logo
Purdue student reunites with family after release from days-long ICE detention

Purdue student reunites with family after release from days-long ICE detention

Yahoo6 days ago
[Source]
Yeonsoo Go, a 20-year-old South Korean student at Purdue University, has been released from federal immigration custody and reunited with her family in New York after being detained for four days in a case that sparked widespread community outcry.
What happened: Go, the daughter of an Episcopal priest, had just completed a routine immigration hearing in Lower Manhattan on July 31 and was set to return later this month when ICE agents took her into custody. She was transferred to Richwood Correctional Center in Monroe, Louisiana, where she remained for the next three nights. Amid her detainment, loved ones, community members and local officials called for her release in protests across the city.
Without any explanation, she was returned to New York and freed shortly before 8 p.m. Monday. 'I always had faith that [I'd] be out soon,' she told reporters as she walked out of 26 Federal Plaza.
About Go: Go first arrived in the U.S. in March 2021 on an R-2 visa with her mother, Rev. Kyrie Kim, who became the first female Anglican priest ordained in Seoul's diocese. After completing high school in Scarsdale High as an honors student, she went on to Purdue's College of Pharmacy while remaining active in the Episcopal church.
Trending on NextShark:
'We used to do midnight runs together and make sandwiches and meals for the homeless,' a friend named Caitlin told CBS New York. 'She's a college student, a daughter, a friend. She belongs here, not in a detention center.' While authorities claim Go is an 'illegal alien' who had 'overstayed her visa that expired more than two years ago,' her legal team says it remains valid through December 2025.
What her family is saying: Rev. Kim, who welcomed her daughter back, expressed relief in their tearful reunion. 'I'm just happy that she's with me,' Kim said while acknowledging others in similar circumstances. The religious leader previously called the situation 'incomprehensible,' telling Yonhap News Agency she never expected her family to become targeted despite her work advocating for Korean immigrants.
New York State Assemblymember Amy Paulin, who spoke with Go by phone, reportedly described her as 'happy, relieved and finally free.'
Trending on NextShark:
The big picture: Go's arrest as someone with no criminal record reflects a documented shift in the Trump administration's immigration enforcement efforts. After White House officials set a daily arrest target of 3,000 in May, data shows more than half of those detained by ICE lack criminal convictions, far from the previous focus on targeting serious criminals.
Go's case also follows that of Tae Heung 'Will' Kim, a South Korean-born researcher and legal permanent resident detained at San Francisco International Airport in July, contributing to concerns within the Korean American community.
Trending on NextShark:
This story is part of The Rebel Yellow Newsletter — a bold weekly newsletter from the creators of NextShark, reclaiming our stories and celebrating Asian American voices.
Subscribe free to join the movement. If you love what we're building, consider becoming a paid member — your support helps us grow our team, investigate impactful stories, and uplift our community.
Subscribe here now!
Trending on NextShark:
Download the NextShark App:
Want to keep up to date on Asian American News? Download the NextShark App today!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why you're probably better off just avoiding Rashee Rice in your fantasy football drafts this season
Why you're probably better off just avoiding Rashee Rice in your fantasy football drafts this season

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why you're probably better off just avoiding Rashee Rice in your fantasy football drafts this season

