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Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan
Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan

[Source] A woman in Pierce County, Washington state, has expressed outrage after her husband was unexpectedly deported to South Sudan instead of Vietnam as planned. Tuan Thanh Phan came to the U.S. from Vietnam in 1991 at age 9 with legal permanent residence status. In 2000, he was convicted of first-degree murder and second-degree assault following a gang-related shooting that injured a bystander, resulting in approximately 25 years in prison. His green card was revoked in 2009 during his sentence, leading to a deportation order. ICE took him into custody on his March 3 release and transferred him from the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma to a Texas immigration facility. In a May 21 press release, the Department of Homeland Security labeled him and his fellow deportees 'uniquely barbaric monsters who present a clear and present threat to the safety of the American people.' Ngoc Phan, 40, had prepared extensively for her husband's anticipated deportation to Vietnam, collecting luggage, arranging family pickup abroad and planning to reunite with him within three to five years to begin fresh. 'We've accepted it. We planned for it, and we were looking forward to it,' she told NPR. Trending on NextShark: But on May 20, ICE agents collected her husband and others, first indicating South Africa as the destination, then switching to South Sudan with minimal advance notice. 'I'm angry about it,' she said. 'They want to call him a barbaric monster without really understanding the details of his case ... He [already] did 25 years.' Phan's deportation is part of the Trump administration's strategy to send immigrants to third countries when their home nations would not accept them. Vietnam has historically limited acceptance of deportees, though it signed a 2020 agreement making it easier to accept those who arrived before 1995 — ideally including Phan's situation. Federal judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts, however, ruled the deportations violated due process by not providing adequate time to contest removal to a non-origin country. Murphy ordered the men be given credible fear interviews while detained at a U.S. military base in Djibouti, where they remain as the administration appeals to the Supreme Court. Trending on NextShark: Ngoc says she has not been able to contact her husband since his departure. The Supreme Court has given lawyers until June 4 to respond to the government's appeal. 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. Trending on NextShark: 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!

Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan
Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Woman condemns Vietnamese husband's deportation to South Sudan

[Source] A woman in Pierce County, Washington state, has expressed outrage after her husband was unexpectedly deported to South Sudan instead of Vietnam as planned. Tuan Thanh Phan came to the U.S. from Vietnam in 1991 at age 9 with legal permanent residence status. In 2000, he was convicted of first-degree murder and second-degree assault following a gang-related shooting that injured a bystander, resulting in approximately 25 years in prison. His green card was revoked in 2009 during his sentence, leading to a deportation order. ICE took him into custody on his March 3 release and transferred him from the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma to a Texas immigration facility. In a May 21 press release, the Department of Homeland Security labeled him and his fellow deportees 'uniquely barbaric monsters who present a clear and present threat to the safety of the American people.' Ngoc Phan, 40, had prepared extensively for her husband's anticipated deportation to Vietnam, collecting luggage, arranging family pickup abroad and planning to reunite with him within three to five years to begin fresh. 'We've accepted it. We planned for it, and we were looking forward to it,' she told NPR. Trending on NextShark: But on May 20, ICE agents collected her husband and others, first indicating South Africa as the destination, then switching to South Sudan with minimal advance notice. 'I'm angry about it,' she said. 'They want to call him a barbaric monster without really understanding the details of his case ... He [already] did 25 years.' Phan's deportation is part of the Trump administration's strategy to send immigrants to third countries when their home nations would not accept them. Vietnam has historically limited acceptance of deportees, though it signed a 2020 agreement making it easier to accept those who arrived before 1995 — ideally including Phan's situation. Federal judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts, however, ruled the deportations violated due process by not providing adequate time to contest removal to a non-origin country. Murphy ordered the men be given credible fear interviews while detained at a U.S. military base in Djibouti, where they remain as the administration appeals to the Supreme Court. Trending on NextShark: Ngoc says she has not been able to contact her husband since his departure. The Supreme Court has given lawyers until June 4 to respond to the government's appeal. 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. Trending on NextShark: 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!

ICE officials ousted amid White House order to triple number of daily arrests
ICE officials ousted amid White House order to triple number of daily arrests

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

ICE officials ousted amid White House order to triple number of daily arrests

[Source] Two senior ICE officials are being removed from their positions amid White House pressure for dramatically higher arrest numbers of undocumented migrants. Pressure to arrest White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem demanded that agents arrest 3,000 people daily during a heated meeting at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) headquarters in Washington, D.C., on May 21, sources told Axios. Some attendees reportedly worried about their jobs if targets were not met. The aggressive push, which would triple the current rate of arrests, comes despite detention facilities already exceeding capacity, with nearly 49,000 people in ICE custody while Congress has funded only around 47,000 beds. Additionally, Miller and Noem threatened to dismiss the bottom 10% of regional ICE officials based on their arrest numbers, sources told Reuters. Trending on NextShark: The pressure reflects a major enforcement shift as May data reportedly showed 11,367 migrants were arrested by ICE compared to 2,415 from border patrol — a reversal from May 2024 when border arrests far exceeded interior enforcement. Who's out? Kenneth Genalo, who heads ICE's enforcement and removal division, will retire, while Robert Hammer, who heads the agency's investigative arm, will be reassigned, ICE announced on Thursday, among other changes. These follow earlier shakeups in February and come as deportation numbers have remained roughly equivalent to the Biden administration's final year despite Trump's mass deportation promises. Trending on NextShark: The White House and Congress are now working to provide $147 billion in additional immigration funding over the next decade to support expanded operations. 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. Trending on NextShark: 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!

