#immigrationenforcement — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #immigrationenforcement, aggregated by home.social.
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ICE Raid at San Diego Restaurant Sparks National Debate Over Enforcement Tactics
By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News
Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 14, 2026 — 21:05 PHST
A May 30, 2025 immigration raid at the South Park location of the San Diego restaurant group Buona Forchetta continues to draw national attention nearly a year later, after armed federal agents detained workers during dinner service and used flash-bang grenades as community protests erupted outside the restaurant.
The operation, carried out by agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), took place around 4:30 p.m. local time during a busy Friday dinner rush. Witnesses said agents entered the restaurant in tactical gear, handcuffed employees, and moved workers outside while customers were forced from the building.
According to local reporting and later-unsealed search warrants, the investigation centered on allegations that some employees used fraudulent immigration documents during the hiring process. Federal investigators claimed that approximately 19 employees among a workforce of roughly 40 people had allegedly submitted fraudulent green cards or false documentation during employment verification procedures.
Community Reaction Escalated Quickly
The raid rapidly became a public confrontation after neighborhood residents, restaurant patrons, and nearby families gathered outside the restaurant while agents attempted to leave the area.
Witnesses described masked federal agents carrying rifles while protesters surrounded vehicles and shouted at officers. Federal agents eventually deployed flash-bang grenades in an attempt to disperse the crowd. Nearby schools reportedly altered dismissal procedures because of the disturbance.
Video and photographs from the scene spread widely online over the following days, helping turn a local immigration enforcement action into a broader national political controversy.
Several San Diego-area elected officials criticized the operation publicly, arguing the tactics used appeared excessive given that there was no public indication the detained restaurant workers had violent criminal histories beyond alleged immigration violations.
The Timeline Behind the Raid
Federal documents later revealed that the investigation reportedly began after an anonymous complaint filed in November 2020 alleged that undocumented workers were employed by the restaurant group.
According to the search warrant affidavit, a second complaint was reportedly received in January 2025, leading to a renewed federal investigation under the Trump administration’s expanded immigration enforcement priorities. Federal investigators later conducted employment verification audits before carrying out the May 30, 2025 enforcement operation.
The raid occurred during a broader nationwide push for increased immigration arrests and workplace enforcement operations. Reports at the time indicated that federal immigration officials faced pressure from senior administration figures to substantially increase daily arrest numbers nationwide.
A Larger Political Issue
The San Diego operation became politically significant not only because of the arrests themselves, but because of the visual presentation of the enforcement action.
Images of heavily armed agents entering a neighborhood restaurant during normal business hours intensified criticism that immigration enforcement in the United States had become increasingly militarized in appearance and execution.
Supporters of the operation argued that the federal government was enforcing immigration and employment laws already on the books. Critics argued that the tactical style of the raid blurred the line between immigration enforcement and military-style domestic policing.
The incident also highlighted a growing divide between federal immigration policy and local political leadership in many American cities, particularly in California.
Long-Term Impact
The Buona Forchetta raid became one of several highly visible immigration enforcement actions in California during 2025. The event contributed to expanded immigrant-rights demonstrations, neighborhood rapid-response organizing efforts, and renewed debate over workplace raids and federal detention practices.
The restaurant group temporarily closed locations following the incident before eventually resuming operations.
For many observers, the raid became a symbol of a broader shift in immigration enforcement tactics during the second Trump administration, particularly the increasing use of highly visible tactical operations in civilian public spaces.
