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Court blocks Trump, for now, in another case of a questionably detained immigrant
Court blocks Trump, for now, in another case of a questionably detained immigrant

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Court blocks Trump, for now, in another case of a questionably detained immigrant

His lawyers call him Y.A.P.A., a shielded name based on his initials, because they fear what might happen if he's sent back to Venezuela. He's a 34-year-old activist for humanitarian causes who drew the ire of the Maduro regime in Venezuela. In September of 2022, he crossed the U.S. southern border, was met by U.S. Border Control officers and asked for asylum. While awaiting an asylum ruling, he obtained a work permit and held a job in food service at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, delivered takeout food and had other odd jobs. He reported to his scheduled hearings, all of them continued. He found a place to stay and had a girlfriend. All was going well until February, when he was picked up in Wilmington by Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) officers for allegedly being part of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. He denies any connection to the gang and the government said in court documents that it cannot validate that he is a member. He is left with the difficult and perhaps impossible task of proving he is not. He has been in Stewart Detention Center, an overcrowded private prison in Georgia, since February, with no immediate prospect of getting out. He has spent months fearing he might be deported without due process to CECOT, El Salvador's terrorism confinement center, or sent off to another country or returned to Venezuela. This week, he had a small victory in his odyssey through the slanted system of immigration enforcement under President Donald Trump. A federal district court judge in Georgia said Y.A.P.A. couldn't be sent to a foreign prison or returned to Venezuela without a chance to refute the government's allegations against him. Judge Clay Land said that the right to due process extends to all who face detention or removal by the federal government. 'This foundational principle is part of what has made, and will continue to make, America great,' he said. 'Consistent with the rule of law, it is the court's job to make sure, without fear or favor, that we adhere to these principles.' Rebecca Cassler, an attorney at the American Immigration Council, which has taken up Y.A.P.A.'s cause, said in a statement, 'This ruling affirms that our client, like every person in the United States, has a fundamental right to due process and a fair day in court.' The ruling blocks the Trump administration's claim that it can deport non-citizens without due process under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act. The law allows for the removal of people deemed to be enemies during times of war or invasion. The administration says Tren de Aragua is an invading force connected to the Venezuelan government, although a U.S intelligence report said that's untrue. Cassler said, 'Thanks to this ruling, for now there is one less person who has to live in fear of being whisked away to CECOT in the middle of the night and held there indefinitely on behalf of the United States.' Still, a Venezuelan immigrant being plucked from the streets of Wilmington and imprisoned remains an unresolved injustice. 'He was complying with everything the government asked him to do,' said his immigration attorney, Keli Reynolds. 'He reported his address changes. He had a work authorization and then all of the sudden in February they started picking up Venezuelans and alleging out of nowhere they are members of Tren de Aragua. It's quite shocking.' Reynolds thinks ICE swept up Venezuelan immigrants under a blanket claim of membership in Tren de Aragua because Trump was unhappy with the pace of deportations. Now her client has to prove he's not what ICE says he is. 'It's terrifying to have to prove a negative,' she said. 'It's not like people from Tren de Aragua are going to come in and say, 'He's not one of us.' ' Kaelyn Phillips, a U.S. citizen, met Y.A.P.A. last summer and became his partner. She has visited him at the Georgia detention center, where they were separated by a clear plastic barrier and spoke by phone. When he was denied bond to get out because of his alleged gang connection, Phillips said, 'It totally broke him. He went into shock and denial. He said, 'God will get me out of here.' ' Phillips said Y.A.P.A. has two sisters and nephews living in Wilmington and no criminal record in Venezuela or the U.S. The claims that he is a gang member, she said, 'are not charges, they are allegations,' that the government has not provided evidence to support and he has had no opportunity to refute. She said he was lucky he was not among the group of Venezuelan immigrants sent to an El Salvador prison in March without due process and with no prospect of release. 'We are a country of immigrants,' she said. 'Why are we making war on immigrants?' Ned Barnett is an opinion writer for McClatchy and the News & Observer of Raleigh.

