NJ, immigration and The governor
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The Justice Department is moving up the court hearings for hundreds of immigrants and scheduling them for mass hearings. If they don't show up, they could be ordered deported.
By Andrew Hay May 30 (Reuters) - Civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit over alleged human rights abuses at the United States' largest immigration detention center in El Paso, Texas, where three people have died in the nine months since it opened.
Steven Thal has spent decades in immigration court. Recently, he said he shed a rare tear as a judge denied asylum to a family who say they came to Minnesota to escape sexual violence and extortion.
A Tukwila-based immigration attorney who gave up her law license this week to avoid discipline following a misconduct complaint and federal lawsuit had more than 35,000 clients, including potentially many in Oregon.
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said his department is "drawing up" plans to stop customs and immigration processing at airports in cities that “don’t want us to enforce immigration.”
After about two months on the job, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin has shifted the agency’s immigration enforcement efforts toward tactics that generate fewer headlines but still result in mass deportations.
New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill has sent state police to establish designated protest zones and vehicle checkpoints outside an immigration detention center in Newark. The facility has been the site
President Donald Trump’s administration has added three new judges to Philadelphia’s immigration court, part of a sweeping and ongoing effort to transform the country’s immigration system and dramatically increase deportations nationwide.
The Canadian Press on MSN
Immigration lawyers say automation is partly driving a massive Federal Court backlog
OTTAWA — The number of immigration cases being brought to Federal Court has more than quadrupled since 2020 — and some immigration lawyers are linking the surge in part to the federal government's use of artificial intelligence and automation to clear visa application backlogs.
Those are some of the responses from a focus group of right-leaning British voters, run by the pollster More In Common and commissioned by The Economist, when asked recently what concerns them about immigration.
A Cuban Air Force pilot tied to the Brothers to the Rescue shootdown 30 years ago was inside a Florida courtroom on Thursday. But this case was tied to immigration fraud, not the Brothers to the Rescue shootdown in which former Cuban leader Raúl Castro was just indicted by federal officials last week.