logo
ICE raid rumors leave Triad Latino communities on edge

ICE raid rumors leave Triad Latino communities on edge

Yahoo28-01-2025
(WGHP) — Pres. Donald Trump's immigration crackdown has many people in the Triad's Latino community on edge.
Many are worried about whether U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, also known as ICE, or other law enforcement officials will come for them next as part of his executive order.
Trump's 5 biggest moves on immigration so far
Hector Rivera, an organizer for the nonprofit Siembra NC, didn't let a chilly Monday afternoon stop him from spreading awareness about ICE raids at a popular market. He started passing out pamphlets to keep Asheboro's Latino community informed.
'We've heard there's a lot of problems with rumors going around, that there's immigration over here and immigration over there, so we're also helping our community dispel those rumors by spreading verified information,' Rivera said.
Rivera and his group of volunteers are separating fact from fiction for Latino community members, especially after ICE arrested nearly 1,000 people nationwide in raids on Sunday. News of these arrests has caused panic in the Piedmont Triad.
'Right now people are trying to not live with fear. They know that they still have to go to work and that they still have to take their kids to school, and they're trying to continue doing that,' said Elena Jimenz.
Jimenz has lived in Asheboro for more than 20 years. She says she's fearful of potential ICE raids.
'We haven't heard them. I haven't heard them yet but I am hearing the rumors,' Jimenz said.
As a documented immigrant from Mexico, Jimenz says she's doing her due diligence by keeping her neighbors educated.
'It makes me sad and feel a little bit worried as well, but I'm still here to bring this information to the community about their rights,' Jimenz said.
Those rights include what to do in situations if an individual has encounters with immigration enforcement.
Rivera says, if anyone comes to your car or house, you're not obligated to open the door unless they have a judicial order.
And if you have questions call the Siembra community hotline.
'Continue to live without fear. That's the message that we're spreading to our people too. If we continue to live in fear, they're going to win because we want to continue to live life because we're not doing anything wrong as community members of Asheboro or North Carolina,' Jimenz said.
Siembra NC also has a hotline that can be reached by calling (336) 543-0353.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Law and Order' President Trump Just Forced a Cop to Self-Deport
'Law and Order' President Trump Just Forced a Cop to Self-Deport

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Law and Order' President Trump Just Forced a Cop to Self-Deport

The Department of Homeland Security blamed local officials in Maine for using the department's federal database to determine the employment eligibility of a police officer who was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement last month, according to NBC News. ICE arrested Old Orchard Beach Police Department reserve Officer Jon Luke Evans late last month, shocking local law enforcement officials who had been told by the federal government that their colleague was permitted to work in the United States. ICE told the Associated Press Monday that Evans, who is originally from Jamaica, would be given the opportunity to voluntarily leave the country immediately. Evans has agreed to leave the United States. As Donald Trump ramps up his purported crackdown on crime in the nation's capital (and elsewhere), the removal of a law enforcement officer strikes a particularly ironic note—but Evans's removal hits on yet another crucial issue. Old Orchard Beach had previously confirmed Evans's immigration status by using E-Verify, DHS's online system for employers to quickly certify whether a potential employee can legally work legally in the U.S. based on records at the Social Security Administration and DHS. But apparently that's not good enough for the Trump administration. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin accused Old Orchard Beach of 'reckless reliance' on her own department's program, according to NBC News. Critics of the program had said that it's easy to fool the E-Verify system with fake I-9 documents and stolen IDs. But employers have few alternatives to E-Verify. Nine states have even implemented laws requiring private-sector employers to use the fast and free program. Some opponents to the program have said that stricter enforcement could lead to discrimination and worker shortages. In the wake of Trump's sweeping deportation scheme, employers who use E-Verify have not been spared from immigration raids. In June, a food-packaging company in Omaha saw more than half of its workforce arrested, though the employer said he'd used E-Verify to check the work status of all of his employees. DHS recently added a new tool to notify employers when someone's employment authorization is revoked and must be reverified. If employees cannot provide new evidence of valid employment authorization, they will be terminated immediately. Solve the daily Crossword