If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews
For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org
References
Axios. (2025, June 2). ICE raid shakes South Park, generates national attention. https://www.axios.com/local/san-diego/2025/06/02/ice-raid-san-diego-south-park
Axios. (2025, June 2). San Diego electeds challenge federal judge over warrant that led to South Park ICE raid. https://www.axios.com/local/san-diego/2025/06/02/san-diego-representatives-judge-ice-raid
CBS 8 San Diego. (2025, June 3). Federal search warrants reveal new details in ICE raid at San Diego restaurant. https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/local/federal-search-warrants-reveal-new-details-ice-raid-san-diego-restaurant/509-c3826674-6940-43bb-bd56-9d4aa15af3da
NBC San Diego. (2025, June 2). South Park ICE raid search warrants reveal investigation details. https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/south-park-ice-raid-search-warrants/3838841/
National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. (2025, June 18). ICE raids in San Diego foreshadowed the roundups, protests now spreading across California. https://nnirr.org/ice-raids-in-san-diego-foreshadowed-the-roundups-protests-now-spreading-across-california/
The Independent. (2025, May 31). Inside ICE’s day of raids across California. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/ice-raids-california-club-italian-restaurants-b2761310.html
#CaliforniaPolitics #CivilLiberties #ICERaids #immigrationEnforcement #SanDiego #TrumpAdministration #workplaceRaids -
https://www.europesays.com/people/53315/ Mike Johnson Says ‘Not Defying The White House’ As House GOP Passes Budget 215-211 After Revolt #FarmBill #GOP #house #HouseSpeaker #ImmigrationEnforcement #JodeyArrington #ManuRaju #MikeJohnson #ReconciliationPackage #WhiteHouse
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The Empire’s New Enforcers: ICE and the Birth of Trump’s Praetorian Guard
Cliff Potts, WPS News
You can tell a lot about a government by the agency it empowers. Under Trump’s second term, the clearest signal of the administration’s intentions isn’t in the laws Congress passed—none of the big changes came from Congress—but in the agency Trump elevated: Immigration and Customs Enforcement. ICE has always been large, always aggressive, and always controversial. But it was never explicitly political. Not until now.
Since January 20, 2025, ICE has undergone a transformation that should worry anyone who still thinks the Constitution—not the presidency—sets the limits of federal power. What we’re seeing is not the creation of a secret police force or a cartoonish dictatorship. It’s something older, quieter, and historically far more accurate: the emergence of a Praetorian Guard—a force inside the state whose loyalty bends toward the leader instead of the law.
Administrative Power Becomes Personal Power
Most Americans don’t realize ICE carries its own version of a warrant. It’s called an “administrative warrant”—signed not by a judge, but by an ICE officer. These forms were originally intended for limited, civil immigration operations. Under Trump 2.0, they’ve become a shortcut around the Fourth Amendment and a license to act on political priorities.
In practice, these warrants now function like imperial seals: documents used to justify raids, interrogations, and detentions without the inconvenience of judicial oversight. Anyone in the crosshairs—immigrant communities, sanctuary officials, journalists documenting abuse—can be swept into these operations. The paperwork is clean. The legality is gray. The real purpose is pressure.
Fear as a Policy Tool
One of the oldest tactics of the Praetorian Guard was not violence but presence—showing up, unannounced, where the emperor wanted fear to travel. ICE has adopted the same strategy. “Knock-and-talks” now appear in neighborhoods known not for immigration violations, but for political opposition: immigrant-rights organizers, city council members resisting federal mandates, faith groups hosting asylum seekers.
These operations often rely on residents not knowing their rights. No judicial warrant. No obligation to open the door. But the implication of consequences—vague, undefined, and intimidating—is usually enough. The power isn’t in what ICE does; it’s in what people fear it might do.
The Fusion of Agencies
The Praetorian Guard didn’t operate alone. They blended with other forces, pulling power from their proximity to the emperor. ICE today follows that same arc. “Fusion” teams with U.S. Marshals and select state police blur lines of accountability, allowing operations in areas where local officials refuse cooperation.
This blurring isn’t a bureaucratic accident—it’s a feature. When authority becomes cloudy, loyalty, not law, becomes the deciding factor. That’s why Rome fell into the hands of emperors the Guard preferred. And it’s why ICE’s growing fusion culture is so dangerous now.
Surveillance as the New Sword
Instead of daggers, ICE has something more powerful: data. Through partnerships with Palantir, Clearview AI, DMV databases, and utility companies, ICE now holds one of the most comprehensive domestic intelligence networks in the country. Originally sold as tools to track criminals, these databases increasingly sweep in activists, observers, and critics.
