ICE Raids Thread

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
63,158
Reputation
9,642
Daps
172,818
rawstory.com

ICE contractor worth billions is fighting to pay detainee workers $1-a-day​


ProPublica

5–6 minutes



ICE contractor worth billions is fighting to pay detainee workers $1-a-day


ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

The for-profit prison company GEO Group has surged in value under President Donald Trump. Investors are betting big on immigration detention. Its stock price doubled after Election Day.

But despite its soaring fortunes, the $4 billion company continues to resist having to pay detainees more than $1 a day for cleaning facilities where the government has forced them to live.

At the 1,575-bed detention center GEO runs for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Tacoma, Washington, detainees once prepared meals, washed laundry and scrubbed toilets, doing jobs that would otherwise require 85 full-time employees, the company estimated. The state’s minimum wage at the time was $11 an hour. (It’s now $16.66.) In 2017, Washington sued GEO to enforce it, and in October 2021 a federal jury ruled unanimously in the state’s favor.

This year, GEO and Washington are back in court — for a third time — as the company tries to reverse the earlier decision that sided with the state. GEO has brought in contract cleaners at the Tacoma facility while the case plays out, keeping detainees there from paid work and from having a way to earn commissary money.

The legal battle has national repercussions as the number of ICE detainees around the country rises to its highest level in five years. The vast majority are held in private facilities run by GEO or corporate competitors like CoreCivic. If following state minimum wages becomes the norm, Trump’s immigration crackdown could cost the country even more than it otherwise would — unless private detention centers absorb the cost themselves or decide to cut back on cleaning, which Tacoma detainees have already accused GEO of doing.

GEO frames the lawsuit as a fight over the federal government’s authority to make the laws of the nation. Multiple courts have decided that the Fair Labor Standards Act, which sets the federal minimum wage, does not apply to detained migrants. At issue in the Tacoma case is the state minimum wage.

“Simply put, we believe the State of Washington has unconstitutionally violated the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution,” GEO wrote in a news release.

The company did not respond to a request for comment from ProPublica. ICE and CoreCivic declined to comment.

GEO’s latest legal salvo came last month.

A three-judge panel at the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had recently affirmed lower courts’ rulings. GEO had to pay state minimum wage at the Tacoma facility. The company was also ordered to hand over $17 million in back wages, plus $6 million for “unjust enrichment.” The combined penalties amounted to less than 1 percent of GEO’s total revenues in 2024.

Rather than pay up, GEO petitioned on Feb. 6 for a rehearing by the full 9th Circuit. In the news release, it vowed to “vigorously pursue all available appeals.”

It isn’t that GEO lacks the ability to pay, the company has made clear in legal filings. Its gross profit from its Tacoma facility, today called the Northwest ICE Processing Center, was about $20 million a year when Washington filed its lawsuit. The company told a judge in 2021 it could “pay the Judgments twenty times over.”

The real issue is the precedent the Tacoma case could set. GEO, which manages 16 ICE detention facilities across the country, faces similar lawsuits in California and Colorado. The California case, also before the 9th Circuit, is on hold pending the outcome of Washington’s. Colorado’s is winding its way through a lower court.

GEO is expected to fight the case all the way to the Supreme Court, if needed.

If eventually forced to pay state minimum wages across the country, the company could decide to pay detainees more or else hire outside employees at all its locations – either of which would potentially eat into its profits, stock price and dividends.

The company also could try to renegotiate its long-term contracts with ICE for a higher rate of reimbursement, Lauren-Brooke Eisen, an expert in incarceration, noted in an article for the Brennan Center for Justice.

Or GEO could respond to higher labor costs another way. After the jury decision against it in 2021, the company paused Tacoma’s Voluntary Work Program, as it is known, rather than pay detainees there minimum wage. Some could no longer afford phone calls to family members. (For such detainees, the program had never been entirely voluntary. “I need the money desperately,” one testified. “I have no choice.”)