Mayor Eric Adams, NYC call on ICE to end migrant courthouse arrests immediately
Mayor Eric Adams, NYC call on ICE to end migrant courthouse arrests immediately

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Mayor Eric Adams, NYC call on ICE to end migrant courthouse arrests immediately

Mayor Eric Adams on Tuesday joined calls for ICE to immediately end the 'illegal' arrests of migrants reporting for their hearings at a Lower Manhattan federal immigration building. The city Law Department filed court papers in support of a lawsuit that seeks to halt the arrests by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement at 26 Federal Plaza, arguing the blitzes are driving fear among the Big Apple's roughly 3 million immigrants. 'From my first days as a rookie cop to my current role as mayor of New York City, my job is, and has always been, to keep law-abiding New Yorkers safe,' Adams said in a statement. 'We should allow New Yorkers to feel secure to attend legal proceedings in their pursuit to obtain legal status.' Advertisement The arrests have driven many to avoid courts, police and other basic city services for fear of detention and removal, sending otherwise law-abiding immigrants underground, claims the suit, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and other legal groups. 5 Mayor Adams is taking his strongest stance against the Trump Administration yet by joining in on a lawsuit seeking to end ICE arrests at Manhattan immigration court. Stephen Yang 5 Adams and the city law department argue that the arrests 'undermines the public interest' by 'deterring City residents from participating in immigration proceedings.' Corbis via Getty Images Advertisement The Adams administration's public support of the suit, filed in Manhattan federal court earlier this month, marks the mayor's strongest stance yet against President Trump's immigration crackdown. Adams has previously appeared to cozy up to the White House, including pushing to rid the city of its sanctuary city status and to bring back ICE to Rikers Island — moves that he has repeatedly defended in court. Hizzoner and the city, in the amicus brief filed Tuesday, argued the ICE arrests at 26 Federal Plaza are not only illegal, but 'undermines the public interest,' by 'deterring City residents from participating in immigration proceedings.' 'Free access to courts is a pillar of the rule of law, but our judicial system cannot work as it should, as it must, if courthouses are used as traps for those who are simply following what the law requires,' the filing states. Advertisement 5 The city's top lawyer, Muriel Goode-Trufant, said that the city has become the 'epicenter of the Trump administration's courthouse arrest campaign.' William Farrington The city's top lawyer, Muriel Goode-Trufant, said that the Big Apple has become the 'epicenter of the Trump administration's courthouse arrest campaign,' constraining the ability for immigrants — and New Yorkers at-large — to seek justice through the legal system. 'With every illegal courthouse arrest, Immigration and Customs Enforcement is chipping away at the bedrock principles of fairness and due process that support our entire system of justice,' Goode-Trufant said in a statement. 5 One of the several lawsuits filed over the ICE arrests scored a victory last week when a judge ordered the agency to immediately improve conditions at a makeshift holding cell inside the federal immigration courthouse at 26 Federal Plaza. NYIC Advertisement A study of federal records by THE CITY revealed that half of all immigration court arrests in the country this spring occurred in Manhattan, but more recently, those busts have ground to a halt as immigrants have largely ceased showing up to courthouses altogether. While this is the first time the Adams administration has supported a wholesale end to the arrests, the city filed briefs earlier this summer in support of individuals caught up in the ICE dragnet — including several public school students. 'No one in our city should feel forced to hide in the shadows or be afraid to use resources, and that includes sending children to school, going to a hospital when sick, calling 911 when in danger, or going to a court hearing when called upon to do so,' Adams said Tuesday. 5 'Free access to courts is a pillar of the rule of law, but our judicial system cannot work as it should, as it must, if courthouses are used as traps for those who are simply following what the law requires,' the filing states. Getty Images One of the several lawsuits filed over the ICE arrests scored a victory last week when a judge ordered the agency to immediately improve conditions at a makeshift holding cell inside the federal immigration courthouse at 26 Federal Plaza. The order was walked back slightly when government lawyers successfully argued that detained immigrants should not have access to toothbrushes.