This is the new Praetorian playbook: keep a list—not of enemies of the state, but enemies of the ruler’s narrative.
Detention as a Message
ICE’s detention powers allow weeks or months of confinement without criminal charges. Transfers to remote facilities. Restricted access to counsel. Long waits for hearings. Families separated through bureaucratic inertia. These are not accidents. They are soft weapons.
Rome’s Praetorian Guard detained senators to “send messages.” ICE detains asylum seekers, green-card holders, and activists under civil authority. The message lands just as clearly.
The Warning Embedded in History
America is not Rome. But power behaves the same way across centuries. A Praetorian Guard doesn’t take over a nation. It makes sure the person who does take over is never challenged.
ICE is not that far gone. Not yet. But its trajectory—the centralization of discretion, the political alignment, the quiet intimidation, the surveillance apparatus—matches a pattern recognizable to anyone who studies collapsing republics.
If this continues, we won’t wake up in a dictatorship.
We’ll wake up in something worse:
a democracy where power answers to the president first, and the people second.And once a Praetorian Guard forms, it almost never un-forms.
#AmericanDemocracy #Authoritarianism #CivilLiberties #ErosionOfRights #ExecutivePower #federalOverreach #historicalParallels #HomelandSecurity #ICE #immigrationEnforcement #PoliticalIntimidation #PraetorianGuard #SoftAuthoritarianism #Surveillance #TrumpAdministration -
The Empire’s New Enforcers: ICE and the Birth of Trump’s Praetorian Guard
Cliff Potts, WPS News
You can tell a lot about a government by the agency it empowers. Under Trump’s second term, the clearest signal of the administration’s intentions isn’t in the laws Congress passed—none of the big changes came from Congress—but in the agency Trump elevated: Immigration and Customs Enforcement. ICE has always been large, always aggressive, and always controversial. But it was never explicitly political. Not until now.
Since January 20, 2025, ICE has undergone a transformation that should worry anyone who still thinks the Constitution—not the presidency—sets the limits of federal power. What we’re seeing is not the creation of a secret police force or a cartoonish dictatorship. It’s something older, quieter, and historically far more accurate: the emergence of a Praetorian Guard—a force inside the state whose loyalty bends toward the leader instead of the law.
Administrative Power Becomes Personal Power
Most Americans don’t realize ICE carries its own version of a warrant. It’s called an “administrative warrant”—signed not by a judge, but by an ICE officer. These forms were originally intended for limited, civil immigration operations. Under Trump 2.0, they’ve become a shortcut around the Fourth Amendment and a license to act on political priorities.
In practice, these warrants now function like imperial seals: documents used to justify raids, interrogations, and detentions without the inconvenience of judicial oversight. Anyone in the crosshairs—immigrant communities, sanctuary officials, journalists documenting abuse—can be swept into these operations. The paperwork is clean. The legality is gray. The real purpose is pressure.
Fear as a Policy Tool
One of the oldest tactics of the Praetorian Guard was not violence but presence—showing up, unannounced, where the emperor wanted fear to travel. ICE has adopted the same strategy. “Knock-and-talks” now appear in neighborhoods known not for immigration violations, but for political opposition: immigrant-rights organizers, city council members resisting federal mandates, faith groups hosting asylum seekers.
These operations often rely on residents not knowing their rights. No judicial warrant. No obligation to open the door. But the implication of consequences—vague, undefined, and intimidating—is usually enough. The power isn’t in what ICE does; it’s in what people fear it might do.
The Fusion of Agencies
The Praetorian Guard didn’t operate alone. They blended with other forces, pulling power from their proximity to the emperor. ICE today follows that same arc. “Fusion” teams with U.S. Marshals and select state police blur lines of accountability, allowing operations in areas where local officials refuse cooperation.
This blurring isn’t a bureaucratic accident—it’s a feature. When authority becomes cloudy, loyalty, not law, becomes the deciding factor. That’s why Rome fell into the hands of emperors the Guard preferred. And it’s why ICE’s growing fusion culture is so dangerous now.
