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Trump administration working to return migrant hastily deported to Mexico after resisting similar court orders in other cases

Trump administration working to return migrant hastily deported to Mexico after resisting similar court orders in other cases

Yahoo6 days ago

US immigration officials are 'working' on flying back a Guatemalan migrant who says he was wrongly deported to Mexico, according to new court filings, in what appears to mark the first time the Trump administration has made plans to bring back a migrant after a judge ordered the administration to facilitate their return.
Phoenix-based immigration officials are 'currently working with ICE Air to bring O.C.G. back to the United States on an Air Charter Operations (ACO) flight return leg,' the Justice Department said in the Wednesday court filing, referring to the pseudonym the migrant is using in the case.
US District Judge Brian Murphy, who sits in Boston, ordered O.C.G.'s return last week. The case that Murphy is overseeing concerns the deportation of migrants to 'third countries,' or nations that are not their home country.
After entering the US and being deported a first time, the Guatemalan man reentered the US again in 2024, at which point he sought asylum, having suffered 'multiple violent attacks' in Guatemala, according to court documents.
On his way to the US during the second trip, O.C.G. said, he was raped and held for ransom in Mexico –– a detail he made known to an immigration judge during proceedings. In 2025, a judge ruled he should not be sent back to his native country, the documents say.
Two days after the judge ruled he should not be removed to Guatemala, the government deported him to Mexico, according to Murphy's order. O.C.G. had claimed in the case that he had not been given the opportunity before his deportation to communicate his fear of being sent to Mexico and that his pleas before his removal to speak to an attorney were rejected. The government had been arguing in the case that O.C.G. had communicated to officials before his removal that he had no fear about being deported to Mexico. But recently, the government had to back down from that claim, acknowledging that it could not identify an immigration official who could substantiate that version of events.
Before Murphy's ruling, O.C.G. filed a declaration that said he was now in Guatemala, where he has been 'living in hiding, in constant panic and constant fear.'
O.C.G.'s removal to Mexico and subsequently Guatemala likely 'lacked due process,' Murphy said in his ruling. During his immigration proceedings, O.C.G. said he feared being sent to Mexico, but the judge told him that since Mexico isn't his native country, he can't be sent there without additional steps in the process, the ruling said.
'Those necessary steps, and O.C.G.'s pleas for help, were ignored. As a result, O.C.G. was given up to Mexico, which then sent him back to Guatemala, where he remains in hiding today,' Murphy said.
Murphy's ruling came days after an appeals court denied the Trump administration's request to put on hold an order requiring it to facilitate the return of a 20-year-old Venezuelan migrant wrongly deported to El Salvador earlier this year.
During a hearing earlier this month, US District Judge Stephanie Gallagher said officials had done virtually nothing to comply with her directive that they 'facilitate' the migrant's return to the US from the mega-prison in El Salvador where he was sent so he can have his asylum application resolved.
In a similar case, the Trump administration has been in a standoff with another federal judge in Maryland over her order that it facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man who was mistakenly deported in March.
US District Judge Paula Xinis, who is overseeing the case, has faced repeated stonewalling from the Justice Department and members of the Trump administration, who have continued to thwart an 'expedited fact-finding' search for answers on what officials are doing to facilitate his return from El Salvador.
CNN's Karina Tsui contributed to this report.

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Feds seek to ditch settlement over alleged redlining with North Jersey bank
Feds seek to ditch settlement over alleged redlining with North Jersey bank

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time16 minutes ago

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Feds seek to ditch settlement over alleged redlining with North Jersey bank