The facility also “got really gross” after the sudden stoppage, a Mexican detainee told the Associated Press at the time. “Nobody cleaned anything.”

GEO brought in contract cleaners eventually.

Mike Faulk, a spokesperson for the Washington state attorney general’s office, said testimony in the minimum-wage issue highlights the problem with housing detainees in private prisons: profit motive. Not only did GEO pay $1 a day for cleaning in Tacoma, it budgeted less than $1 per meal that each detainee ate, one kitchen worker testified. “So the grade of food is abysmal,” Faulk said of the detainee’s testimony. “He routinely picked out grasshoppers/insects from the food.”

For its part, GEO argues that Washington wants to unfairly — and hypocritically — hold the Tacoma facility to a standard that even state facilities don’t have to meet. The company has noted that a carveout in Washington law exempts state prisons from minimum-wage requirements, allowing the state to pay prisoners no more than $40 a week. The federal government, taking GEO’s side, has made the same point in “friend of the court” briefs under both the first Trump administration and the Biden administration. So did a dissenting judge in the recent 9th Circuit decision.

But to liken state prisons to a privately run immigration facility is an “apples and oranges” comparison, the 9th Circuit decided. Washington doesn’t let private companies run its state prisons. And the migrants in Tacoma are detained under civil charges, not as convicted criminals.

As judges have noted, GEO’s contract with ICE states that the prison company must follow “all applicable federal, state, and local laws and standards,” including “labor laws and codes.” It also holds that GEO must pay detainees at least $1 a day for the Voluntary Work Program. The federal government “made a deliberate choice to dictate to GEO the minimum rate,” the 9th Circuit wrote in its most recent decision, but “it also made a deliberate choice not to dictate to GEO a maximum rate.”

Conditions in Tacoma are worsening as the number of detainees rises, according to Maru Mora Villalpando, founder of the activist group La Resistencia. The group is in regular contact with people inside the detention center.

Meal service, Mora Villalpando said, is faltering: “Dinner used to be at 5. Then 6. Now it’s 9.”

Cleaning is faltering, too, she said. Without detainee labor, the outside cleaners have to do it all.

“But these people,” Mora Villalpando said, “can’t keep up.”

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.
 

Heimdall

Under His Eye
Joined
Dec 13, 2019
Messages
538
Reputation
341
Daps
1,201
rawstory.com

'Like I'd been kidnapped': Canadian detained by Trump's ICE delivers chilling account​


Brad Reed

1–2 minutes



'Like I'd been kidnapped': Canadian detained by Trump's ICE delivers chilling account'Like I'd been kidnapped': Canadian detained by Trump's ICE delivers chilling account


ICE officers (YouTube/ ICE Gov)

A Canadian woman who was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement for two weeks has written an account of the ordeal, in which she said she felt "like I'd been kidnapped."

Writing in The Guardian, Jasmine Mooney described being taken into custody while she was reapplying for a work visa despite the fact that officials never accused her of any wrongdoing.

"I was taken to a tiny, freezing cement cell with bright fluorescent lights and a toilet," she explained. "There were five other women lying on their mats with the aluminum sheets wrapped over them, looking like dead bodies. The guard locked the door behind me."

ALSO READ: 'Not sure there's ever been anything like this': Rachel Maddow stunned by Trump 'oddity'

After a couple of days, she was given a stack of paperwork to sign and told that she faced a five-year ban from reentering the United States unless she applied for reentry through the consulate.

She signed the papers but was still kept under detention without explanation.

"Then they moved me to another cell – this time with no mat or blanket," she said. "I sat on the freezing cement floor for hours. That’s when I realized they were processing me into real jail: the Otay Mesa Detention Center."

Upon arriving at the center, she was told that she could be detained there for months on end.

Read the whole account at this link.
Read/Listened to this a few hours ago. Absolutely disgusting (though the conditions of the detention facilities surely predate this administration :francis:). Kafkaesque comes to mind.
 