The 'will he, won't he' nature of Rashee Rice's potential and inevitable suspension saga took another turn Thursday morning. ESPN's Adam Schefter reported that Rice's disciplinary hearing with the NFL will take place on Tuesday, Sept 30 in New York, which means his suspension would only begin sometime after that date. When Rice entered into a plea bargain stemming from the 2024 multi-car crash in Dallas back in July, fantasy gamers assumed the NFL's disciplinary process would begin soon and Rice would serve his suspension — estimated anywhere from four to eight games — at the start of the season. That's now completely out the window, as he'll be eligible to play in the first four games of the 2025 NFL season. Those matchups include a Week 1 Brazil game with the Chargers, a Super Bowl rematch with the Eagles in Kansas City, a trip to New York vs. the Giants and a home game against the Ravens. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Beyond the fact that this has been a super laborious and drawn-out disciplinary process for someone who deserves immense scrutiny for what he did, this is straight-up bad for fantasy drafters considering Rice. I firmly believe fantasy content creators have gotten too over-focused on 'the weeks that matter' toward the end of the season rather than hammering how important it is to win in September, as I outline in my Draft Day Blueprint mega-article. However, it's objectively true that the easiest time to fill in the gap around a suspended or injured player is earlier in the season. There are no bye weeks to consider, you haven't sustained injuries yet and the most appealing waiver-wire heroes are often made apparent in the first few weeks of the year. Essentially, you have your whole lineup at your disposal to fill in the gaps. That will no longer be the case if Rice serves his four-to-eight-game suspension anywhere between Weeks 5 and 18. Not that the Chiefs have a Week 10 bye that can't count toward a suspension and there's no guarantee the league hands out punishment right after the September 30 hearing before their Week 5 kickoff against the Jaguars on October 6. We've seen this before. Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott was suspended six games during the 2017 NFL season over accusations of domestic violence. Elliott was originally suspended for the first six weeks of the season but after appeals and court litigation pushed it off, he ended up serving the suspension from Weeks 10 to 15. The process for both situations is an apples-to-apples comparison but the point is the same: You're in the Wild West of projecting when the player will miss time. Yahoo drafters were taking Rashee Rice at an ADP of 61st overall. That seemed more than fair enough of a risk/reward proposition for a player who has been ultra-productive in a terrific offensive ecosystem. Since he entered the league in 2023, Rice has been targeted on 27.4% of his routes, sixth-most among wide receivers who have run 300-plus routes, and ranks seventh in first downs per route run. I do have my concerns about Rice holding up to that level of production long-term, given that he doesn't have the complete WR1 skill set as a man-coverage-beating or downfield receiver that every other name in the top 10 of those two metrics brings to the table. The YAC-based zone-beaters who struggle to beat man coverage can be susceptible to environmental changes more than traditional WR1s. Just look back to JuJu Smith-Schuster's rise and fall for an example of this; I think they're incredibly similar players. However, that's more of a dynasty concern. If Rice is on the field for this Chiefs offense, he's likely ticketed for another year of heavy volume of layup targets as the team's power slot receiver, unless Xavier Worthy takes a massive leap forward. Before Thursday's update, I had Rice ranked 52nd overall and was willing to take the plunge in Round 5 even if he was set to miss the start of the season. Now that the suspension is a complete unknown from a timing perspective, the calculation has to change. I've hammered this over and over again this offseason but the Rounds 5-8 wide receiver draft board is just so appealing. There are even appealing picks all the way into the 110-to-120-overall range. None of those bets are flawless but at least I'm not walking into the season carrying a massive burden of unknown and locking myself into multiple missed games during crucial bye weeks. I won't sink Rice past that 120 overall range or anything like that, but a big dip into the 90s and outside the top-40 wide receivers feels appropriate. There's likely a way to take Rice, start him in the first four weeks and insulate your wide receiver corps with the deep pool of WRs this year to make up for his absent weeks. However, I question if the reward of such a pursuit is as great as the fantasy community may imagine. That's because there is another significant risk factor to Rice's profile that we haven't touched on here yet — and is way too often ignored in the fantasy circles. Rashee Rice is coming off a major injury that ended his 2024 season after less than four games. One of the (slightly galaxy brain) takes in some circles of the fantasy community over the last month — when Rice pled guilty in July — was that missing the first few games of the season may actually be good for Rice. This would allow him to get healthier coming off the significant injury and you wouldn't have to start him in the games he may be working back into form. Instead, you'd just plug him into the lineup when he's close to fully operational after four, six or however many games he missed. I'm not sure if that ever made sense but either way, that's out the window now. You're now getting Rice for those first four games when he may indeed be working back from that injury. And just because he's been practicing, you've seen some nice-looking clips of him and the team is saying he looks good, does not mean you are guaranteed anything close to 100% Rice when the real games begin. Drafters made this exact same mistake with Tank Dell last season for all the same reasons listed. Despite participating fully in the offseason, Dell was not productive to start the year, averaging 32.3 yards per game, 9.7 yards per catch and scoring just once in the first seven weeks of last season. It took no time at all when turning on the film in September to see that, while there was a wide receiver out there wearing No. 3 for the Houston Texans playing a normal snap count, that guy didn't play anything like the Tank Dell we saw cut through secondaries as a rookie before going on IR with a lower body injury. Dell eventually returned closer to form as the year wound down, but this still provides a cautionary tale when discussing Rice's projections early in 2025. We act like these guys are names on a spreadsheet, or players in Madden. They're not. Just because they're out there on the field doesn't mean they are capable of performing at their normal level when working back from something significant. Sometimes, it's the year after the year following the injury. Rice's 'ramp up back to normal in-game performance' phase could be in the first four weeks when he's eligible to play and is then whisked away from your lineup the moment he's turning the corner. That's not to mention how coming back from an injury like this may, at best, temporarily sap some of his explosiveness early in the season, which is troubling for a wideout who doesn't win down the field with nuance or separation, but rather as a hammerhead with speed and power in the open field. Maybe all of that worry is for naught and he's fantastic in the first four weeks of the season. That's within the range of outcomes. However, the risk is present and I don't see any of that discussed in the analysis of him from a fantasy standpoint, nor is it at all baked into either his current ADP or even where he was going in best-ball drafts prior to the July plea bargain. Rashee Rice is one of the riskiest propositions on the board in fantasy football drafts this year. It would be one thing if it were a simple four-game suspension to start the year. It's not. It's an unknown length of absence that will come in the middle of the season for a player working back from a significant injury, a player who inhabits a somewhat fragile role as a YAC-based zone-beater for an offense that desperately needs to find a downfield dimension. What if Xavier Worthy takes off in Year 2 as a vertical threat at the start of the season and only cements himself further while Rice is suspended? Are we absolutely confident that Rice returns to the type of outrageous volume he was getting in Weeks 1 to 3 last year? You have to be certain to wade into the incredibly clouded waters that now define his 2025 season. With how strong the wide receiver board is after Round 5, with a litany of appealing bets — some early in their career and others undervalued veterans — there are just too many ways the Rice selection can go wrong. He's a pretty easy avoid for me inside the top 90 selections and there are too many analysts focused on that per route efficiency for me to imagine he falls farther than that.

