logo
Trump administration tells border shelters helping migrants may be illegal

Trump administration tells border shelters helping migrants may be illegal

The Guardian25-05-2025

The Trump administration has continued releasing people charged with being in the country illegally to non-governmental shelters along the US-Mexico border after previously telling those same organizations that providing immigrants with temporary housing and other aid may violate a law used to prosecute smugglers.
Border shelters, which have long provided lodging and meals before offering transportation to the nearest bus station or airport, were rattled by a letter from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) that raised 'significant concerns' about potentially illegal activity and demanded detailed information in a wide-ranging investigation.
Fema suggested shelters may have committed felony offenses related to bringing people across the border illegally or transporting them within the US.
'It was pretty scary. I'm not going to lie,' said Rebecca Solloa, executive director of Catholic Charities of the diocese of Laredo, Texas.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) continued to ask shelters in Texas and Arizona to house people even after the 11 March letter, putting them in the awkward position of doing something that Fema appeared to say might be illegal. Both agencies are part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and have also been accused of withholding funds from organizations, in addition to asking them to hand over names of those they've helped and implying that some charities are human-smuggling operations.
After receiving the letter, Catholic Charities still received eight to 10 people a day from Ice until financial losses forced it to close its shelter in the Texas border city on 25 April, Solloa said.
The Holding Institute community center, also in Laredo, has been taking about 20 families a week from Ice's family detention centers in Dilley and Karnes City, Texas, executive director Michael Smith said. They come from Russia, Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Papua New Guinea and China.
Annunciation House in El Paso, Texas, a storied institution in the region, has been receiving five to 10 people a day from Ice, including from Honduras and Venezuela, said Ruben Garcia, its longtime executive director.
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) did not get a letter but continues receiving people from Ice in Phoenix, according to a person briefed on the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss information that has not been made public. The releases include people who had been held at Ice's Krome detention center in Miami, Florida, a site of severe overcrowding.
Ice's requests struck Solloa as a 'little bit of a contradiction', but Catholic Charities agreed to them. She said some guests had been in Ice detention centers for two to four weeks after being arrested in the nation's interior and ordered released by an immigration judge while their challenges to deportations wind through the courts. Others had been flown from San Diego, California, after crossing the border without authorization.
Those released were from India, China, Pakistan, Turkey and Central and South America, Solloa said.
Smith, a Methodist pastor, said that the Fema letter was alarming and that agreeing to continue caring for people released by Ice was 'probably not a good idea'. Still, it was an easy choice.
'There's some things that are just right to do,' he said.
Tricia McLaughlin, spokesperson for the DHS, drew a distinction with large-scale releases under Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden. The Biden administration worked closely with shelters but, during its busiest times, released immigrants at bus stops or other public locations.
Sign up to This Week in Trumpland
A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration
after newsletter promotion
'Under the Biden administration, when Ice has aliens in its custody who are ordered released, Ice does not simply release them onto the streets of a community – Ice works to verify a sponsor for the illegal alien, typically family members or friends but occasionally a non-governmental organization,' McLaughlin said.
The US government has struggled to quickly deport people who have arrived from some countries because of diplomatic, financial and logistical challenges. Those hurdles have prompted Ice to deport people to countries other than their own, including El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama, and – this week – an attempt to remove people, mostly originally from south Asia, to South Sudan. If those options aren't available, Ice may release people in the US, which the Trump administration is reluctant to do.
Fema awarded $641m to dozens of state and local governments and organizations across the country in the 2024 fiscal year to help them deal with large numbers of immigrants who crossed the border from Mexico.
But Fema has suspended payments during its investigation, which requires shelters to provide 'a detailed and descriptive list of specific services provided'. Executive officers must sign sworn statements that they have no knowledge or suspicions of anyone in their organizations violating the smuggling law.
The releases show how border shelters have often maintained close, if cordial, relations with federal immigration authorities at the ground level, even when senior officials publicly criticize them.
'We have a good working relationship with our federal partners. We always have,' Solloa said. 'They asked us to help, then we will continue to help, but at some point we have to say: 'Yikes, I don't have any more money for this. Our agency is hurting and I'm sorry, we can't do this anymore.''
Catholic Charities hosted at least 120,000 people at its Laredo shelter since opening in 2021 and housed 600 to 700 people on its busiest nights in 2023, Solloa said. It was counting on up to $7m from Fema. The shelter closed with a loss of nearly $1m million after not receiving any Fema money.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US job openings rose in April, signaling resilience in the American labor market
US job openings rose in April, signaling resilience in the American labor market