The Trump administration is asking a judge to drop a 2022 settlement the Justice Department had reached with North Jersey-based Lakeland Bank — which was later absorbed by Provident Bank — over allegations of redlining against Black and Hispanic customers. While Provident Bank said it will continue to provide low-cost mortgages to underserved communities, the motion by the U.S. Justice Department to abandon the settlement has drawn the ire of community advocates and legal experts, who say it would make it easier for banks to engage in redlining. 'It goes without saying it's a good thing when financial institutions are complying with those consent orders, but when you take away the teeth — the actual enforcement — who's to say that they will continue to comply,' said Leila Amirhamzeh, director of community reinvestment for New Jersey Citizen Action, a consumer advocacy four-page motion by the Justice Department, filed May 28 in U.S. District Court, seeks to terminate the consent order the Biden administration negotiated with what was then Lakeland Bank. In the initial complaint, the Justice Department said Lakeland violated the federal Fair Housing Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act by deliberately avoiding banking with Black and Hispanic customers, particularly in and around Newark. The discrimination in question allegedly took place between 2015 and 2021, according to the Biden administration. To settle the complaint, Lakeland agreed to pay $12 million to subsidize mortgages, home improvement loans and home refinancing loans for Black and Hispanic residents and open two branches in underserved neighborhoods. Lakeland also had to provide $150,000 a year for advertising, outreach and consumer finance education in the Newark area. Newark Mayor and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ras Baraka wanted one of those new branches to be in his city, and the Greater Toms River Chamber of Commerce also wanted a branch in its area. According to the Provident Bank website, there are currently four locations in Newark and three in Toms River. After acquiring Lakeland, Provident took ownership of the settlement and the mandate to open two branches in underserved areas of New Jersey. The Justice Department in its motion to terminate the order said Lakeland reached substantial commitment to comply with the consent agreement and it is committed to continuing its disbursement of the loan subsidy. Provident spokesperson Keith Buscio told and the USA TODAY Network New Jersey that the bank remains committed to the loan subsidy initiative. He said Provident is not a party to the litigation and referred other questions to the Justice Department. The Justice Department could not immediately be reached for comment. Baraka's office in Newark said it is planning to hold a press conference about the motion by the Justice Department on June 5. Court filings show two attorneys who helped file the initial complaint against Lakeland, Michael Campion and Susan Millenky, withdrew as counsel from the case. Campion was appointed in 2022 to lead the U.S. Attorney's Office's Civil Rights Division that was created to enforce federal civil rights laws in New Jersey. The Fair Housing Act was passed as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 to prohibit landlords and mortgage lenders from discriminating based on race, religion, national origin or sex. Nearly 60 years later, racial wealth disparity remains vast. In New Jersey, the median household wealth of white families is $322,500, compared with $17,700 for Black families and $26,100 for Hispanic families, the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice said. In New Jersey, 77.3% of white residents owned a home in 2020. By comparison, 42.8% of Black residents and 32.7% of Hispanic residents were homeowners, according to the Urban Institute, a research group. Critics said the Justice Department's motion to drop the Lakeland settlement is a step by the Trump administration's bid to reverse diversity, equity and inclusion programs. David Troutt, a professor at Rutgers Law School in Newark, said the motion by the Justice Department to terminate the consent decree is part of a larger campaign by the department to rescind investigations and agreements involving anti-Black racism, while beginning investigations into what it deems 'illegal DEI.' 'The Trump administration's withdrawal from a federal consent decree without justification is an extraordinary act of endorsing racist practices and housing market manipulation,' Troutt said. 'For the very government that successfully enforced those borrowers' civil rights to now repudiate them sends a message unlike any we've seen since the federal government first endorsed redlining in the 1930s,' Troutt said. Lakeland isn't the only New Jersey bank that faced scrutiny under the Biden administration. Toms River-based OceanFirst Financial Corp. agreed to pay $14 million to subsidize mortgages, helping settle a lawsuit that alleged the bank violated federal discrimination laws. Since then, it has improved the rating given by federal bank regulators who oversee investments in underserved communities to 'outstanding.' The Justice Department hasn't filed a motion seeking to terminate the consent order with OceanFirst. But two attorneys who represented the U.S. in the initial complaint, Millenky and Nathan Shulock, have filed motions to withdraw from the case, according to the court docket. A combined 22 Provident and Lakeland branches closed in 2024 following the $1.3 billion merger creating a 'super community bank.' Each branch that closed was within roughly three miles of a nearby branch. Activists and opponents warned that the merger would mean fewer banking services would be available for underserved communities, such as people of color, the elderly and disabled. New Jersey Citizen Action applauded Provident for its continued commitment to the terms of the consent order. But the group said the Justice Department should continue to enforce it. 'When you actually terminate these consent orders, there's no deterrence, and it's basically telling financial institutions that the Department of Justice is going to be taking a hands-off approach to fair lending issues, to redlining,' New Jersey Citizen Action's Amirhamzeh said. Daniel Munoz covers business, consumer affairs, labor and the economy for and The Record. Email: munozd@ Twitter:@danielmunoz100 and Facebook Michael L. Diamond is a business reporter for the Asbury Park Press. He has been writing about the New Jersey economy and health care industry since 1999. He can be reached at mdiamond@ This article originally appeared on Feds seek to drop Lakeland Bank settlement over alleged redlining