DonB90

Superstar
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
11,365
Reputation
2,394
Daps
61,418
Ice director wants to run deportations like ‘Amazon Prime for human beings

The head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement said he would like the agency to implement a system of trucks that rounds up immigrants for deportation in a system similar to how Amazon delivers packages around the US.

“We need to get better at treating this like a business,” the acting Ice director, Todd Lyons, said. He said that he wanted to see a deportation process “like [Amazon] Prime, but with human beings”. His comments were first reported by the Arizona Mirror.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
63,158
Reputation
9,642
Daps
172,818

ICE Agents Realize They Arrested Wrong Teen, Say 'Take Him Anyway'​


Today at nullToday at null

Trump Floats Deporting Some US Criminals To El Salvador: 'Monsters'

By Billal Rahman

Immigration Reporter

Federal immigration authorities apprehended a 19-year-old in New York despite realizing he was not the intended target.

The young man, Merwil Gutiérrez, was later deported to El Salvador's notorious super prison, despite his family's insistence that he has no gang ties or criminal history.

His father, Wilmer Gutiérrez, is now searching for answers after his son was snatched by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.

"The officers grabbed him and two other boys right at the entrance to our building. One said, 'No, he's not the one,' like they were looking for someone else. But the other said, 'Take him anyway,'" Wilmer told Documented, "an independent, nonprofit newsroom dedicated to reporting for immigrant communities in New York City."

CECOT


Inmates remain in a cell at the Counter-Terrorism Confinement Centre (CECOT) mega-prison, where hundreds of members of the MS-13 and 18 Street gangs are being held, in Tecoluca, El Salvador on January 27, 2025. Marvin Recinos/Getty



Why It Matters


El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele responded Monday to questions about the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, stating that he lacked the authority to return individuals sent by the U.S. to the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT).

This remark came amid growing criticism of the government's handling of due process, opponents accusing the administration of bypassing legal safeguards in its treatment of deportees. Critics argue that Garcia's deportation reflects a broader pattern of disregarding constitutional rights, sparking concerns over the erosion of legal protections in the country's justice system.

President Donald Trump has pledged to conduct the largest deportation operation in American history as his administration looks to remove millions of undocumented immigrants. The White House has said anyone living in the country unlawfully is considered a "criminal" by the federal government. Since the beginning of Trump's second term, thousands of migrants have been arrested.



What To Know


Gutiérrez, who fled instability in Venezuela and was pursuing an asylum case in the U.S, was detained in the Bronx by ICE agents conducting a targeted operation.

According to his father, the agents initially acknowledged he was not the individual they were seeking—but chose to detain him anyway.

Just days later, Gutiérrez was deported to El Salvador, where he was transferred to a high security prison known for housing members of violent gangs, including the transnational criminal group Tren de Aragua.

His family and attorneys say he has no criminal record, no gang affiliations, and "not even a tattoo," which authorities often use to profile alleged gang members.

Wilmer Gutiérrez last spoke to his son on March 16 during a brief call allowed by police. He had spent days searching for information, visiting police stations and courthouses, only to be told there was no record of his son.

During the call, Merwil Gutiérrez said he was being held in Pennsylvania and expected to be transferred to Texas before returning to Venezuela. That transfer never happened.

Wilmer Gutiérrez later discovered through a news report that his son had been deported to El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. Videos circulating online showed detainees in harsh conditions, their heads shaved and marched to cells.

"I could have understood if he'd been sent back to Venezuela," he said. "But why to a foreign country he's never even been to?"

In May 2023, Wilmer Gutiérrez left Venezuela with his son Merwil and nephew Luis, traveling through Colombia and the Darién Gap into Panama. The monthlong journey eventually brought them to Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, where they applied for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) through the CBP One app. While waiting for their immigration appointment, they took temporary jobs and slept near the border to keep their place in line.