Senate Probe Uncovers Allegations of Widespread Abuse in ICE Custody
Senate Probe Uncovers Allegations of Widespread Abuse in ICE Custody

WIRED

timean hour ago

  • WIRED

Senate Probe Uncovers Allegations of Widespread Abuse in ICE Custody

Aug 19, 2025 1:15 PM Led by US senator Jon Ossoff, the investigation cites hundreds of reports since January, including accounts of miscarriages, child neglect, and sexual abuse at ICE detention centers in dozens of states. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) questions witnesses during a hearing held to examine a future without Type 1 Diabetes with a focus on accelerating breakthroughs and creating hope at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on July 09, 2025, in Washington, DC. Photograph:A United States Senate investigation has identified more than 500 credible reports of human rights abuses in US immigration detention since January, including alarming allegations of mistreatment of pregnant women and children. As of late last month, the investigation—led by US senator Jon Ossoff, a Democrat of Georgia—had unearthed 41 cases of physical and sexual abuse; 14 involving pregnant detainees and 18 involving children. The accounts of abuse span facilities in 25 states and include Puerto Rico, US military bases, and charter deportation flights. Among the most harrowing: a pregnant woman reportedly bled for days before being taken to a hospital, only to miscarry alone without medical attention. Others described being forced to sleep on the floor or denied meals and medical exams. Attorneys reported that their clients' prenatal checkups were canceled for weeks at a time. Children as young as 2 were also subjected to neglect. One US citizen child with severe medical needs was hospitalized multiple times while in Customs and Border Protection custody, where an officer allegedly dismissed her mother's pleas for help by telling her to 'just give the girl a cracker.' Another child recovering from brain surgery was reportedly denied follow-up care, and a 4-year-old undergoing cancer treatment was deported without access to doctors. The Senate investigation found most abuse reports at detention centers in Texas, Georgia, and California, spanning both Department of Homeland Security-run facilities and federal prisons used under Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agreements. The findings are based on dozens of witness interviews, Ossoff's office says, including detainees, family members, attorneys, correctional staff, law enforcement, doctors and nurses, as well as site inspections of detention centers in Texas and Georgia. The report also cites corroborating news investigations and public records, drawing on sources such as WIRED, Miami Herald, NBC News, CNN, BBC, and regional outlets like Louisiana Illuminator and VT Digger. Together, these sources formed the foundation of what the report describes as an 'active and ongoing investigation' into systemic mistreatment of pregnant women and children in US custody. ICE did not respond to WIRED's request for comment. A WIRED investigation published in late June and focused on 911 calls from 10 of the nation's largest ICE detention centers revealed a pattern of medical crises ranging from pregnancy complications and suicide attempts to seizures, head injuries, and allegations of sexual assault. (WIRED shared its findings with Ossoff's office upon request last month.) Sources told WIRED that detention staff frequently failed to respond to urgent calls for help, including multiple cases in which pregnant women suffered serious complications or miscarriages without timely medical attention. The Trump administration's detention system is undergoing rapid expansion, with plans to more than double capacity to over 107,000 beds nationwide. New facilities are rising in West Texas, where a $232 million contract has funded a tent-style camp at Fort Bliss capable of holding up to 5,000 people; and in Indiana, where ICE struck a deal to house 1,000 detainees in the state prison system. Florida's so-called 'Alligator Alcatraz' caged encampment has already drawn lawsuits over alleged human rights abuses and environmental damage, while critics warn that relying on military bases and remote rural prisons to absorb the surge strips detainees of due process and shields conditions from public scrutiny. Civil rights groups and local advocates argue that the expansion cements a system already plagued by neglect, pointing to reports of miscarriages, untreated illness, and violence inside. With contracts flowing to private prison companies and military facilities alike, the US is locking in the largest immigration detention network in the country's history—an infrastructure that critics say is designed not only to hold migrants, but make their suffering invisible.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store