Judge scrutinizes Everglades site as ‘Alligator Alcatraz' hearings near close
Judge scrutinizes Everglades site as ‘Alligator Alcatraz' hearings near close

E&E News

time19 minutes ago

  • E&E News

Judge scrutinizes Everglades site as ‘Alligator Alcatraz' hearings near close

MIAMI — U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams sharply questioned lawyers for the state of Florida and federal government Wednesday about why the 'Alligator Alcatraz' immigration detention facility had to be built on an airstrip in the Everglades' delicate ecosystem. She questioned why the tented facility, which is expected to have the capacity to hold as many as 4,000 undocumented immigrants at a time, wasn't constructed elsewhere, including outside a standing detention center, at an abandoned commercial property, a decommissioned airport or 'an abandoned speedway' — in an apparent reference to the 'Speedway Slammer' detention facility under development in Indiana. 'The only question is: Why in the middle of the Everglades?' she asked principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Adam Gustafson. 'There has been no evidence as to why we need to have it in the middle of the Everglades.' Advertisement State and federal lawyers explained the location was helpful for sending out deportation flights directly from the airstrip, and that the remote site was important for public safety. But Williams, an Obama-era appointee, shot back that deportation flights could leave out of other Florida airports.

D.C. Police Move to Share Limited Information With Federal Immigration Officials
D.C. Police Move to Share Limited Information With Federal Immigration Officials

New York Times

time20 minutes ago

  • New York Times

D.C. Police Move to Share Limited Information With Federal Immigration Officials

The chief of the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington issued an order on Thursday permitting officers to share information about people detained during traffic stops and to provide transportation to federal immigration authorities and their detainees. The directive from Chief Pamela A. Smith, which was reviewed by The New York Times, came as the Trump administration asserted temporary control of the police force, and as a top federal official proclaimed the end of Washington's status as a sanctuary city. The change effectively serves as a limited carve-out to how the department enforces a broader ban that prohibits the local police from cooperating with federal immigration enforcement. Chief Smith's order on Thursday emphasized that the law remained in place, noting that members of the police department still cannot arrest people solely on immigration charges or hold them in custody at the request of federal officials, if they would have otherwise been released. The order comes as the local police conduct joint patrols with federal agents as part of President Trump's takeover of law enforcement in the nation's capital. The president's border czar said this week that the deployment of federal law enforcement across Washington would effectively negate local laws that limit cooperation with deportation efforts. 'D.C. under federal control is not going to be a sanctuary city,' the official, Tom Homan, said on 'Fox News' on Wednesday. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store