
Guatemala denies that Chilean green-card holder was deported from the United States
The Morning Call of Allentown, Pennsylvania, reported Luis Leon, 82, a legal permanent resident of the United States who won asylum in 1987, ended up in Guatemala after being handcuffed in a Philadelphia immigration office, where he went to replace his lost green card. The news report relied on family accounts.
The Morning Call reported Sunday that Leon was recovering from pneumonia in Guatemala and didn't plan to return to the United States, according to his granddaughter.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was looking into the circumstances, according to The Morning Call. ICE did not respond to questions from The Associated Press on Sunday.
The Guatemalan Migration Institute said in a statement that it coordinates with ICE on all deportations from the United States and that no one matched Leon's name, age or citizenship.
Guatemala agreed in February to receive people deported from the United States who are from other Central American countries. Its agreement does not extend to Chileans.
The Trump administration has embraced deporting people to countries other than their own, including El Salvador, South Sudan and, last week, the African kingdom of Eswatini.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Longtime Franklin County Board of Elections member Kimberly Marinello has died of cancer
Longtime Franklin County Board of Elections member Kimberly E. Marinello has died at 72 from brain cancer, according to her fellow board members. Marinello served on the board since 2008 and she died on July 18, said her fellow Democrat on the board, Mike Sexton. "Just an outstanding, dedicated Democrat," Sexton said of Marinello. "Her work was meticulous. She's very efficient and she's been one of the most loyal Democrats I have ever met." Sexton said Marinello was diagnosed with cancer just about a month ago at the end of June. That's when she stepped down from her role as treasurer for the Franklin County Democratic Party, a role she had held since 2003. Now, the county party has 15 days to nominate a replacement to the county board of elections for the Ohio Secretary of State to approve. In Ohio, county boards of elections are made up of two Republicans and two Democrats. The county party already had a meeting scheduled for the evening of July 22, so Sexton said the party will vote then on a nominee. Doug Preisse, a Republican and chairman of the Franklin County Board of Elections, told the Dispatch that the whole board is saddened and Marinello was a truly decent person. "For the many years I served with Kim, while she was always a loyal Democrat, she was first and foremost a loyal public servant," Preisse said. "She looked out for the best interest of Franklin County voters. It was a pleasure and honor to serve next to her." More local government news: Columbus Council poised to reject fire truck contract amid Dublin company's worker strike Government and politics reporter Jordan Laird can be reached at jlaird@ Follow her on X, Instagram and Bluesky at @LairdWrites. This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Longtime Franklin County Board of Elections member, a Democrat, dead Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ex-Manual coaches Donnie, Ronnie Stoner plead not guilty to child sex charges
With their accusers sitting in the courtroom behind them, two former Jefferson County Public Schools coaches listened as an attorney entered not-guilty pleas for both on child sex abuse charges. Donnie and Ronnie Stoner, who last worked at duPont Manual High School and previously worked and coached at other schools within JCPS, were then placed on home incarceration July 21 by Jefferson Circuit Judge Mitch Perry. A Jefferson County grand jury indicted the twin brothers July 18 on over 50 combined counts related to child sex abuse charges related to four minors, identified by the initials A.S., A.F., A.J. and A.C. The counts span from May 2005 to July 2023. Zach Kilgore, also named in the case, did not appear in court. Perry scheduled a bond hearing in the case for July 29. The case was originally set for Circuit Judge Julie Kaelin's court until she recused herself because of a conflict of interest. She told the court she formerly represented a co-defendant of Kilgore's. The case was reassigned to Perry's case within an hour of the Stoner brothers' original arraignment. Donnie Stoner pleaded not guilty to 35 total counts of child sex abuse charges related to the four minors, including: 12 counts of sodomy; 11 total counts of rape (nine counts third-degree, two counts first); 8 counts of sexual abuse; 2 counts of unlawful transaction with a minor; 1 count of tampering with physical evidence; 1 count of conspiracy to commit unlawful transaction with a minor. Ronnie Stoner pleaded not guilty to 21 total counts of child sex abuse charges related to the four minors, including: 6 total counts of sodomy (three counts in the third degree, three counts in the second degree); 6 total counts of rape (three counts in the third degree, one count in the second degree and two counts in the first degree); 4 counts of sexual abuse; 3 counts of unlawful transaction with a minor; 1 count of conspiracy to commit unlawful transaction with a minor; 1 count of incest. Kilgore was charged in the indictment with one count of first-degree rape. "It's like the first step of any accountability for 20 years, so we're very happy such a robust indictment was filed," said one of the accusers who attended the hearing. "... Emotions are really high." The Stoner brothers walked out of the courtroom with three bailiffs and onto the elevator. They were not made available to reporters by attorney Rob Eggert, who represented both in the arraignments. Eggert is the legal representation for Donnie Stoner. Ronnie Stoner is still working to obtain legal representation. From 2005 to present Personnel files for both Donnie and Ronnie Stoner obtained by The Courier Journal through Kentucky's Open Records Act show the brothers ― formerly known as LaDon and LaRon ― first began coaching at Evangel Christian in 2005, the year the counts in the grand jury indictment began. Donnie Stoner's JCPS tenure began in 2010 as a paid freshman football coach at Fern Creek, where Ronnie would eventually join him as an assistant football coach. By 2013, Donnie Stoner became an assistant junior varsity football coach. By 2015, he began at Newburg Middle School. And by 2015, he was named varsity assistant football coach. In 2017, he moved to duPont Manual as varsity assistant football coach until 2022, when he became the head coach there. There are charges that relate to different minors throughout this time period, too. On July 13, 2023, JCPS "temporarily removed" Donnie Stoner from his coaching duties. He was arraigned 18 days later