Before leaving Venezuela, Wilmer had lived in Los Teques, near Caracas, working for the state oil company PDVSA and later running a cellphone repair business. However ongoing political instability and a collapsing economy made it increasingly difficult to support his family, including his three children and his mother, who was battling cancer.



What People Are Saying


William Parra, an immigration attorney from Inmigración Al Día said: "Merwil was detained for hanging out with friends and was at the wrong place at the wrong time. ICE was not looking for him, nor is there any evidence whatsoever that Merwil was in any gang."

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council said in a post on X, formerly Twitter: "19-year-old Merwil Gutierrez was grabbed off the street in New York City days before he was sent to El Salvador. His family insists he has no connection to Tren de Aragua. He doesn't even have any tattoos."



What Happens Next


Gutiérrez's legal team is calling for immediate diplomatic intervention to secure his release and safe return.
 

DonB90

Superstar
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
11,365
Reputation
2,394
Daps
61,418

Dade County was bright red election night. Mfers voted to be deported:skip:
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
63,158
Reputation
9,642
Daps
172,818



Exclusive: Abrego Garcia's Wife Responds After Restraining Order Revealed​


Yesterday at nullYesterday at null

Maryland Senator Vows To Go To El Salvador If Wrongfully Deported Man Isn't Returned

By Jesus Mesa and Billal Rahman

Politics Reporter

The wife of a Maryland man mistakenly deported to El Salvador is criticizing the Trump administration for publicly releasing details of a 2021 restraining order against him.

Jennifer Vasquez Sura, whose husband Kilmar Abrego Garcia was deported just before the U.S. Supreme Court ordered his return, called the move an unjust act of "abduction" and defended her husband against the resurfaced allegations.

In an exclusive statement to Newsweek, Vasquez Sura responded to the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) release of court filings alleging domestic violence. The documents include her 2021 request for a protective order in which she accused her husband of punching and scratching her, ripping her shirt, and leaving her bruised.

The temporary order barred Abrego Garcia from contacting her and directed him not to harass or abuse her, according to the filings.

"After surviving domestic violence in a previous relationship, I acted out of caution following a disagreement with Kilmar by seeking a civil protective order, in case things escalated," she said. "Things did not escalate, and I decided not to follow through with the civil court process. We were able to work through the situation privately as a family, including by going to counseling."

"Our marriage only grew stronger in the years that followed. No one is perfect, and no marriage is perfect. But that is not a justification for ICE's action of abducting him and deporting him to a country where he was supposed to be protected from removal. Kilmar has always been a loving partner and father, and I will continue to stand by him and demand justice for him," the statement adds.

Jennifer Vasquez Sura


Jennifer Vasquez Sura, the wife of Kilmar Abrego Garcia of Maryland, who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador, speaks during a news conference at CASA's Multicultural Center in Hyattsville, Maryland, on April 4, 2025.Associated Press



Why It Matters​


Abrego Garcia's deportation has become a flashpoint as President Donald Trump moves forward with campaign promises of mass deportations. Abrego Garcia was expelled to El Salvador last month, drawing intense scrutiny.

The Trump administration has claimed that Abrego Garcia is affiliated with the MS-13 gang, though he has not been charged with any crime, and his attorneys have said there is no evidence linking him to gang activity. Abrego Garcia's deportation in March occurred amid what DHS later admitted was an "administrative error."

Abrego Garcia is being held in El Salvador's high-security Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), a prison designed for alleged gang members under President Nayib Bukele's sweeping crackdown on organized crime.



What To Know


The case took center stage this week when Bukele arrived in Washington, just days after the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 9-0 ruling ordering the administration to facilitate Abrego Garcia's return. The White House has resisted efforts to secure his return, arguing that the courts cannot interfere with the president's diplomatic authority.

Cabinet members and other White House officials, including Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, claimed Monday morning that the ruling had actually been in the administration's favor and did not compel them to bring back Abrego Garcia.

