four. The oldest person was in his 80s.

    That hasn’t stopped the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from claiming that agents are arresting the “worst of the worst.”

    Arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Michigan have surged under President Donald Trump. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    Arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Michigan have surged under President Donald Trump.

    During the same time period last year, about half of the people arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Michigan had at least one criminal conviction and 24% had “pending criminal charges.” About 26% had no criminal record.

    Those figures show that under Trump, ICE is arresting undocumented immigrants without criminal records at a much higher rate than it did under Biden.

    Nationwide, the number of immigrants arrested by ICE with no criminal history surged from about 860 to 7,800 in June, an increase of more than 800%, according to Reuters.

    In Michigan, a vast majority of those arrested were men. Only 86 were women.

    The immigrants held citizenship in dozens of countries, from China and India to Haiti and Russia. But most were from Central and South America. Mexicans made up 37% of those arrested, followed by 17% from Venezuela, and 8% from Honduras.

    Of those arrested under Trump, 864 have been deported.

    Fears of mass deportations have shaken immigrant communities in Michigan, especially southwest Detroit, where families are keeping children from school and limiting time outside.

    In April, U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, joined the ACLU of Michigan and the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC) to call out federal agents for arresting immigrants who took a wrong turn near the Ambassador Bridge in Southwest Detroit.

    Tensions rose on June 30 when ICE agents, backed by Detroit police, swept into the Joy Road-Livernois neighborhood to detain Marcos Fabian Arita Bautista, a Honduran man. Protests erupted, and a man attempted to block ICE agents with his car. Two people were arrested, and Detroit cops used pepper spray on protesters.

    Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who is running for governor as an independent and is trying to appeal to Trump supporters, called undocumented immigrants “illegal” in January while speaking to business leaders. When called out by pro-immigration groups, Duggan dismissed the criticism as “political correctness.”

    Steve Neavling

    Source link