logo
Author Salman Rushdie testifies about his shock as an attacker repeatedly stabbed him on stage

Author Salman Rushdie testifies about his shock as an attacker repeatedly stabbed him on stage

MAYVILLE, N.Y. — With a mix of humor and graphic detail, Salman Rushdie calmly told a jury Tuesday about the frenzied moments in August 2022 when a masked man rushed at him on a stage in western New York and repeatedly slashed him with a knife, leaving him with terrible injuries.
'It occurred to me that I was dying. That was my predominant thought,' the renowned author said, adding that the people who subdued the assailant probably saved his life.
Just a short drive from where the attack at the Chautauqua Institution occurred, Rushdie took the stand during the second day of testimony at the trial of Hadi Matar, 27, who has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder and assault in the attack, which also wounded another man.
It was the first time since the stabbing that the 77-year-old writer found himself in the same room as Matar, whom Rushdie refused to even name when he looked back on the day in his 2024 memoir, 'Knife.' The book called him 'the A,' as in assassin, or assailant or asinine.
In the memoir, Rushdie imagined a conversation with his assailant, fabricating a dialogue — a strained attempt at understanding — they might have had should the two ever speak.
On Tuesday they hardly seemed to acknowledge each other. Rushdie on occasion looked off to his right, where the defendant sat some 20 feet away, but showed no sign of recognition. Matar, with attorneys on either side, rarely raised his head while Rushdie spoke.
Dist. Atty. Jason Schmidt did not ask Rushdie to identify Matar. Rushdie testified that he got just a brief look at the man who rushed across the stage and stabbed him repeatedly with a 10-inch blade.
In testimony stricken from the record at the defense's request, he added: 'I was very struck by his eyes, which were dark and seemed very ferocious.'
Rushdie said he first thought his attacker was striking him with a fist. 'But I saw a large quantity of blood pouring onto my clothes,' he said. 'He was hitting me repeatedly. Hitting and slashing.'
The testimony came just ahead of the 36th anniversary of the day — Feb. 14, 1989 — that Rushdie has ruefully referred to as the worst possible Valentine's Day, when Iran's supreme leader at the time, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa calling for his death because of the supposed blasphemy in his novel 'The Satanic Verses.'
Rushdie spent years in hiding, a painful adjustment for an otherwise engaging and sociable man. But after Iran announced that it would not enforce the decree, he had traveled freely over the last quarter century, and security lightened to the point where his Chautauqua talk was announced months in advance.
Several law enforcement cars were in front of the courthouse Tuesday morning, and security was also present on the rooftop of the jail across the street.
Matar is a dual Lebanese-U.S. citizen, born in the U.S. to immigrants from Yaroun in Hezbollah-dominated southern Lebanon near the Israeli border, according to the village's mayor. In a jailhouse interview with the New York Post, he did not refer directly to 'The Satanic Verses' but called Rushdie someone 'who attacked Islam.'
On the trial's first day, Mahar calmly said 'Free Palestine' while being led into the courtroom. On Tuesday he said in a dull chant, 'From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.'
The trial is expected to last around two weeks.
In a separate indictment, federal authorities allege that Matar was driven to act by a terrorist organization's 2006 endorsement of the fatwa. A later trial on federal terrorism charges will be scheduled in U.S. District Court in Buffalo, N.Y.
Rushdie spoke in an even, mild tone, even when recounting how he lay in a 'lake' of blood. He briefly bared to the jurors his now-blinded right eye, usually hidden behind a darkened eyeglass lens.
Born in India, raised in Britain and now a U.S. citizen, Rushdie is a Booker Prize-winning author who has been famous worldwide since 'Midnight's Children' was published more than 40 years ago. He has long been known for his eloquence, candor and wit that can surface in unexpected moments.
Under direct examination, Rushdie spoke of undergoing painful surgery to seal the lid of his blinded eye. He turned to the jurors, and joked, 'I don't recommend it.'
Under cross examination from public defender Lynn Schaffer, who challenged his memories of the attack, he acknowledged that it was hard to say precisely how many times he was stabbed: 'I wasn't counting at the time. I was otherwise occupied.'
Rushdie spent 17 days at a Pennsylvania hospital and more than three weeks at a New York City rehabilitation center, where he relearned basic skills like squeezing toothpaste from a tube. He detailed his months of recovery in 'Knife,' which he dedicated 'to the men and women who saved my life.'
'I think I'm not quite at 100%. I think I've substantially recovered, but it's probably 75% to 80%,' Rushdie testified. 'I'm not as energetic as I used to be. I'm not as physically strong as I used to be.'
Rushdie's wife, Rachel Eliza Griffiths, sat in the second row in the courtroom. In 2022 she took an emergency private flight to be at his side after being told he was unlikely to survive, and he devoted a chapter of his book to her.
Griffiths cried at times, gripping the hand of a friend sitting beside her. As Rushdie left the room after his testimony, she smiled at him and clasped her hands across her chest.
Thompson and Italie write for the Associated Press. AP writer Dave Collins in Hartford, Conn., contributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bill Essayli is out for revenge
Bill Essayli is out for revenge

