
Several people arrested at anti-Ice protest outside NYC immigration court
Protesters marched to the largest federal immigration courthouse in Manhattan on Friday morning and chanted outside the building. Demonstrators demanded access to the site, which was denied, and they later held a sit-in outside the courthouse, according to Hunter Dunn, the press coordinator for the grassroots protest movement known as 50501.
Within a few minutes the New York City police department moved in to arrest about 15 protesters for disorderly conduct, according to Dunn , as activists could be seen blocking the street.
'No fear, no hate, no Ice in our state!' chanted demonstrators during their march to the site, where Ice agents routinely detain immigrants after immigration court proceedings, in a move that goes against previously normal practice.
'They were entirely peaceful,' Dunn told the Guardian. 'It is not wrong to demonstrate against illegal, unconstitutional and immoral actions by the federal government.'
Demonstrators allege detainees are being held in overcrowded conditions without many basic amenities or legal access at 26 Federal Plaza's 10th floor, where the agency denies it detains people, and are demanding unrestricted access for elected officials, journalists and faith leaders. Friday's protest was one of several in the city this week.
Last month, footage from inside 26 Federal Plaza shared by the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC) showed two dozen men in bare rooms, some lying on the floor with emergency blankets and with few basic provisions.
'Just to be a presence, we're here to say that the American people are opposed to these kinds of policies. And for Ice agents, maybe that will lead some of them to reconsider their career choice,' Jeffrey Courter, the chair of the Justice Ministries Committee of the Presbytery of New York City, told ABC7.
Authorities insist the facility is only a processing center.
Lawmakers have been denied access to the site. In June, Brad Lander, the city's comptroller, was arrested while escorting an immigrant from a hearing.
Several groups, including 50501 and NYIC, as well as faith-based groups, were present at the protest.
Courthouse detentions have become a flashpoint in the Trump administration's aggressive immigration crackdown, which aims to arrest 3,000 people daily. Reports from cities including Phoenix, Los Angeles, Chicago and El Paso, Texas, describe routine court appearances devolving into tense encounters. A newly filed class-action lawsuit seeks to ban the practice of making Ice arrests at immigration courthouses.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
2 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Vinay Prasad returns to FDA days after leaving under pressure from Laura Loomer
Vinay Prasad is returning to his role overseeing vaccine, gene therapy and blood product regulation at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) a little more than a week after he left the agency. 'At the FDA's request, Dr Vinay Prasad is resuming leadership of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research,' Department Health and Human Services spokesperson Andrew Nixon said in a statement to Reuters. Prasad left the agency on 30 July after just a few months as director of the center. Stat News first reported the return of Prasad. Prasad, an oncologist who was a fierce critic of US Covid-19 vaccine and mask mandates, was named the center's director by the FDA's commissioner, Marty Makary, in May. Criticism of Prasad's tenure intensified around the agency's handling of a gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) from Sarepta Therapeutics. The FDA-approved therapy played a role in the death of two teens who had advanced DMD. After a third death in a separate experimental gene therapy from the company, the FDA asked Sarepta on 18 July to stop all shipments of the approved DMD therapy, saying it had safety concerns. The FDA changed course on Sarepta on 28 July and said shipments to the main group of patients for the drug could restart. Laura Loomer, a far-right influencer and conspiracy theorist with outsized sway over Donald Trump, had called Prasad a 'progressive leftist saboteur' who was undermining the agency's work. Two days before Prasad stepped down last month, Loomer had released misleadingly edited audio to suggest that that Prasad had admitted sticking pins in a Trump voodoo doll, when the full audio made it clear that he was talking about the kind of thing an imagined liberal Trump-hater would do. Loomer reacted to the news of Prasad's return on Saturday by renewing her attacks on him in a social media post in which she promised to produce 'exposes of officials within HHS and FDA' in the weeks ahead. 'There are several Senate Confirmation hearings coming up and I have multiple oppo books ready for distribution!' she wrote. Prasad was a physician who joined the agency from the University of California, San Francisco. He has had stints at the National Cancer Institute and the National Institutes of Health. The FDA and other health agencies have seen multiple shake-ups in recent months under the leadership of health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.


The Guardian
4 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Far-right protesters clash with police in Nuneaton after rally outside town hall
Far-right protesters clashed with police on Saturday after hundreds of people gathered outside the town hall in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, for a planned protest. The event was organised in response to two men, reportedly Afghan asylum seekers, who were charged over the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in the town. The protest began peacefully but there were tense exchanges with counter-protesters from Stand Up to Racism, who held placards and a banner reading 'stop the far right'. One held a handwritten sign which read: 'Why do fascists only care about women when they can use our stories and pain to oppress others?' On the other side, a red and white sign in the crowd saying 'This Is England', and another with 'UK first', were held above the growing crowd of protesters. They accused the anti-racists and the police of 'protecting paedophiles', shouting 'shame on you!'. Nuneaton and Bedworth police said there was one arrest at the protest, a 17-year-old boy for making threats to cause criminal damage. The counter-protesters were outnumbered about four to one and were led away by police after a couple of hours. Those in the crowd listened to rambling speeches in which men shouted 'enough is enough!' and urged them to support Reform UK. The crowd erupted in chants of 'send them home' and 'we want our country back'. One man standing on a stage in front of about 400 people said: 'England is doomed. You cannot stop it by protesting, the far right must unite.' He called upon the separate far-right organisations to come together in a group that should include Tommy Robinson, a far-right agitator whose real name is Stephen Yaxely-Lennon. Robinson is on bail accused of assaulting a man in St Pancras station. The protest, Nuneaton says No!, was organised by the extremist nationalist group Homeland party, whose activists unfurled a banner reading 'Remigration NOW', referring to the mass deportation of immigrants and those born in the UK with heritage from overseas. Many of those who attended said they were from the local area and denied being far right. Meanwhile, Nazi imagery could be seen on T-shirts worn by a handful of people. Music blared from a loudspeaker, including a mismatch of Rule, Britannia! with the chorus loudly sung along to. The protest wound down by mid afternoon as the music was switched off and many protesters, including most of the women, left. Some remained, drinking cans of beer and working themselves up into a lather against the police, who they accused of covering up crimes by asylum seekers. When one officer agreed with a protester that the alleged rape of the child was a 'horrific crime', in an attempt to calm some agitated protesters, one shouted: 'Horrific crime? Well let us protest then.' The officer responded: 'We are letting you protest.' By late afternoon, the crowd had entirely dispersed. Later, some of the protesters could be seen taking it in turns to sing karaoke on the street outside the Wetherspoon's pub.


The Guardian
4 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Far-right and anti-asylum protesters gather in Nuneaton
Far-right protesters clashed with police on Saturday after hundreds of people gathered outside the town hall in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, for a planned protest. The event was organised in response to two men, reportedly Afghan asylum seekers, who were charged over the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in the town