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New York Times
29 minutes ago
- New York Times
The Turmoil of an ICE Courthouse Arrest
In One Image The Turmoil of an ICE Courthouse Arrest By Todd Heisler, Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Wesley Parnell This is one of the many arrests happening each day inside the immigration courthouse in New York City. Agents cover their faces with masks. They wait in the hallway before springing into action, grabbing migrants leaving routine hearings. President Trump has enlisted officers across the government, but it can be difficult to tell which agencies they work for. Carlos Javier Lopez Benitez, a 27-year-old from Paraguay, was one of their targets on July 16. He was in court seeking asylum. News photographers, who outnumber federal agents some days, dashed to document the arrest. His sister, Lilian Lopez, clung to his arms, wailing, as officers clawed her grip. Supported by This has become the new normal in America's immigration courts. In New York City, especially, courthouse arrests have driven a spike in detentions of undocumented immigrants without criminal records. Immigration authorities used to stay away from courthouses. They were aware that their presence could scare migrants from engaging with the legal system. That changed in May when the Trump administration began arresting some immigrants showing up for mandatory court dates so that their deportations could be expedited. The arrests turned the courthouses into places to witness Mr. Trump's immigration crackdown unfold, in real time, every day. Masked agents stand sentry outside the courtrooms. Migrants show up for their hearings, not knowing if they're walking into a trap. The arrests sometimes devolve into volatile tussles, with news photographers, activists and politicians crowding hallways to witness the spectacle. Family members are often left reeling. 'His arrest was like the show of the day,' Porfiria Lopez, one of Mr. Lopez Benitez's sisters, said of her brother's arrest. 'The question we were left with is: How do they decide who to arrest? Is it chance or just theater?' Mr. Lopez Benitez, who is from Paraguay, crossed the southern border in May 2023. He was briefly apprehended by border patrol agents in Arizona, placed in deportation proceedings and released into the United States as his case wound through the courts. He traveled to New York, where he reunited with his two sisters, who are U.S. citizens. He lived in Queens, worked in construction and did not have a criminal record, according to his family and his lawyers. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
29 minutes ago
- New York Times
Curtis Sliwa Wants to Be Mayor. He's Taking Off His Beret to Prove It.
Curtis Sliwa, the Guardian Angels founder, flamboyant radio host and Republican nominee for mayor, has been an inescapable fixture of life in New York City for decades. But when he strolled into the Lower Manhattan offices of an important business group recently, its chief executive literally did a double take. Mr. Sliwa had swapped out his familiar sateen Guardian Angels jacket for a dark suit. And on his head, where a swooping red beret has sat almost every day of his adult life, there was only a cap-shaped tan line and balding pate. 'He stuck out his hand, and I looked at him and said, 'Oh my god!'' said Kathryn S. Wylde, the longtime leader of the group, the Partnership for New York City. ''I didn't recognize you.'' In a city rich with sartorial symbols, few have been more memorable than Mr. Sliwa's ruby red headpiece. It helped the Guardian Angels, his subway patrol group, gain notoriety in the 1970s; was his uniform for a career in television and radio and provided an unofficial motif for his unsuccessful first run for mayor in 2021. Yet as he takes a second, seemingly more viable run at City Hall, Mr. Sliwa, 71, is beginning to show up without it. Certainly not always, but especially for meetings with business leaders, union officials and others he has deemed to be serious people. He has pledged to keep it off permanently if he is elected in November. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump's executive order seeks to remove homeless from streets. What is seen in Erie County
On July 24, President Donald Trump issued an executive order to 'end crime and disorder on America's streets, which was directed at the homelessness endemic taking place across the nation." The executive action makes it easier for cities and states to remove homeless people from the streets by ending consent decrees that limit local and state governments' ability to move homeless people into treatment centers and other facilities. The issues that pertain to homelessness that the executive order focuses on are seen in Erie County. The 2024 PA 605 In Time Census, as cited by the Erie County Home Team Homeless and Housing Coalition, provides the following statistics of note for the county: 454 residents in Erie County we're identified as homeless. 76 residents were unsheltered and living in a place that was considered inhumane. 378 were living in an emergency shelter or a transitional housing program. 37 families could be found in shelters consisting of 116 people and 37 children under the age of 18. 47% of adults dealing with homelessness battled mental illness while 36% battled substance abuse. An additional 577 people were in supportive housing or considered 'near homeless." "Talking to all of my colleagues across the country like in Philadelphia, their challenges are far different than ours in Erie County," Erie County Executive Brenton Davis said. "Honestly, I am thankful for the first world problems that we have. For all the different things that we have, we know what the finite number is and if you know what the number is then you can work towards solving it." From 2024: Erie County opens single-site location for Our Neighbors' Place overflow homeless shelter What to know about the executive order The executive order is divided into several objectives, according to which provides the following order details: The purpose and policy (of the order) which is due to the endemic vagrancy, disorderly behavior, sudden confrontations and violent attacks making cities unsafe. Restoring civil commitment and what to take appropriate action on. Fighting vagrancy on America's streets and how immediate steps will be taken to assess grants. The redirection of federal resources towards effective methods of addressing homelessness and where to take appropriate action. The increase in accountability and safety in America's homelessness programs. Finally, the general provisions of the order. The full order can be found on "To me, anything that provides a resource to local government to be flexible to solve the issues in our community I fully support," Davis said. Organizations in Erie to assist with homelessness In Erie, there are multiple organizations that are on the front lines in battling homelessness, including but not limited to the Erie City Mission, Mercy Center for Women, Mental Health Association, Emmaus Soup Kitchen, Erie County Care Management and more. provides a list of multiple resources from shelters to free clothing to medical services and more. More: Could visit to Erie's Mercy Center for Women help the state craft a maternal health plan? "I can only speak to this locally, Erie County is a social service-rich environment," Davis said. "Everything is finite, resources and funding are finite. I think it's a matter of finding an array of tools to make it more accessible and flexible. That'll be the key." Contact Nicholas Sorensen at nsorensen@ This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News: What to know about homelessness in Erie County Solve the daily Crossword