Surveillance as the New Sword
Instead of daggers, ICE has something more powerful: data. Through partnerships with Palantir, Clearview AI, DMV databases, and utility companies, ICE now holds one of the most comprehensive domestic intelligence networks in the country. Originally sold as tools to track criminals, these databases increasingly sweep in activists, observers, and critics.
This is the new Praetorian playbook: keep a list—not of enemies of the state, but enemies of the ruler’s narrative.
Detention as a Message
ICE’s detention powers allow weeks or months of confinement without criminal charges. Transfers to remote facilities. Restricted access to counsel. Long waits for hearings. Families separated through bureaucratic inertia. These are not accidents. They are soft weapons.
Rome’s Praetorian Guard detained senators to “send messages.” ICE detains asylum seekers, green-card holders, and activists under civil authority. The message lands just as clearly.
The Warning Embedded in History
America is not Rome. But power behaves the same way across centuries. A Praetorian Guard doesn’t take over a nation. It makes sure the person who does take over is never challenged.
ICE is not that far gone. Not yet. But its trajectory—the centralization of discretion, the political alignment, the quiet intimidation, the surveillance apparatus—matches a pattern recognizable to anyone who studies collapsing republics.
If this continues, we won’t wake up in a dictatorship.
We’ll wake up in something worse:
a democracy where power answers to the president first, and the people second.And once a Praetorian Guard forms, it almost never un-forms.
#AmericanDemocracy #Authoritarianism #CivilLiberties #ErosionOfRights #ExecutivePower #federalOverreach #historicalParallels #HomelandSecurity #ICE #immigrationEnforcement #PoliticalIntimidation #PraetorianGuard #SoftAuthoritarianism #Surveillance #TrumpAdministration -
The Empire’s New Enforcers: ICE and the Birth of Trump’s Praetorian Guard
Cliff Potts, WPS News
You can tell a lot about a government by the agency it empowers. Under Trump’s second term, the clearest signal of the administration’s intentions isn’t in the laws Congress passed—none of the big changes came from Congress—but in the agency Trump elevated: Immigration and Customs Enforcement. ICE has always been large, always aggressive, and always controversial. But it was never explicitly political. Not until now.
Since January 20, 2025, ICE has undergone a transformation that should worry anyone who still thinks the Constitution—not the presidency—sets the limits of federal power. What we’re seeing is not the creation of a secret police force or a cartoonish dictatorship. It’s something older, quieter, and historically far more accurate: the emergence of a Praetorian Guard—a force inside the state whose loyalty bends toward the leader instead of the law.
Administrative Power Becomes Personal Power
Most Americans don’t realize ICE carries its own version of a warrant. It’s called an “administrative warrant”—signed not by a judge, but by an ICE officer. These forms were originally intended for limited, civil immigration operations. Under Trump 2.0, they’ve become a shortcut around the Fourth Amendment and a license to act on political priorities.
In practice, these warrants now function like imperial seals: documents used to justify raids, interrogations, and detentions without the inconvenience of judicial oversight. Anyone in the crosshairs—immigrant communities, sanctuary officials, journalists documenting abuse—can be swept into these operations. The paperwork is clean. The legality is gray. The real purpose is pressure.
Fear as a Policy Tool
One of the oldest tactics of the Praetorian Guard was not violence but presence—showing up, unannounced, where the emperor wanted fear to travel. ICE has adopted the same strategy. “Knock-and-talks” now appear in neighborhoods known not for immigration violations, but for political opposition: immigrant-rights organizers, city council members resisting federal mandates, faith groups hosting asylum seekers.
These operations often rely on residents not knowing their rights. No judicial warrant. No obligation to open the door. But the implication of consequences—vague, undefined, and intimidating—is usually enough. The power isn’t in what ICE does; it’s in what people fear it might do.
The Fusion of Agencies
The Praetorian Guard didn’t operate alone. They blended with other forces, pulling power from their proximity to the emperor. ICE today follows that same arc. “Fusion” teams with U.S. Marshals and select state police blur lines of accountability, allowing operations in areas where local officials refuse cooperation.
