Latest news with #Marshals


The Hindu
08-07-2025
- Politics
- The Hindu
BBMP employees withdraw strike after recent suspensions promised to be rolled back, services affected on Tuesday
Employees of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) went on a strike on Tuesday, affecting civic services in Bengaluru throughout the day. Revenue, Education, and Health departments were the most affected by the strike, which was withdrawn later in the evening, after Chief Civic Commissioner M. Maheshwar Rao promised to withdraw the suspensions of eight revenue officials, suspended over alleged dereliction of duty during the Scheduled Castes Survey. Solid waste management remained unaffected. Mallamma, who works as a domestic help in Rajajinagar area, said that her mother-in-law had fallen ill and she had taken her to the nearest BBMP hospital, but doctors had been to a protest. Madhav Rao, a resident of Vidyaranyapura and a senior citizen, said he had been to the BBMP office to meet the assistant revenue officer (ARO) over an e-khata query, but the office was deserted. Meanwhile, classes were not properly held in most of the BBMP-run schools and colleges as teachers were also participating in the strike. The BBMP headquarters in N.R. Square of the city also wore a deserted look as most of the employees were part of the strike. Suralkar Vikas Kishor, Special Commissioner (West Zone), faced the heat from BBMP employees who alleged he tried to stop employees from participating in the strike. However, he clarified that he had told only two employees — an office assistant and a driver — not to go for the protest, to keep the office running, and said he was not against the strike. Mr. Rao visited Freedom Park, where the BBMP employees were protesting and assured them of withdrawing the suspension orders of eight revenue officers. Responding to other demands — BBMP should fill 6,000 posts, give promotions to BBMP direct recruits, cancel employing Marshals in the city — the Commissioner promised the employees that he will soon take up these issues with the State government. Following this, the strike was called off. A. Amrutraj, president, BBMP Employees' and Engineers' Welfare Association, which led the strike, said that with the suspensions withdrawn and assurance to positively consider their other demands, they had decided to call off the strike and return to work on Wednesday.


The Sun
28-06-2025
- Automotive
- The Sun
F1's Austrian Grand Prix qualifying session SUSPENDED as grass catches fire next to track
FORMULA ONE qualifying at the Austrian Grand Prix was suspended after a FIRE put to a stop to the session. Race stewards stopped the session just over five minutes into the second qualifying, with drivers returning to their garages as marshals dealt with a small grass fire. 1
Yahoo
14-06-2025
- Yahoo
Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleads not guilty to human smuggling charges in Nashville court
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March, pleaded not guilty in a Nashville federal court on June 13. He is charged with conspiracy to transport aliens and unlawful transportation of undocumented aliens. Abrego Garcia, 29, entered his plea alongside his attorneys in the Fred D. Thompson Federal Building and Courthouse in downtown Nashville at 10:13 a.m. June 13. Attorneys also argued a motion to keep Abrego Garcia in detention while the case is pending. U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes had not ruled on the detention motion as of the afternoon of June 13. Abrego Garcia's wife read a statement from him at a news conference before the hearing, asking people to "keep praying and keep fighting that the light will always come soon." Both prosecutors and defense are heavily staffed for the case. Acting U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee Rob McGuire, who leads all federal prosecutors in Nashville, and lawyers from the U.S. Department of Justice are representing the federal government. Abrego Garcia's attorneys include the local Federal Public Defender Dumaka Shabazz and three assistant public defenders. "This has the feel of a case that's going to be very heavily litigated," said Jack Chin, a professor at the University of California Davis School of Law. The charges against Abrego Garcia were revealed when a federal indictment against him was unsealed June 6, the same day the U.S. flew him back from El Salvador. Abrego Garcia appeared in the Nashville courthouse that day, where he was read the charges against him. Since then, he has been in the custody of the U.S. Marshals. More: How a routine traffic stop in TN exploded into human smuggling charges for Kilmar Abrego Garcia During the hearing, prosecutors and defense attorneys debated whether Abrego Garcia should stay behind bars while the case proceeds. Prosecutors have argued he is a danger to the community, and children in particular, and said there's a risk he could leave the country. Homeland Security Investigations special agent Peter Joseph testified that agents have spoken with five witnesses, including two alleged co-conspirators in what prosecutors say was a smuggling operation. Prosecutors played the bodycam footage from the November 2022 traffic stop in Cookeville now central to the case. Joseph said there was a minor in the car when Abrego Garcia was stopped. In the footage, Abrego Garcia is heard telling Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers that he and the nine others in the car were coming back from St. Louis. License plate readers, however, showed they were not in St. Louis in all of 2022, Joseph said. A license plate reader in Spring, Texas, registered a hit on the vehicle Abrego Garcia was driving days before he was stopped, Joseph said. Joseph also said agents found six of the nine people were in the country illegally. Two had been removed from the U.S. to Mexico in early November. Joseph testified that the Chevrolet Suburban Abrego Garcia was driving was owned by a man named Jose Hernandez-Reyes, whom Joseph said was convicted of alien smuggling. Prosecutors entered into evidence two orders of protection Abrego Garcia's wife has taken out against him. Just before the court recessed for lunch, one of Abrego Garcia's defense attorneys, federal public defender Richard Tennent, pressed the prosecution while cross examining Joseph. Tennent tried to poke holes in the timeline of the allegations of human smuggling levied by the prosecution. In particular, Tennent pointed to the length of the drives prosecutors say Abrego Garcia was taking, and questioned how Abrego Garcia would manage these distances while transporting his family and other passengers. Defense attorneys have argued for his release. "[T]he government isn't even entitled to a detention hearing in this case — much less detention," the defense wrote in a June 11 filing. "Mr. Abrego Garcia should be released." They argued Abrego Garcia does not have an incentive to flee and in fact may have a basis for a new asylum claim after he was illegally deported to a Salvadoran mega-prison. Abrego Garcia denies allegations he is a member of the MS-13 gang; defense attorneys argue that even if he were a member, that not reason enough to keep him detained. Defense attorneys also said the crimes did not involve minor victims, because no children were alleged to have been harmed in transit. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has a detainer against Abrego Garcia. If Holmes were to rule that prosecutors cannot detain Abrego Garcia before trial, he would leave Marshals custody but be transferred to ICE custody due to the detainer, Chin said. If that happened, his attorneys may be able to secure his release. An immigration judge may decide to grant Abrego Garcia bail from ICE custody, Chin said. A crowd of at least 100 people had gathered outside the Fred D. Thompson Federal Courthouse by 9:45 a.m. At a nearby news conference, Abrego Garcia's wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, read a message from her husband to the reporters and community members who'd gathered. "To all the families still fighting to be reunited after a family separation, or if you too are in detention, Kilmar wants you to have faith," Vasquez Sura said. "He said these dark times are where we're facing all of the tribulations God has put in our path. But keep praying and keep fighting that the light will always come soon for all of us, and you too will be able to see your family again." The crowd at the news conference chanted, "We are all Kilmar, we are all Kilmar." This case is separate from the civil case over Abrego Garcia's deportation. Prosecutors say between 2016 and 2025, Abrego Garcia was part of a conspiracy to transport undocumented migrants from various countries in Central and South America into and within the U.S. They say Abrego Garcia's role was generally to pick up immigrants in the Houston area and drive them to other locations in the U.S. The charges were filed in the Middle District of Tennessee because he was stopped in Cookeville in 2022 driving a Chevrolet Suburban with nine men the indictment suggests were undocumented immigrants. The Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers who pulled him over allowed him to leave, giving him only a warning for driving on an expired license. Have questions about the justice system? Evan Mealins is the justice reporter for The Tennessean. Contact him with questions, tips or story ideas at emealins@ This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleads not guilty to charges in Nashville court