Politico

time2 hours ago

  • Politico

Bill Essayli is out for revenge

Bill Essayli, the recently appointed 39-year-old U.S. attorney for California's central district, spent years in Sacramento angrily chafing at one-party rule — elected but impotent. Now he's ready to show the state's Democrats how it feels to be powerless. He has already charged David Huerta, one of California's most powerful union leaders, with felony conspiracy for allegedly impeding an ICE arrest by participating in a protest. On Thursday, he stood by as California Sen. Alex Padilla was handcuffed and forced to the ground at a press conference hosted by Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. Now, other Democratic politicians say they fear being seen at immigration protests, confident that Essayli will seize any chance to put former colleagues behind bars and revel in the fallout. 'As legislators, we know fully well that if he has an opportunity and can somehow connect us to any violence or any disruptions that are going on, he is going to try to arrest us,' Assemblymember Corey Jackson said in an interview. 'It makes me feel crazy that I have to say these things. But it's the truth.' Essayli is President Donald Trump's man on the immigration battlefield of Los Angeles — a rapid status shift for a politician who not long ago was a junior, little-liked Republican state lawmaker. As an agitator turned enforcer with an ax to grind and the full weight of federal law enforcement at his back, Essayli is animated by many of the same vengeful impulses that drive the president who appointed him. (Essayli did not respond to interview requests for this story.) 'The Democrats that bullied Bill Essayli should be very worried,' said Assemblymember Carl DeMaio, a Republican who worked to get Essayli elected before serving alongside him. 'They've never been held accountable. But life changes.' Any story about the arc of Bill Essayli's career should probably begin on April 10, 2002. While visiting the Wells Fargo branch where his mother worked, the 17-year-old Essayli witnessed a bank robber leaving the building. As Essayli tells it, he instinctively jumped in his car to follow the suspect, writing down the thief's license number so he could report the vehicle to federal investigators. His actions that day earned him a personal letter from then-FBI Director Robert Mueller, a man who would later go on to investigate Essayli's current boss, who praised the teenager's 'tremendous initiative.' Raised by Lebanese immigrant parents on the western edge of the Inland Empire, east of Los Angeles, Essayli was long drawn to law enforcement, serving as a volunteer in Corona's police department Explorer program. After becoming the first member of his family to graduate college, Essayli attended Chapman University School of Law, which has been home to prominent conservatives like John Eastman and Hugh Hewitt. Essayli went into private practice before two years as a Riverside County prosecutor and four as an assistant U.S. attorney. In that role he worked on the deadly 2015 shooting and attempted bombing by alleged homegrown extremists in San Bernardino. In 2018, Essayli became directly involved in politics, joining a campaign to repeal a gas-tax increase while mounting his own failed, somewhat moderate, candidacy for the state assembly. Four years later, after district lines were redrawn, Essayli ran again on a tough on crime and conservative school issues platform. He was the first Muslim elected to the California State Assembly, representing a diverse, semi-rural region in a district Trump won by 12 points in 2024. But when the clean-cut Essayli came to Sacramento in 2022, he made little effort to conform to the capital's hobnobby culture and was quite open about how much he detested it. Even fellow Republicans who agreed with his politics disagreed with his tactics and aggressive stance toward Democrats and his own party. His political life, as his friend DeMaio described it, was a 'lonely' one. Upon arriving in the capital he hung the 2002 letter from Mueller on his office wall. Essayli quickly made a name for himself by taking up red-meat conservative causes and authoring bills that would require school staff to notify parents if their children might be transgender and mandate government identification to vote. He raged against the state's Covid-19 restrictions and criticized critical race theory. None of his bills became law, but Essayli distinguished himself on the Assembly floor with his penchant for political theater. His pattern of outlandish outbursts and near-physical altercations were of the sort that largely disappeared from the legislative process in the nineteenth century (Jackson himself once had to be restrained from Essayli after the two clashed on the Assembly floor). Other lawmakers, staff and lobbyists traded accounts of their favorite Essayli episodes. In one, he called the speaker pro tempore a 'fucking liar' on the Assembly floor. In another he banged a fist on his desk in petulant fury, shouting into the void of his muted microphone as state lawmakers looked on. To like-minded conservatives, this presented a vision of how a disruptive, aggressive opposition party should function. DeMaio, who was elected to the Assembly two years after Essayli and has followed in his footsteps, said he showed how an opposition party could 'illustrate how the other side is wrong' even if you don't get 'drinks paid for at the bars.' Essayli wasn't worried about rubbing people the wrong way, according to his former chief of staff Shawn Lewis. On a personal level, he was kind and even funny. But Essayli, according to Lewis, was also driven by 'an unshakable sense of what is right and wrong.' The outbursts were no performance, but rather the outward projections of a true believer's frustrations. 