Tag: ICE
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The Guardian describes ICE agent testimony which reveals daily arrest quotas (8 per day) and surveillance systems (including Mobile Fortify facial recognition technology that taps into other collected demographic and location).
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This substack, by Austin Kocher and Adam Sawyer, maps recent immigrant detention deaths.
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MS NOW showed this 10-minute news piece that describes the impact of ICE activities on the health of the general public as well as the health of those targeted community members. People are avoiding health care not only because of their immigration status but because of their ethnicity. Also, some mention of poor immigrant detention…
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This article explains how local communities are trying to prevent federal ICE detention centers but have few tools to fight them.
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In this 6 1/2 minute video, a former ICE Attorney Whistleblower asserts that newly-hired ICE agent training is deficient because new ICE agents do not understand use of force policies nor constitutional authority – and, therefore, they can not recognize unlawful orders. Watch here
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The NPR series, “If you can Keep It” explores companies that are profiting off of ICE expansion and activities. Here is the podcast and article.
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The Guardian article, “Local Police aid ICE by tapping school cameras amid Trump’s immigration crack-down” shows collaboration with ICE via Flock cameras at schools.
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This article describes how ICE flights (both shuffle flights within the U.S. and deportation flights) are affecting immigration inmates at the Aurora (near Denver, Colorado) Immigration Detention Center.
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Today, we are sharing ICE records on Palantir that show how the company has long been enmeshed in the day-to-day operations fueling ICE surveillance and deportations. These records were obtained via a FOIA lawsuit filed in 2019. The documents include emails, training guides and progress reports between Palantir and ICE spanning 2014-2022.The records show how…
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The CATO Institute reports that data from ICE/DHS shows that one in five ICE arrests are Latinos on the street with no criminal past and no removal order. This means, according to the article, that these people have likely been profiled and randomly picked up instead of their arrests being the result of careful research…