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New Jersey's Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst to be used for immigrant detention

New Jersey's Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst to be used for immigrant detention

CBS News7 days ago
Congressional democrats in New Jersey are condemning the U.S. Defense Department for agreeing to a request by the Department of Homeland Security to set up temporary immigrant detention facilities at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.
The military facility is in both Burlington and Ocean counties.
A defense department spokesperson said the timeline will depend on operational requirements and coordination with DHS.
New Jersey Congressman Herb Conaway posted a video on Facebook denouncing the plan.
The video's caption reads in part,
"I received a letter from Secretary Hegseth that Joint Base McGuire in NJ is opening a ICE detention center on its base. First they made Alligator Alcatraz. Now… it's the Garden State Gulag.
Our military's forces should not be carrying this burden. It's an inappropriate use of military resources and an escalation of an immigration policy that has seen inhumane conditions of detaining undocumented immigrants. The last thing I want to see are these kinds of conditions in our state."
"Every criminal alien we arrest on the street before we deport them, they need a bed. Because it takes several days, several weeks, several months actually to move them," said White House Border Czar, Tom Hohman, earlier on Friday, telling the media he wants 100,000 beds.
A spokesperson for the New Jersey Governor's Office said Gov. Phil Murphy also stands against the temporary immigrant detention plan at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.
"The Governor opposes any effort by the Trump Administration to use Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst as an immigration detention center. He believes this is a gross misuse of U.S. military resources."
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Meta Clashes With Apple, Google Over Age Check Legislation
Meta Clashes With Apple, Google Over Age Check Legislation

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Meta Clashes With Apple, Google Over Age Check Legislation

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From Columbia University to Paramount, Trump keeps getting his way as America's 1st 'suer in chief'
From Columbia University to Paramount, Trump keeps getting his way as America's 1st 'suer in chief'

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

From Columbia University to Paramount, Trump keeps getting his way as America's 1st 'suer in chief'

Donald Trump is no stranger to lawsuits. In fact, he was involved in more than 4,000 of them before winning the White House in 2016. Since then, Trump has made headlines mostly as a defendant — that is, the individual getting sued (for sexual abuse and defamation; for business fraud; for hush-money payments; for trying to end birthright citizenship; and so on). But now, six months into his second presidential term, Trump is positioning himself as something new: America's first 'suer in chief.' And the strategy seems to be working. Late Wednesday, the Trump administration and Columbia University announced that they had settled a months-long dispute that started when the White House accused the Ivy League school of failing to protect Jewish students from discrimination during recent Gaza War protests — then froze the majority of its $1.3 billion a year in federal research grants and funding. 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Around the same time, Meta announced that it was ending its diversity, equity and inclusion programs and eliminating fact-checking on Facebook — both longtime priorities of Trump and his allies. The company also made a $1 million donation to Trump's inaugural committee, and Zuckerberg sat front and center at his swearing-in. Law firms In the early weeks of his second term, Trump issued executive orders targeting three prominent law firms that had pursued what he viewed as politically motivated investigations and lawsuits against him and his allies. One was Perkins Coie, a firm that represented Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and repeatedly won election law cases in 2020 against Trump's campaign. Another was Covington & Burling, a firm that provided legal advice to Jack Smith, the special counsel who brought two federal indictments against Trump. 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Judge blocks Trump's birthright citizenship restrictions in third ruling since high court decision
Judge blocks Trump's birthright citizenship restrictions in third ruling since high court decision

Associated Press

time20 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Judge blocks Trump's birthright citizenship restrictions in third ruling since high court decision

BOSTON (AP) — A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from ending birthright citizenship for the children of parents who are in the U.S. illegally, issuing the third court ruling blocking the birthright order nationwide since a key Supreme Court decision in June. U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin, joining another district court as well as an appellate panel of judges, found that a nationwide injunction granted to more than a dozen states remains in force under an exception to the Supreme Court ruling. That decision restricted the power of lower-court judges to issue nationwide injunctions. The states have argued Trump's birthright citizenship order is blatantly unconstitutional and threatens millions of dollars for health insurance services that are contingent on citizenship status. The issue is expected to move quickly back to the nation's highest court. Lawyers for the government had argued Sorokin should narrow the reach of his earlier ruling granting a preliminary injunction, arguing it should be 'tailored to the States' purported financial injuries.' 'The record does not support a finding that any narrower option would feasibly and adequately protect the plaintiffs from the injuries they have shown they are likely to suffer,' Sorokin wrote.

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