'Bill Essayli sees things as they can and should be, not as they are,' Lewis said. But at least some political observers believe that Essayli's moves were calculated. There are few avenues to power for a hard-right Republican in Democrat-dominated California. Serving as an avatar for the Trump administration's talking points within the state Legislature was one of them. And the performances led to even bigger platforms: regular appearances on Fox News that won him a casual following nationally among the MAGA faithful. 'I think he's a very smart guy,' Anthony Rendon, a former Assembly speaker, said of Essayli. 'There's nothing Bill does that isn't very well thought-out.' In April 2025, Essayli announced that he would be leaving Sacramento to accept an interim appointment as the top federal prosecutor for seven Southern California counties with a population of nearly 20 million people. Elsewhere, Trump sought out personal confidants, longtime political allies and loyal defenders to fill U.S. attorney's offices. In his hometown of New York City, Trump named Jay Clayton, who had served as his appointee atop the Securities and Exchange Commission, to the post. Trump's former personal attorney Alina Habba was named the prosecutor in New Jersey, home to Trump's Bedminster golf course. In Washington, D.C., he has placed conservative legal activist Ed Martin, a former lawyer for Jan. 6 defendants, and Fox News host Jeanine Pirro into powerful prosecutorial positions. Essayli does not have the same direct connection to Trump's circle, but his appointment vindicated the way Essayli had spent his brief time in Sacramento. Upon being named to the post, he made clear he was ready to adopt Trump's ethos. 'I intend to implement the President's mission to restore trust in our justice system and pursue those who dare to cause harm to the United States and the People of our nation,' Essayli said. Newly backed by a small army of lawyers and special agents, Essayli is aiming at many of the same targets that eluded him as a politician. In April, he launched a task force to investigate fraud and corruption within homelessness funding sources administered by California's Democratic officials. In May, he threw his support behind a Justice Department investigation into Title IX violations in the state, alleging that transgender athletes were 'violating women's civil rights.' At the beginning of June, Essayli warned an air quality management district in Southern California to abandon plans to impose fees on gas appliances, threatening 'all appropriate action' to stop the regulations. But it is his role backing Trump's immigration enforcement actions that has given Essayli his biggest opportunity to flex his newfound power. Earlier this week, prominent conservative commentator Marc Thiessen suggested that Essayli may have found a workaround for sanctuary city laws, by charging migrants held on state charges with federal crimes in an effort to force local officials to turn them over to ICE. (Thiessen did not respond to a request to explain further.) In Los Angeles, his authority ran up against the most basic form of dissent: public protest. As immigration enforcement officials, aided by Essayli's search warrants and federal agents, launched targeted raids of migrant communities, they were met by demonstrators who intended to stand in the way. On Monday, Essayli announced that his prosecutors would use social media and video evidence to pursue protesters who threw objects at officers. Yesterday, two protesters were charged with possessing Molotov cocktails, which Essayli said would be punished by up to 10 years in prison. 'I don't care who you are — if you impede federal agents, you will be arrested and prosecuted,' Essayli wrote on X after Huerta's arrest on June 6. Immigrant advocacy and LGBTQ+ rights organizations allege that he intends to use that authority to 'prosecute his political opponents.' 'Bill Essayli spent his short career in the Legislature with a singular agenda: to attack the students and families he was supposed to serve,' said Kristi Hirst, the co-founder of Our Schools USA, an advocacy organization that pushes for LGBTQ-friendly school policies. 'Essayli is not interested in seeking justice.' Those concerns have now manifested in a political campaign called Stop Essayli run by Jacob Daruvala, a former constituent of Essayli's and a local LGBTQ+ advocate. The lobbying effort, which remains something of a hail Mary, is aimed at persuading Sens. Adam Schiff and Padilla to block Essayli's official confirmation, which would rid him of his interim title. If a permanent replacement is not confirmed within 120 days, the federal district court for his jurisdiction would instead appoint someone else to serve in the role until a Senate confirmation is successful. But without the votes to block his path, it is only a delicate historical courtesy, which Schiff and Padilla will have to ask the Senate to respect, that stands between Essayli and a permanent assignment. Daruvala is asking California's senators to withhold their 'blue slips,' a Senate tradition in which committees defer to a nominee's home-state senators for guidance on confirmation. There is something poetic in that question. After Essayli made his name defying the decorum of the California Legislature, it is only decorum that can halt his upward rise. Jeremy B. White contributed to this report.