To support claims that Abrego Garcia was "not the father of the year," as White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday, DHS posted on X, formerly Twitter, 2021 court documents showing that Vasquez Sura had filed for a protective order, alleging acts of domestic violence.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, DHS officials wrote: "Kilmar Abrego Garcia had a history of violence and was not the upstanding 'Maryland Man' the media has portrayed him as."

Kilmar Abrego Garcia had a history of violence and was not the upstanding “Maryland Man” the media has portrayed him as.

According to court filings, Garcia’s wife sought a domestic violence restraining order against him, claiming he punched, scratched, and ripped off her shirt,… pic.twitter.com/FpSV0k3i90

— Homeland Security (@DHSgov) April 16, 2025



What People Are Saying


El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, in the Oval Office on Monday: "I don't have the power to return him to the United States."

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, in the Oval Office on Monday: "First and foremost, he was illegally in our country, he had been illegally in our country...Right now, additional paperwork had needed to be done, that's up to El Salvador if they want to return him."

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in the Oval Office on Monday: "The foreign policy of the United States is conducted by the president of the United States, not by a court."



What Happens Next


If the U.S. and El Salvador say they do not have the power to return Abrego Garcia, his fate remains uncertain. U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis said she would move quickly on the case and invited the plaintiffs to conduct depositions with the DHS, ICE and the State Department by April 23.

Update 4/16/25, 6:20 p.m. ET: This article was updated with additional information and a new headline.
 

Art Barr

INVADING SOHH CHAMPION
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
68,100
Reputation
13,607
Daps
94,682
Reppin
CHICAGO
That’s how that nikka Willie D pronounce his name :mjlol:

They fellow Latinos voted for Donah Trum


:dead:



Art Barr



You want housing prices to come down. This will make them come down. Less renters = more inventory = lower/competative prices. If he actually makes this happen I think the real estate market will come down as investors dump properties.



You need to learn us factual history.


D'oh nell is why the actual rent in nyx is so high. Plus is segregati9n and racist in nature. To the point. The systemic racist ideal concentrated in real estate stem from his practices. Not to mention. The last region or area. Outside of nyc.
that was laid barren to.
In his former hub of atlantic city.
Is a post modern wasteland.







You'll have 55 diseases. If you touch that water in this fountain.


Art Barr


Art Barr
 
Last edited:

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
63,158
Reputation
9,642
Daps
172,818
1/35
🇺 newyorker.com
ICE officers are now reportedly required to meet arrest quotas each day, from a few hundred to between 1,200 and 1,500 nationwide. Jonathan Blitzer reports on the mystery of the agency’s unidentifiable arrests.
bafkreig736hoewlupxslyx3r7qgrz2ecalrbmawjqgklk5v3tjdh56ic3e@jpeg

http://nyer.cm/rytarkf?utm_source=threads&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=tny&utm_social-type=owned

2/35
🇺 paraver.bsky.social
Full scale fascism. USA have choosen this path:
bafkreicecyjilinnz644lsbm7oqrxb3icdjefsbgcu7v6ah3m7kvnsa5b4@jpeg

http://nyer.cm/opfbntw?utm_medium=s...rce=bluesky&mbid=social_bluesky&utm_brand=tny

3/35
🇺 maga4you.bsky.social
☝ Another MS-13 luvin' Demrat sobs and lies.

4/35
🇺 populi-world.bsky.social
We - the people - are coming
No tyrants
No kings
bafkreie2mh64yrbaia3uxckzl5o3rhnahglesvkoxzwwa3uk334rwqep64@jpeg


5/35
🇺 maga4you.bsky.social
And here's where you're going.

6/35
🇺 populi-world.bsky.social
We love it when extremists from the Alt Right attempt to tell the people where they are going. The people know where you are going.
We are going nowhere.
We - the people - are coming.
bafkreier4esnau2eu34ysfbfnmi3wohi7jqyakmmlmpjirqamt5mlitccq@jpeg


7/35
🇺 doggiemama.bsky.social
They should all go to jail for what they are doing.