Calvin Butler Elected Chair; David Campbell and Chris Womack Elected Vice Chairs of EEI Board of Directors
Calvin Butler Elected Chair; David Campbell and Chris Womack Elected Vice Chairs of EEI Board of Directors

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time31 minutes ago

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Calvin Butler Elected Chair; David Campbell and Chris Womack Elected Vice Chairs of EEI Board of Directors

NEW ORLEANS, June 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Calvin Butler, president and CEO of Chicago-based Exelon, today was elected chair of the board of the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), the national association of investor-owned electric companies. David Campbell, chairman and CEO of Kansas City, Mo.-based Evergy, and Chris Womack, chairman, president, and CEO of Atlanta-based Southern Company, were elected vice chairs. EEI's Board elected Butler, Campbell, and Womack during the institute's annual meeting in New Orleans. EEI's chair rotates on an annual basis, and Butler succeeds Maria Pope, president and CEO of Portland, Ore.-based Portland General Electric. "EEI and our member electric companies are grateful to Maria Pope for her strong and steadfast leadership as EEI chair," said EEI interim President and CEO Pat Vincent-Collawn. "Maria's commitment to providing customers with safe, reliable, and resilient clean energy and to bringing new energy solutions forward is unwavering. She has been instrumental in shaping a multi-year strategic roadmap for our members that prioritizes customer affordability, and she continues to play a critical role in helping our industry identify comprehensive national solutions to mitigate risks from wildfires." "We also are proud to announce that Calvin Butler was elected EEI Chair for the 2025-2026 cycle," added Vincent-Collawn. "With demand for electricity rising at the fastest pace in decades, Calvin's leadership will be essential as EEI's member companies work to advance our shared policy priorities and to deliver the reliable, secure electricity that powers our nation's economy." "Our industry stands at an exciting crossroad, with new challenges, historic levels of investment, and burgeoning technologies like artificial intelligence that are redefining America's energy future," said Butler, who most recently served as an EEI vice chair. "I look forward to working with EEI and its member companies to ensure that we continue to meet the evolving needs and expectations of our customers, while at the same time working to keep their bills as low as possible." Calvin Butler is president and CEO of Exelon, the parent company of six local energy companies, including Atlantic City Electric, BGE, ComEd, Delmarva Power, PECO, and Pepco. Together, they serve approximately 10.7 million electric and natural gas customers in New Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia. David Campbell joined Evergy in January 2021 as president and CEO and, in May 2024, became chairman and CEO. Under Campbell's leadership, Evergy focuses on providing safe, affordable, and reliable service to its 1.7 million electric customers in Kansas and Missouri. Chris Womack is the chairman, president, and CEO of Southern Company, which serves 9 million electric and natural gas customers and businesses in Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Virginia. Under Womack's leadership, Southern Company and its subsidiaries are leading producers of clean, safe, reliable, and affordable energy, and leading innovators in the energy industry. EEI is the association that represents all U.S. investor-owned electric companies. Our members provide safe, reliable electricity for nearly 250 million Americans, and operate in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. As a whole, the electric power industry supports more than 7 million jobs in communities across the United States. In addition to our U.S. members, EEI has more than 70 international electric companies, with operations in more than 90 countries, as International Members, and hundreds of industry suppliers and related organizations as Associate Members. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Edison Electric Institute