05-06-2025
US Marshals arrest a Dominican man sought in last year's killing of 4 people in New York
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- The U.S. Marshals Service announced late Wednesday that agents arrested a man in the Dominican Republic sought in the killing of four people in New York last year, including two children. Luis Francisco Soriano, also known as Jefry Yevo, had been working at a hotel in the popular tourist coastal town of Punta Cana, the agency said in a statement. Soriano had originally fled to Puerto Rico after the killings but then jumped on a boat to his native Dominican Republic after becoming aware that federal marshals were in the U.S. territory, authorities said. U.S. Marshals said it worked with Dominican authorities to arrest 31-year-old Soriano 'without incident after he completed his shift at the hotel's call center.' It wasn't immediately clear if Soriano had an attorney. His brother, Julio Pimentel Soriano, was arrested shortly after the August 2024 killings and has pleaded not guilty. Police have said the brothers are related to one of the victims. 'Every case is important to us, but this one not only deeply impacted our communities in New York and Puerto Rico, it shook our entire nation,' said Wilmer Ocasio-Ibarra, U.S. marshal for the district of Puerto Rico. The Sorianos were accused in the killings of Fraime Ubaldo, 30; Marangely Moreno Santiago, 26; Evangeline Ubaldo Moreno, 4; and Sebastián Ubaldo Moreno, 2. Police said Ubaldo was a cousin of the Sorianos. The victims' bodies were found in the basement of their home that was set on fire in Irondequoit, a suburb of Rochester, New York, authorities said. Moreno Santiago and her two children were buried in the southern Puerto Rican coastal town of Salinas, her hometown.

Yahoo
05-06-2025
- Yahoo
US Marshals arrest a Dominican man sought in last year's killing of 4 people in New York
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The U.S. Marshals Service announced late Wednesday that agents arrested a man in the Dominican Republic sought in the killing of four people in New York last year, including two children. Luis Francisco Soriano, also known as Jefry Yevo, had been working at a hotel in the popular tourist coastal town of Punta Cana, the agency said in a statement. Soriano had originally fled to Puerto Rico after the killings but then jumped on a boat to his native Dominican Republic after becoming aware that federal marshals were in the U.S. territory, authorities said. U.S. Marshals said it worked with Dominican authorities to arrest 31-year-old Soriano 'without incident after he completed his shift at the hotel's call center.' It wasn't immediately clear if Soriano had an attorney. His brother, Julio Pimentel Soriano, was arrested shortly after the August 2024 killings and has pleaded not guilty. Police have said the brothers are related to one of the victims. 'Every case is important to us, but this one not only deeply impacted our communities in New York and Puerto Rico, it shook our entire nation,' said Wilmer Ocasio-Ibarra, U.S. marshal for the district of Puerto Rico. The Sorianos were accused in the killings of Fraime Ubaldo, 30; Marangely Moreno Santiago, 26; Evangeline Ubaldo Moreno, 4; and Sebastián Ubaldo Moreno, 2. Police said Ubaldo was a cousin of the Sorianos. The victims' bodies were found in the basement of their home that was set on fire in Irondequoit, a suburb of Rochester, New York, authorities said. Moreno Santiago and her two children were buried in the southern Puerto Rican coastal town of Salinas, her hometown.