8/35
🇺 maga4you.bsky.social
Typical response from a criminal.

9/35
🇺 angelusmerula.bsky.social
Dutch here: Sounds familiar;

When trains to Auschwitz Gaschambers were not filled to capacity, Nazis just grabbed random people to meet their quota

BEWARE

10/35
🇺 yikebendan.bsky.social
Bureaucracy+quota is an evil and highly destructive combination.

11/35
🇺 esieli.bsky.social
Sutpid question but at some point there will no one left, right? So will they going to arrest themself?

12/35
🇺 calc88.bsky.social
Call them what they are, Gestapo. They’re also not officers, they’re militia.

13/35
🇺 roryr6.bsky.social
They are common criminals and you have every right to defend yourself

14/35
🇺 lhmproductions.bsky.social

bafkreibacjixstebkdkhllympf4zqprinuun4q4khvnqpyncqdw2xc5oby@jpeg


15/35
🇺 anvilhammers.bsky.social
At what point is armed resistance against a lawless paramilitary fake illegal police force warranted?

I'm asking the question ALL AMERICANS SHOULD BE ASKING.

16/35
🇺 riadach.bsky.social
Surely "stand your ground" laws cover attempted kidnappings?

17/35
🇺 eremiophon.bsky.social
Only if you’re white and the kidnapper is brown.

18/35
🇺 jc-thomas.bsky.social
Anyone who continues to work for ICE must be cast out from any community they have infiltrated. Expelled from polite society, excommunicated from religious groups, kicked off sports teams, thrown out of bars.
Do no business with Nazis

19/35
🇺 piaa75.bsky.social
That’s why they wear masks they’re traitors to the Constitution

20/35
🇺 bamboozer2112.bsky.social
Ah Yes! The inevitable "quota" for the political goals of the Fascists. Would say this is a version of "Never interrupt the enemy when they are making a mistake", for they have awoken the proverbial "sleep giant".

21/35
🇺 bettinahorvath.bsky.social
USA once helped to free Europe from Hitler’s Gestapo. Now they have their own. What horrible turn of events. 😓

22/35
🇺 hamiltonasseiro.bsky.social
Isn't this the truth.

23/35
🇺 phillpn.bsky.social
Ice detention isn’t just a mindless bureaucratic nightmare. These facilities are privately owned and run for profit and without restraint. They are laws unto themselves, with little restraint or oversight. With mass deportation now firmly in place, their huge profits are likely to double.

24/35
🇺 victorbcn.bsky.social
Prisons were Trump donors. Now we know how they expected to be rewarded by the new administration. Fascists like to fill prisons.

25/35
🇺 barbie68.bsky.social
When are they going to arrest the thug/gang leader in the White House??

26/35
🇺 doriann454.bsky.social
Dear Ice Agents, saying you “were following orders” will not save you.

27/35
🇺 shaquiuk.bsky.social

bafkreidwzujiazmts325mizq3m6bqaexfmxwnwedepph2gpottdczdtsgm@jpeg


28/35
🇺 tiredlala.bsky.social
Seems like a good time to remember if *no one complied no one would be kidnapped & disappeared.
*ICE (since the beginning of time corrupt regimes have needed a phalanx of willing brutes & bully boys to give effect to their sinister orders)

29/35
🇺 dingdong007.bsky.social
That's BS ..NOT TRUE AT ALL ..

30/35
🇺 kdmusc.bsky.social
Effing quotas?? They are monsters.

31/35
🇺 mepafford.bsky.social
#ICE - IS NOT FOOLING ANYBODY!

#America Knows!

Every Person who works for ICE - Is An EMPLOYEE!

NOT ONE OF THEM is a CONSCRIPT or PRISONER!

If Any ICE Employee Doesn't Like What They're Being Told To Do-They Can Refuse and Quit!

Every ICE Employee CHOOSES To Do, "What The Government Tells Us".
Bluesky
Bluesky

32/35
🇺 what-do-u-want-now.bsky.social
And that complicity makes them despicable pieces of rat shyt.