This blurring isn’t a bureaucratic accident—it’s a feature. When authority becomes cloudy, loyalty, not law, becomes the deciding factor. That’s why Rome fell into the hands of emperors the Guard preferred. And it’s why ICE’s growing fusion culture is so dangerous now.
Surveillance as the New Sword
Instead of daggers, ICE has something more powerful: data. Through partnerships with Palantir, Clearview AI, DMV databases, and utility companies, ICE now holds one of the most comprehensive domestic intelligence networks in the country. Originally sold as tools to track criminals, these databases increasingly sweep in activists, observers, and critics.
This is the new Praetorian playbook: keep a list—not of enemies of the state, but enemies of the ruler’s narrative.
Detention as a Message
ICE’s detention powers allow weeks or months of confinement without criminal charges. Transfers to remote facilities. Restricted access to counsel. Long waits for hearings. Families separated through bureaucratic inertia. These are not accidents. They are soft weapons.
Rome’s Praetorian Guard detained senators to “send messages.” ICE detains asylum seekers, green-card holders, and activists under civil authority. The message lands just as clearly.
The Warning Embedded in History
America is not Rome. But power behaves the same way across centuries. A Praetorian Guard doesn’t take over a nation. It makes sure the person who does take over is never challenged.
ICE is not that far gone. Not yet. But its trajectory—the centralization of discretion, the political alignment, the quiet intimidation, the surveillance apparatus—matches a pattern recognizable to anyone who studies collapsing republics.
If this continues, we won’t wake up in a dictatorship.
We’ll wake up in something worse:
a democracy where power answers to the president first, and the people second.And once a Praetorian Guard forms, it almost never un-forms.
#AmericanDemocracy #Authoritarianism #CivilLiberties #ErosionOfRights #ExecutivePower #federalOverreach #historicalParallels #HomelandSecurity #ICE #immigrationEnforcement #PoliticalIntimidation #PraetorianGuard #SoftAuthoritarianism #Surveillance #TrumpAdministration -
https://www.europesays.com/news/14340/ Trump loses across courts in bruising week of immigration and legal setbacks #administration #Colorado #Court #FederalGovernment #Headlines #Immigration #ImmigrationEnforcement #Jan #judge #LegalSetback #News #president #ruling #SupremeCourt #thousand #TopStories #trump #week
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ICE leaked ledger exposed: local cops paid per arrest as a deportation army. Blue states get ZERO. One Tennessee cop: $1.8M. They're buying your police department. 🚨
#ICE #287g #DeportationArmy #BountyHunters #KenKlippenstein #ImmigrationEnforcement #TheWashingtonPretzel #USPoliTickle -
US Citizens Detained by Immigration Agents: Examining the Evidence
Over 170 US citizens were wrongly detained by immigration agents in 2026. Learn why it happened and what happens next.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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US Citizens Detained by Immigration Agents: Examining the Evidence
Over 170 US citizens were wrongly detained by immigration agents in 2026. Learn why it happened and what happens next.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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More than 170 US citizens were detained by immigration agents in 2026, with some held for days. This is a significant number of cases.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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More than 170 US citizens were detained by immigration agents in 2026, with some held for days. This is a significant number of cases.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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More than 170 US citizens were detained by immigration agents in 2026, with some held for days. This is a significant number of cases.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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More than 170 US citizens were detained by immigration agents in 2026, with some held for days. This is a significant number of cases.
#ICEdetentions, #USCitizenRights, #ImmigrationEnforcement, #CivilLiberties, #LegalIssues
https://newsletter.tf/us-citizens-detained-by-ice-agents-2026/
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HT @bob
#DHS Hunts Down 67-Year-Old #USCitizen Who Criticized Them in Email
The Department of Homeland Security is using a little-known tool to go after its critics.
Hafiz Rashid/ February 3, 2026
"The #Trump administration is targeting #FreeSpeech with a little-known legal tool: #AdministrativeSubpoenas.
"The #WashingtonPost reports that a retired #Philadelphia man, Jon, 67, found himself in the government’s crosshairs after he emailed a lead prosecutor at the Department of Homeland Security, #JosephDernbach, who was handling the deportation case of an #AfghanRefugee, identified as H, asking him to consider that the man’s life was in danger from the #Taliban.