The Independent

time40 minutes ago

  • The Independent

US job openings rose in April, signaling resilience in the American labor market

U.S. job openings rose unexpectedly in April, showing that the labor market remains resilient in the face of uncertainty arising from President Donald Trump's trade wars. The Labor Department reported Tuesday that employers posted 7.4 million job vacancies in April, up from 7.2 million in March. Economists had expected openings to drift down to 7.1 million. But the number of Americans quitting their jobs— a sign of confidence in their prospects — fell, and layoffs ticked higher. And in another sign the job market has cooled from the hiring boom of 2021-2023, the Labor Department reported one job every unemployed person. As recently as December 2022, there were two vacancies for every jobless American. Openings remain high by historical standards but have dropped sharply since peaking at 12.1 million in March 2022, when the economy was still roaring back COVID-19 lockdowns. The Labor Department's Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary showed little evidence of cuts to the federal workforce by billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. Openings for federal jobs rose to 134,000 in April from 121,000 in March. And federal layoffs fell to 4,000 from 8,000 in March and 19,000 in February. Although it has decelerated, the American job market has remained resilient in the face of high interest rates engineered by the Federal Reserve in 2022 and 2023 to fight a resurgence of inflation. The economic outlook is uncertain, largely because of Trump's economic policies — huge taxes on imports, purges of federal workers and the deportation of immigrants working in the United States illegally. Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, said the JOLTS report shows that companies are waiting to see how Trump's policies play out. 'Once companies are more certain that bad times are coming, they will start to shed workers,' he wrote in a commentary. 'However, the economy is still near full employment. We suspect companies are still hoarding workers until they are very, very sure about an economic downturn.″ The Labor Department is expected to report Friday that employers added 130,000 jobs last month, down from 177,000 in April. The unemployment rate is expected to stay at a low 4.2%, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet.

Transgender athlete, 17, tells critics to ‘get a life' as they are booed after winning girl's state track race
Transgender athlete, 17, tells critics to ‘get a life' as they are booed after winning girl's state track race

The Sun

time40 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Transgender athlete, 17, tells critics to ‘get a life' as they are booed after winning girl's state track race

TRANSGENDER athlete Veronica Garcia has told their detractors to "get a life" after being booed at a state track championship in Washington. The 17-year-old blew away their 400m rivals by a whole second and played a big role in their East Valley of Spokane team-mates winning the 4x100m relay race. For the second year in a row, Garcia, the first transgender athlete in the state of Washington to win a track title, was heckled by track goers. The Seattle Times claims scores of attendees booed when Garcia - who is permitted to compete against biological females as students in Washington state can participate in sports based on their gender identity - stood on the podium after cheering loudly for their counterparts. That wasn't the only backlash Garcia had to deal with as a man wearing a 'Save women's sports' t-shirt - shouted: "Let go, girls!" The man, who made his feelings known during the warm-up, also shouted: "Girls' race!" Garcia fully "expected" to be hounded given the reception they received last year. But unlike last year, they had a defiant message for the minority in attendance who targeted them. Garcia said: "It maybe didn't have their intended effect. "It made me angry, but not angry as in, I wanted to give up, but angry as in, I'm going to push. 2 "I'm going to put this in the most PG-13 way, I'm just going to say it's a damn shame they don't have anything else better to do. "I hope they get a life. But oh well. It just shows who they are as people." Garcia could care less about her critics, insisting: "I'm really proud of myself. "I did what I came to do, and that's good enough for me." Garcia pipped Lauren Matthew to victory in the 400m, although their rival insisted they were the "real champion" with a homemade sign. Garcia also had to endure a rival school wearing tees which read 'Keep Women's Sports Female' before and after the 4x400m relay.

Blake Lively moves to drop two claims about Justin Baldoni
Blake Lively moves to drop two claims about Justin Baldoni

The Guardian

time44 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Blake Lively moves to drop two claims about Justin Baldoni

Blake Lively has made moves to withdraw two of the claims she made about the actor and director Justin Baldoni, who worked with her on the 2024 romantic drama It Ends With Us. The two actors have been engaged in a legal dispute since Lively sued Baldoni in December 2024 following the release of the film based on the best-selling novel by Colleen Hoover. Lively accused Baldoni of sexual harassment and a public smear campaign. Baldoni's legal team reportedly asked Lively to release her medical records, including therapy notes, as part of its defence against her claims she suffered 'she suffered 'severe emotional distress and pain, humiliation, embarrassment, belittlement, frustration and mental anguish', according to Variety. In January, it was reported that Baldoni planned to sue his co-star and her husband, the actor Ryan Reynolds, following the accusations on claims of civil extortion, defamation and invasion of privacy. Lively is now attempting to drop the claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Though the actress is withdrawing the claims, she is refusing to withdraw the claims with prejudice as Baldoni's legal team had requested, Variety reported. According to legal filings by Baldoni's team, Lively is only willing to withdraw her claims without prejudice. 'Ms Lively wants to simultaneously: (a) refuse to disclose the information and documents needed to disprove that she suffered any emotional distress and/or that the Wayfarer Parties were the cause; and (b) maintain the right to re-file her IED Claims at an unknown time in this or some other court after the discovery window has closed,' Variety reported a Monday filing to say. The court will ultimately decide if the claims will be dismissed or if Lively will be compelled to disclose the records related to her mental health. Esra Hudson and Mike Gottlieb, two of Lively's lawyers, called the filing from Baldoni's team 'a press stunt'. They added: 'The Baldoni-Wayfarer strategy of filing retaliatory claims has exposed them to expansive new damages claims under California law, rendering certain of Ms Lively's original claims no longer necessary. Ms Lively continues to allege emotional distress, as part of numerous other claims in her lawsuit, such as sexual harassment and retaliation, and massive additional compensatory damages on all of her claims,' in a statement to the magazine.' In December 2024, the New York Times published an article entitled: ''We Can Bury Anyone': Inside a Hollywood Smear Machine,' that served as an exposé of how Baldoni allegedly utilized his publicists and the media to publicly drag Lively's reputation. Baldoni, publicist Melissa Nathan, and eight other plaintiffs accused the Times of 'cherrypicking' facts and filed a $250m libel lawsuit against the paper.

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