33/35
🇺 fancypantsy.bsky.social
We are being groomed for dictatorship. ICE has shown through their complicity that they are no longer a law enforcement agency. This is the intro to removing the opposition. They have to burn the Reichstag before midterms.

34/35
🇺 dragonedd.bsky.social
Groomed? They are past that!! It's happening now. We were groomed years ago. Still time to resist and demand change.

35/35
🇺 gusman74.bsky.social
Facts matter! In 2024 Biden averaged 23,000 deportations per month. All received due process, none were given life sentences in gulags. Trump is deporting way less than Biden did, only he’s doing it in a more harmful & lawless way. No due process, no hearing-no permission to fly folks out of US.

To post tweets in this format, more info here: https://www.thecoli.com/threads/tips-and-tricks-for-posting-the-coli-megathread.984734/post-52211196
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
63,158
Reputation
9,642
Daps
172,818
1/20
🇺 stschrader1.bsky.social
The message from Baltimore, where Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s detention odyssey began
bafkreiav2thgu5i25wqcswd6ejxginuc2zxxcvjpu2orz4dqfxcbjuljxy@jpeg


2/20
🇺 tedbrinkleybmore.bsky.social
Proud to be here and to see that.

3/20
🇺 duolingous.bsky.social
This journey reminds us all: reform starts with abolition.

4/20
🇺 rosiedekat.bsky.social
I would go further and say charge them with trafficking and then lock them up.

5/20
🇺 bumslogic.bsky.social
Where is that? Looks like the bar/club formerly known as "The Bank"

Is it?

6/20
🇺 emilycello.bsky.social
North Ave and Charles St is all I know, facing north I think. Spent many many hours waiting at that stoplight!

7/20
🇺 chanceofrain.bsky.social
Yes, you are right. It's at the north-easterly corner of the x-ing of North and Charles. It's been empty for years & I think it is owned by an absentee landlord who somehow can't be brought to justice while blighting our lovely city. It could be such a great community space. Kudos to the sign makers

8/20
🇺 modamo.xyz
I never even considered who owned it. It'd absolutely make a great community space!

9/20
🇺 chanceofrain.bsky.social
It was years ago that I toured Old Goucher with Kelly Cross, a local activist. He mentioned the scourge of absentee landlords and that bldg was an example. North is the great lateral artery and the x-ing with Charles is the (battered) heart of the city

10/20
🇺 modamo.xyz
If only there was a community version of eminent domain

11/20
🇺 betheorchard.bsky.social
Global Warming: ON IT!

12/20
🇺 drkhaynes.bsky.social
Chinga La Migra! ✊🏾

13/20
🇺 jettabutt.bsky.social
Baltimore is a city sick of being decimated by greed and hatred.
She was once so, so beautiful.

14/20
🇺 xiane.bsky.social
They wanted a revolution. They may get one. Not the one they thought.

15/20
🇺 marietoto.bsky.social
Will share. Thanks

16/20
🇺 greysky209.bsky.social
Yeah that's ALSO part of the problem. Moronic hard lefties that think we shouldn't have ANY immigration enforcement make it very very easy for populists right wingers to push their horrific agenda.

Instead of being dopes, they should be pushing hard for DACA which had majority support.

17/20
🇺 theexiledduck.bsky.social
we don't need imaginary lines to impede freedom. immigration enforcement necessitates authoritarianism.

18/20
🇺 zacharybeasley.bsky.social
🧊 ICE? This is the only ICE I respect and like!

19/20
🇺 tonedead.bsky.social
Good morning,Baltimore

20/20
🇺 defeq79.bsky.social
I think they should all be required to wear only pink uniforms, display a pink badge and wear no camouflage.

To post tweets in this format, more info here: https://www.thecoli.com/threads/tips-and-tricks-for-posting-the-coli-megathread.984734/post-52211196
 
Top