Rock Falls murder victim's father wants police chief to resign, says chief to blame for investigative errors
Rock Falls murder victim's father wants police chief to resign, says chief to blame for investigative errors

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rock Falls murder victim's father wants police chief to resign, says chief to blame for investigative errors

Jun. 13—ROCK FALLS — The father of a Rock Falls man murdered in that city Feb. 14 wants the Rock Falls police chief to resign after the department's officers testified that several protocol violations were committed during their investigation of the murder scene. "This can't stand. It can't be allowed to continue. There will be more murders in Rock Falls. There will be more violent crime in Rock Falls. People are not getting better to each other." — Dan Gordon, father of murder victim DJ Gordon "This falls directly on leadership. If I were in charge of a group of people that screwed up on the basics this I was there, and they screwed up this bad, I would have enough integrity to resign," Dan Gordon, father of Daniel "DJ" Gordon, who was killed Feb. 14 in Rock Falls, said in a June 10 interview with Shaw Local. "That's what I think Rock Falls Police Chief David Pilgrim deserves to do is resign," he said. After being called to the 600 block of West 20th Street in Rock Falls, first responders and police found DJ Gordon, 27, in the early morning hours of Feb. 14 unresponsive and suffering multiple abdominal stab wounds. The accused, Kyle Cooper, 36, of Rock Falls, admitted to the stabbing May 22, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of second-degree murder and was given the maximum 20-year sentence. But in the days after the stabbing, Cooper was originally charged with one count of first-degree murder and two counts of aggravated battery in connection with Gordon's death. The case was headed toward trial until May 14, when Cooper's defense attorney, Jim Mertes of Sterling, announced a plea agreement had been reached. [ Rock Falls man pleads guilty to second-degree murder, sentenced to 20 years for fatal Valentine's Day stabbing ] Attorneys announced that agreement in court after Mertes, during court hearings leading up to the trial date, made several arguments in an effort to discredit the Rock Falls Police Department's investigation. "I stand by our investigation. I stand by the work of the investigators," Pilgrim, who was named chief in February 2021, told Shaw Local this week. "I don't believe there were any, what I would call fatal issues with the investigation." [ Prosecutor: Rock Falls man accused of Valentine's Day murder had history of threatening exes' new partners ] He said Mertes' arguments about issues with the investigation were a "defense strategy" and that he doesn't believe Mertes' claims "had any basis and anything that was argued in those motions did not ultimately affect the outcome of the investigation." At the May 14 court hearing, Rock Falls Police Detective Autumn Day, the lead homicide investigator on the case, testified that the vehicle that transported Gordon to the location where he was killed and was parked within the cordoned-off crime scene area was not searched or processed for evidence when it should have been. Pilgrim said the vehicle "was not processed as part of the crime scene. Nothing was alleged to have occurred in or on that vehicle. It was determined by the investigators that the vehicle was not of evidentiary value." Day's testimony, along with that of Rock Falls Police Officer Dustin Sugars and Sgt. Betony Gluff, who both took the stand May 9, indicated that evidence preservation protocol was violated at the scene when the driver of that vehicle was allowed inside it after police arrived and the area had been cordoned off. Day also testified May 14 that a log of activity, which lists who enters and leaves a crime scene during an investigation, was not created when it should have been and that witnesses were allowed into the crime scene when they should not have been. [ Rock Falls murder trial pushed to Thursday by lead detective's illness, ongoing pretrial motion discussions ] "The stuff that they've messed up on is basic police 101," Dan Gordon said. "I can't stress enough I don't hold the officers and the detectives accountable. This is on management." "There's absolutely zero accountability for the mistakes that were made," he said. Dan Gordon said that Whiteside County State's Attorney Colleen Buckwalter "was going to sit down and talk to the Rock Falls Police Department," but he didn't know if that happened yet. Buckwalter declined Shaw Local's request for comment. "There's been zero things happen, even additional training," Dan Gordon said. He said Buckwalter sent Whiteside County Sheriff John Booker to visit him "to explain to me how bad the Rock Falls Police Department screwed up." Booker