ICE used ‘deceptive' practices to detain asylum seeker at Portland courthouse, attorneys say
ICE used ‘deceptive' practices to detain asylum seeker at Portland courthouse, attorneys say

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time34 minutes ago

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ICE used ‘deceptive' practices to detain asylum seeker at Portland courthouse, attorneys say

PORTLAND, Ore. () – Amid the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration, immigration agents detained a woman seeking asylum at a Portland immigration courthouse on Monday, attorneys representing the asylum seeker said. According to the attorneys, OJM — a pseudonym used to protect the woman's identity because of safety concerns — was at a hearing for her asylum case in Portland when Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials asked the court to dismiss her case and detained her. Now, the attorneys at the Portland-based Innovation Law Lab say they are filing an emergency petition, arguing ICE used 'deceptive and unethical practices' to detain her and strip her of her due process to OJM's attorneys, after she left the courtroom, ICE agents arrested her 'in an attempt to end her asylum claim, transfer her, and rapidly deport her.' OJM is a 24-year-old transgender woman from Mexico, where she was abducted and raped because of her gender identity and sexual orientation 'at the hands of a dangerous cartel,' OJM's attorneys said, noting she fled to the United States for safety. 'This is a dangerous attempt by ICE to circumvent due process, speed up deportations, and eviscerate the right to asylum,' said Innovation Law Lab Attorney Jordan Cunnings, who represents OJM. 'This unethical behavior goes against the values we hold as Oregonians, ensuring that everyone is welcomed and included in our state.' Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now The emergency petition, obtained by KOIN 6 News, states that OJM was released from custody by immigration authorities nearly two years ago in California. Later, in February of 2025, she filed for asylum, and in the following month, immigration officials started removal proceedings, the petition says. 'Only nearly two years after OJM was released from custody and months after she applied for asylum, (authorities) commenced removal proceedings against her in immigration court where she could present her asylum claim under the due process rights,' the petition explains. The petition goes on to claim, 'in a deceptive sleight of hand, (authorities) seek to eject OJM from her own asylum case, detain her and transfer her away from the District of Oregon so that they can rapidly deport her.' Neighbors, PBOT fed up with NW 13th outdoor plaza The petition cites the Refugee Act of 1980, which gives people the right to apply for asylum when seeking safety in the U.S. The petition also states that noncitizens who apply for asylum are entitled to a full hearing in immigration court before they can be removed from the U.S. 'OJM had properly filed her asylum application, but ICE appears to be attempting to place her in expedited removal, a rapid deportation process with minimal protections,' Innovation Law Lab said. OJM's case mirrors a 'troubling national trend,' her attorneys say. Hood River-White Salmon Bridge project secures Washington funds, eyes $105M from Oregon 'Courthouse arrests destroy the integrity of our legal system and undermine the rule of law,' Cunnings said. 'We ask immigrants and refugees who are fleeing violence to abide by an asylum process. Detaining them for showing up to court is heartbreaking and harmful to our justice system.' Innovation Law Lab notes that OJM's gender identity matters in this case, explaining she, like others across the United States, traveled to Oregon for its inclusivity and to escape violence because of her identity. The attorneys raised concerns over an executive order issued by President Donald Trump that states transgender women will no longer be detained with other women, meaning they will likely be held with male detainees, which can threaten their safety. 'No one, including transgender women, should be incarcerated in unsafe detention facilities where their lives are at risk,' said Reyna Lopez on behalf of Oregon for All, a coalition of organizations including the ACLU, Innovation Law Lab and the Oregon Food Bank, advocating for immigrant justice. 'Transgender people are part of what makes our Oregon beautiful, and they deserve to be treated with dignity and respect just like every other Oregonian.' KOIN 6 News has reached out to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice, which were named in the petition. This story will be updated if we receive a response. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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