Former DEI supporter selected as University of Florida's new president
Former DEI supporter selected as University of Florida's new president

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Former DEI supporter selected as University of Florida's new president

[Source] The University of Florida Board of Trustees voted unanimously on Tuesday to select Dr. Santa J. Ono as the university's 14th president, despite intense scrutiny from conservative activists who questioned his previous support for diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Who is Santa J. Ono? Ono previously served as president of the University of Michigan, the University of British Columbia and the University of Cincinnati. A world-renowned vision researcher, he has been elected to the National Academy of Medicine and the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, among other prestigious organizations. However, his appointment faces significant opposition due to his past advocacy for DEI initiatives. Conservative activist Christopher Rufo, who serves on New College of Florida's board of trustees, found prior statements by Ono supporting DEI programs and reposted them online. U.S. Reps. Byron Donalds and Greg Steube also expressed opposition, with Steube writing about 'grave concerns' regarding Ono's 'woke politics.' Trending on NextShark: Despite the criticism, Ono received the support of anti-woke Gov. Ron DeSantis, who reportedly expressed trust in school officials. Board Chair Mori Hosseini, who has focused on improving the university's national standing, also endorsed Ono, saying he is 'precisely the right person' to be president at this time and that his values 'align perfectly with ours here in the great state of Florida.' What he's saying Ono has since renounced his previous DEI positions. 'Over time, I saw how DEI became something else — more about ideology, division and bureaucracy, not student success,' he wrote in a widely circulated op-ed. 'That's why, as president of the University of Michigan, I made the decision to eliminate centralized DEI offices and redirect resources toward academic support and merit-based achievement. It wasn't universally popular, but it was necessary. I stood by it — and I'll bring that same clarity of purpose to UF.' Trending on NextShark: Ono's appointment follows the search to replace Ben Sasse, the former Nebraska senator who resigned abruptly in July 2024 after serving little more than a year. Under the proposed contract, Ono would receive a $1.5 million annual base salary plus potential bonuses and $500,000 from UF Health, with duties including preventing money from being spent on DEI or activism. The Florida Board of Governors is expected to vote on his appointment next week. 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!

Road rage suspect who attacked Asian mom, daughter is assaulted by inmates in Hawaii
Road rage suspect who attacked Asian mom, daughter is assaulted by inmates in Hawaii

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Road rage suspect who attacked Asian mom, daughter is assaulted by inmates in Hawaii

[Source] Serial road rage suspect Nathaniel Radimak, 38, who allegedly attacked an Asian American mother and daughter in Honolulu earlier this month, is back behind bars at the Halawa Correctional Facility following hospitalization after being beaten by fellow inmates. Catch up The road rage incident occurred on May 7 when Diane Ung's 18-year-old daughter was reportedly attempting to parallel park on Halekauwila Street with her 7-month-old daughter in the backseat. 'This guy just comes zooming down, maybe about 40 to 50 in a 25-mile-per-hour zone. And my daughter just sticks her head out the window and says, 'slow down,'' Ung told KHON 2. Surveillance video shows a Tesla making a U-turn before its male driver approached the vehicle, reached through the window and punched Ung's daughter in her jaw area. Ung, who intervened by throwing coffee at the driver, also told KABC that 'he came running across the street, struck me like a Superman punch right inside my face,' resulting in a gash that required eight stitches. Trending on NextShark: Arrest and assault Honolulu police arrested Radimak on May 8 at an apartment on Ala Wai Boulevard, charging him with unauthorized entry into a motor vehicle and two counts of assault. His bail was set at $100,000, and he was additionally arrested on a no-bail parole revocation warrant. Radimak, however, sustained injuries to his face and torso after being allegedly assaulted by fellow inmates in a housing unit at the Halawa facility on May 12. A photo making rounds on social media shows him in a wheelchair with facial bruises. Trending on NextShark: Criminal history Radimak was released from California prison last August after serving less than a year of a five-year sentence for multiple road rage attacks across Southern California. He is now being held at the Halawa facility instead of jail due to his status as a convicted felon and parole violator in California's correctional system. Radimak is scheduled for arraignment on Thursday and will be extradited to California only after serving any sentences in Hawaii if convicted, authorities said. 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. Trending on NextShark: Subscribe here now! Download the NextShark App: Want to keep up to date on Asian American News? Download the NextShark App today!

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