told Shaw Local that "as an officer of 34 years, I saw some things [in the investigation] that I would've done differently." "We definitely need to learn from this," Booker said, adding that everybody makes mistakes, but "we need to not make them twice." "I don't want to slam the Rock Falls Police Department. I think they are some of the highest character people that you're going to find," but "when you have poor leadership, no amount of character is going to override that," Dan Gordon said. "Nobody was in charge of the crime scene. The highest ranking official should be in charge," he said. Booker said that if Whiteside County deputies are conducting an investigation and "I'm on the scene, I'm the highest ranking official, I'm in charge and any mistakes that are made fall on me," he said. "Everything comes back to who's running it." Rock Falls Mayor Rod Kleckler told Shaw Local that he, with the consent of the Rock Falls City Council, has the power to fire the police chief, but, he said, that would be a personnel issue that "I wouldn't talk about with anyone." At most jobs, personnel issues are typically private matters, but "in this situation, it kind of is our business. The people of Rock Falls are not getting what they pay for right now," Dan Gordon said. For the victim's family, the investigators' admissions "came to light on the Friday before Mother's Day (May 9)," Dan Gordon said. Mother's Day "was gonna suck bad enough with DJ being gone, but now not knowing what amount of justice we're even going to be able to get," Dan Gordon said. "DJ deserved better. He just did." When Day testified May 14, Mertes' questions alluded to her being assigned as the lead homicide investigator, something that he said was done before she had obtained state-required certification. During that questioning, Day affirmed that Pilgrim was at the scene as officers were investigating. Day said Pilgrim told her at the scene that she was not lead investigator. She completed the state-required training Feb. 28 and was named lead investigator March 3, Day said. She said the investigation was assigned to Deputy Chief Doug Wolber on the day of the offense. It was then assigned to Detective Sgt. Jeremy Vondra and, then, once Day completed the required lead homicide investigator training "she was considered the lead investigator," but "there was no formal assignment of the case" to Day, Pilgrim said. "Initially, when the case started, it was an aggravated battery. It wasn't until the victim had ultimately passed away that it became a homicide investigation," Pilgrim said. But according to Dan Gordon, "DJ was dead when the ambulance got there. They brought him back so we could say goodbye basically. He was gone. Don't tell me you didn't go in as a homicide." "Detective Day got put in a bad position," Dan Gordon said. "Why would you assign the detective with the least amount of experience who wasn't even homicide certified?" Day was hired at Rock Falls PD in 2018. Sugars was hired in 2016, Gluff in 2011, Wolber in 2006 and Vondra in 2003, according to the department's annual report. Rock Falls police "can't afford to have a 'Oh this is a slam dunk' attitude, because it's not. Clearly it's not," Dan Gordon said. "Nobody from the Rock Falls Police Department has even reached out to me at all. I don't know if they should or not. I've never had a kid murdered before," he said, adding that he's spoken to Pilgrim and Wolber, but he "had to call them." On May 12, the victim's family met with Buckwalter to negotiate a plea agreement and agreed to Mertes' offer of the lesser second-degree charge after learning about the "immediate passion" law that would most likely prevent them from securing a conviction of first-degree murder if they were to go to trial, Dan Gordon said. [ Rock Falls man's murder trial canceled day before jury selection when attorneys announce plea deal ] "Honestly, I don't think Rock Falls Police Department's errors, blunders, affected the outcome. I think that the facts of the case probably did not support first-degree murder," he said. "I would much rather him [Cooper] never have the possibility of ever getting out," but "I am at peace with the fact that that was as good as we were going to get given the circumstances," Dan Gordon said. Whiteside County Judge James Heuerman sentenced Cooper on May 22 to the terms laid out in the plea agreement — the maximum possible sentence of 20 years, one year of supervised release and credit for 97 days served. Dan Gordon said he's not asking Pilgrim to resign "for us. DJ is just as dead, regardless of who is the chief of police in Rock Falls." "It's for the next family, the next victims," Dan Gordon said. "This can't stand. It can't be allowed to continue. There will be more murders in Rock Falls. There will be more violent crime in Rock Falls. People are not getting better to each other."