" 'Mr. Dernbach, don’t play Russian roulette with H’s life,' Jon wrote from his #GMail account. 'Err on the side of caution. There’s a reason the US government along with many other governments don’t recognise the Taliban. Apply principles of common sense and decency.'
"Later that day, Jon received an email from #Google notifying him that an administrative subpoena had been sent to them from the Department of Homeland Security 'compelling the release of information related to your Google Account.' Federal agencies can issue such subpoenas without an order from a judge or grand jury, and Google gave Jon, who withheld his last name to protect his family from the government, one week to challenge it.
"Laws are supposed to restrict the use of administrative subpoenas, but DHS has used the tool against dissent protected under the #FirstAmendment to the #Constitution. Jon could not find who in the agency issued the #subpoena, let alone a record of it to show an attorney.
"Days later, DHS agents showed up at Jon’s door. A naturalized U.S. citizen originally from the #UK, Jon was worried about potential violence. The agents showed him a copy of the email and asked to see his side of the story. They didn’t know about the administrative subpoena but said they received orders to interview Jon by #DHS headquarters in Washington, D.C.
"Eventually, the agents agreed that Jon had committed no crimes after he told them he found Dernbach’s email address through a simple Google search. Jon secured pro bono representation by #ACLU attorneys, who argue that the government is violating a statute that limits how administrative subpoenas can be used for '#ImmigrationEnforcement' and that the government targeted Jon for #ProtectedSpeech.
" 'It doesn’t take that much to make people look over their shoulder, to think twice before they speak again,' said Nathan Freed Wessler, one of Jon’s attorneys. 'That’s why these kinds of subpoenas and other actions—the visits—are so pernicious. You don’t have to lock somebody up to make them reticent to make their voice heard. It really doesn’t take much, because the power of the federal government is so overwhelming.'
"Both #Google and #Meta received a record number of subpoenas in the United States during the first half of 2025 as Trump’s second term began, with Google receiving 28,622, a 15 percent increase over the previous six months. Jon was fortunate to have his case picked up by the ACLU and later reported on by a national media outlet. How many others in the U.S. haven’t been so lucky and face legal challenges for exercising their right to free speech?"
Source / listen:
https://newrepublic.com/post/206088/homeland-security-67-year-old-us-citizen-criticized-email#USPol #GoogleSucks #BigTech #Fascism #DefundDHS #ThoughtPolice #Orwellian #NineteenEightyFour #Authoritarianism #DepartmentOfHomelandInsecurity
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New ICE Video Exposes Brutal Truth Behind Renee Good Killing in Minneapolis
The latest ICE shooting video reveals misogyny, dehumanization, and a deadly disregard for human life. It shows Renee Good posed no threat, exposing a fatal misuse of force in Minneapolis.
New ICE Video Exposes Brutal Truth
Watch Politics Done Right T.V. here.
Podcasts (Video — Audio)
Summary
A newly released video removes all doubt about what happened in […]
#Accountability #DHS #federalViolence #HumanRights #ICE #ICEShooting #ImmigrationEnforcement #IndependentMedia #Minneapolis #policeBrutality #protests #ReneGood https://wp.me/p1OjMZ-oz1 -
The Texas Senate is considering a bill that would require sheriffs in the state's larger counties, such as Harris County, to collaborate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
#HarrisCounty #Immigration #LawEnforcement #Local #News #Police #Texas #287G #HarrisCountySheriffEdGonzalez #HarrisCountySheriffSOffice #ImmigrationEnforcement #SheriffSAssociationOfTexas #TexasSenate
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The Texas Senate is considering a bill that would require sheriffs in the state's larger counties, such as Harris County, to collaborate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
#HarrisCounty #Immigration #LawEnforcement #Local #News #Police #Texas #287G #HarrisCountySheriffEdGonzalez #HarrisCountySheriffSOffice #ImmigrationEnforcement #SheriffSAssociationOfTexas #TexasSenate