on rape, sodomy and child sex abuse charges of a Manual student. That trial is set for Aug. 26, which was delayed from March 11. Following a court hearing in February, JCPS confirmed Donnie Stoner was still working for the district in a position that had no contact with students. On July 18, JCPS confirmed he was no longer employed by the district, but spokesperson Mark Hebert wasn't sure when the change took place. An open records request for Stoner's resignation or termination letter has not yet been fulfilled. Donnie Stoner has an active criminal case regarding child sex abuse with a former Manual student. Ronnie Stoner and Kilgore have not faced previous child sex abuse charges related to this group of minors. Donnie Stoner is also facing a civil suit. That suit, originally filed under seal because of a state law, was filed in September 2024. The student, who is no longer a minor, filed a motion to unseal the case. That motion was granted in January 2025. The civil suit also names Ronnie Stoner, as well as Manual principal Michael Newman and athletic director David Zuberer, claiming they "knew or should have known" about Donnie Stoner's conduct and were negligent in his hiring, training, supervision and retention. In response to the suit, Ronnie Stoner denied the allegations due to a lack of "sufficient knowledge," according to court documents. In response to the lawsuit, JCPS claimed governmental immunity. It's a common claim by school districts across the commonwealth used to avoid liability in child sex abuse cases, The Courier Journal found as part of its series, Silence & Secrets, which discovered at least 80 Kentucky middle- and high-school coaches were alleged to have engaged in sexual misconduct in the last 15 years. Stoner's case was one of the more prominent cases profiled in "Silence & Secrets." At the time of its publishing, there were at least three former JCPS coaches on trial for charges related to child sex abuse. One of those coaches, Christopher 'Ro' Morris, has a trial starting this week for charges related to the alleged child sex abuse of two former athletes he coached at two JCPS middle schools. Stephanie Kuzydym is an enterprise and investigative sports reporter. Reach her at skuzydym@ or on social at @stephkuzy. This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Ex-coaches Donnie and Ronnie Stoner plead not guilty to sex charges Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Memphis proposing lucrative offer to join Big 12, but it lacks support from conference leadership: Sources
Memphis has proposed to the Big 12 a lucrative membership proposal — a serious enough endeavor that league presidents met Monday about the offer — but the proposition is not believed to have the necessary support, for now. The proposal from Memphis — one of the most aggressive membership propositions in college athletics history — features hundreds of millions of dollars in sponsorship commitments to the Big 12 from UM-affiliated corporate partners, as well as the school eschewing revenue distribution from the league for at least five years. Multiple sources spoke to Yahoo Sports under condition of anonymity about the proposal, which is the latest and most serious chapter in the school's effort to move out of the American and into one of the four power leagues. This particular effort began more than a year ago. Memphis president Bill Hardgrave has spent at least 14 months visiting with the presidents and top athletic administrators of many Big 12 schools in individual, on-campus meetings that have culminated in a membership offer to the league that is expected to be as high as $200 million over the next five years. Big 12 officials are in the midst of exploring the proposal, but league-wide support is not there, multiple conference officials told Yahoo Sports.. Any expansion move needs the support of a super majority of the league's presidents and chancellors, or 12 of the 16. A more finalized copy of the Memphis proposal was disseminated among conference athletic administrators in the last few days. Over the last 18 months, the conference seriously explored two expansion proposals, from Gonzaga and UConn, only for each to fail to gain the necessary support. This effort is much more lucrative, but hurdles remain. 'I'm not certain it has enough support,' one Big 12 leader told Yahoo Sports over the weekend. 'We vetted Memphis when we added the other four (Cincinnati, UCF, Houston and BYU) and chose not to add them,' said another Big 12 administrator. 'What's changed now?' However, the proposal was attractive enough to garner weeks of exploration from the conference. It comes at a financially stressful time as Big 12 leaders work to compete against the Big Ten and SEC, both with more lucrative television contracts and revenue distributions. The timing is important. On July 1, college athletics launched into a new era in which schools can directly compensate athletes in a capped revenue-sharing system. The industry has never been in a more money-hungry time. Already, Big 12 schools are receiving roughly $1 million in additional revenue from a sponsorship with PayPal. Memphis' proposal would have increased that by at least $2 million with sponsorship commitments from UM partners. The school is notoriously aligned with partners such as FedEx, Lowe's and AutoZone. Memphis' proposal is described as a 'no-risk' concept, according to some in the Big 12, and it also sets a standard, perhaps, of expansion fees to enter a league. The school would (1) take zero distribution for the final five years of the league's new television deal with ESPN and FOX; (2) add the sponsorships in excess of $150 million over five years; and (3) subject itself to expulsion after 2030-31 if Big 12 deems it is not adding value. The sizable offer represents a historic moment in college sports of a school quite literally purchasing their way into a conference — a move that further expounds upon a precedent set by SMU's entrance into the ACC. While SMU agreed to take no league revenue for a stretch of time in the ACC, the school did not arrange millions in sponsorships for the league. The pricy nature of Memphis' offer speaks to its unwavering desire to elevate to a power conference — something the program attempted to do years ago with the ACC. Under Hardgrave and new athletic director Ed Scott, the school has increased investment significantly over the last several years, with financial help from sponsors like FedEx and Lowe's. In fact, with a massive gift from FedEx coming, the UM officials expect to share the full $20.5 million in rev-share with athletes by next year, they have told Big 12 leaders. Any move out of the American would come with another steep price tag. The American exit fee is expected to be at least $25 million - a similar fee that SMU paid the conference upon its departure last year.