Apopka children, lawmakers seek return of Guatemalan immigrants seeking visa
Apopka children, lawmakers seek return of Guatemalan immigrants seeking visa

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Apopka children, lawmakers seek return of Guatemalan immigrants seeking visa

The children of two Guatemalan immigrants called Friday for their parents' return, after their father was deported and their mother detained despite their years-long pursuit of a visa meant to protect victims of crime. Dozens of people, including Central Florida lawmakers and activists, gathered outside the ICE field office in Orlando to speak to reporters on the plight of Esvin Juarez and Rosmeri Miranda. The couple have lived in the United States for 24 years, settling in Apopka with their four children. It is the latest controversy in the Orlando region involving the apprehension of immigrants who — though they entered the country illegally — would previously have been considered to have an opportunity to stay in the U.S. Juarez, who owns a concrete construction business, was detained on May 30 during a check-in with ICE, sent to facilities in Miami and Texas — and then deported to Guatemala on Saturday. Miranda was detained this week. 'He's been here over 20 years, and he's been working out under the sun making concrete slabs, and he's been able to build his business for the last 20 years,' said Beverly Juarez, 21, the couple's oldest child. 'There is a chance for [President Donald Trump] to right this wrong, to bring back my father and to stop my mother's deportation because they are not criminals. They are pillars of the community.' Beverly Juarez, who like her younger siblings was born in the U.S., said her parents were well along in the process of getting a so-called U-visa after her father was attacked in his company work yard by a gunman in 2021. That visa grants victims of crime legal status if they cooperate with law enforcement. Juarez unsuccessfully challenged his removal in federal court, court records show, while Miranda continues to dispute her detention since being taken into custody this week. Her case is being considered by the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. Among the lawmakers standing with the family on Friday was state Rep. Johanna Lopez, D-Orlando, who called Juarez's and Miranda's detentions an illegal 'act of cruelty' given their eligibility for the U-visa. With their parents gone, Beverly Juarez now faces having to care for her siblings, ages 15, 13 and 9. 'Imagine the fear they feel, imagine the trauma they are enduring,' Lopez said. 'What message are we sending when we criminalize the mother surviving and seeking justice?' Before Miranda's detention, she and her four children turned to social media to raise awareness of ICE's efforts to deport her and her husband. Since June 2, the family has posted videos to TikTok with updates in English and Spanish on both cases. The most recent videos directly implored Trump to act despite his emphasis on removing undocumented immigrants in the first months of his second administration. While White House officials say they are focused on deporting criminals and immigrants with ties to gang ties, many who have since been detained and deported don't have such histories. An ICE spokesperson did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. A lawyer for Juarez who now represents Miranda in federal court also did not return a message. It's not impossible for immigrants mistakenly detained for removal to be released. On Thursday, lawyers for two women living in Osceola County announced they were released from ICE custody after spending two months in a facility in Texas facing removal to Colombia — despite having an active asylum application, social security number, work permit and driver's license. Across the country, ICE officials have conducted operations to capture immigrants and process them for removal. In Florida, local law enforcement agencies and county jails have signed agreements known as 287(g) to assist immigration authorities, which a new state law now requires. Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration has said local leaders who refuse could be removed from office. County Commissioner Nicole Wilson, who attended the protest, was one of two 'no' votes when Orange commissioners approved the agreement in March. 'We were told we had to do it. Several of my colleagues believed that they had to do it — they've been bullied to do it,' Wilson said. 'If I don't believe it's representing my community, then it's not an agreement — so I do not agree, I am not complicit.' The other dissenting vote was Commissioner Kelly Martinez-Semrad, who at Friday's protest said she is pushing to put the matter back on the agenda. 'There are those of us who are not afraid to be removed when we're holding the flag of the United States of America and standing with the founders of our country, who are all immigrants,' she said. 'So please stand with us.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store