ICE unjustly swept him up in NC, now he's trapped in Trump's deportation pipeline
ICE unjustly swept him up in NC, now he's trapped in Trump's deportation pipeline

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

ICE unjustly swept him up in NC, now he's trapped in Trump's deportation pipeline

His lawyers call him Y.A.P.A., a shielded name based on his initials, because they fear what might happen if he's sent back to Venezuela. He's a 34-year-old activist for humanitarian causes who drew the ire of the Maduro regime in Venezuela. In September of 2022, he crossed the U.S. southern border, was met by U.S. Border Control officers and asked for asylum. While awaiting an asylum ruling, he obtained a work permit and held a job in food service at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, delivered takeout food and had other odd jobs. He reported to his scheduled hearings, all of them continued. He found a place to stay and had a girlfriend. All was going well until February, when he was picked up in Wilmington by Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) officers for allegedly being part of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. He denies any connection to the gang and the government said in court documents that it cannot validate that he is a member. He is left with the difficult and perhaps impossible task of proving he is not. He has been in Stewart Detention Center, an overcrowded private prison in Georgia, since February, with no immediate prospect of getting out. He has spent months fearing he might be deported without due process to CECOT, El Salvador's terrorism confinement center, or sent off to another country or returned to Venezuela. This week, he had a small victory in his odyssey through the slanted system of immigration enforcement under President Donald Trump. A federal district court judge in Georgia said Y.A.P.A. couldn't be sent to a foreign prison or returned to Venezuela without a chance to refute the government's allegations against him. Judge Clay Land said that the right to due process extends to all who face detention or removal by the federal government. 'This foundational principle is part of what has made, and will continue to make, America great,' he said. 'Consistent with the rule of law, it is the court's job to make sure, without fear or favor, that we adhere to these principles.' Rebecca Cassler, an attorney at the American Immigration Council, which has taken up Y.A.P.A.'s cause, said in a statement, 'This ruling affirms that our client, like every person in the United States, has a fundamental right to due process and a fair day in court.' The ruling blocks the Trump administration's claim that it can deport non-citizens without due process under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act. The law allows for the removal of people deemed to be enemies during times of war or invasion. The administration says Tren de Aragua is an invading force connected to the Venezuelan government, although a U.S intelligence report said that's untrue. Cassler said, 'Thanks to this ruling, for now there is one less person who has to live in fear of being whisked away to CECOT in the middle of the night and held there indefinitely on behalf of the United States.' Still, a Venezuelan immigrant being plucked from the streets of Wilmington and imprisoned remains an unresolved injustice. 'He was complying with everything the government asked him to do,' said his immigration attorney, Keli Reynolds. 'He reported his address changes. He had a work authorization and then all of the sudden in February they started picking up Venezuelans and alleging out of nowhere they are members of Tren de Aragua. It's quite shocking.' Reynolds thinks ICE swept up Venezuelan immigrants under a blanket claim of membership in Tren de Aragua because Trump was unhappy with the pace of deportations. Now her client has to prove he's not what ICE says he is. 'It's terrifying to have to prove a negative,' she said. 'It's not like people from Tren de Aragua are going to come in and say, 'He's not one of us.' ' Kaelyn Phillips, a U.S. citizen, met Y.A.P.A. last summer and became his partner. She has visited him at the Georgia detention center, where they were separated by a clear plastic barrier and spoke by phone. When he was denied bond to get out because of his alleged gang connection, Phillips said, 'It totally broke him. He went into shock and denial. He said, 'God will get me out of here.' ' Phillips said Y.A.P.A. has two sisters and nephews living in Wilmington and no criminal record in Venezuela or the U.S. The claims that he is a gang member, she said, 'are not charges, they are allegations,' that the government has not provided evidence to support and he has had no opportunity to refute. She said he was lucky he was not among the group of Venezuelan immigrants sent to an El Salvador prison in March without due process and with no prospect of release. 'We are a country of immigrants,' she said. 'Why are we making war on immigrants?' Associate opinion editor Ned Barnett can be reached at 919-404-7583, or nbarnett@

Police Arrest Members of ‘Cult-Like' Group Tied to Murders Across U.S.
Police Arrest Members of ‘Cult-Like' Group Tied to Murders Across U.S.

Yahoo

time19-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Police Arrest Members of ‘Cult-Like' Group Tied to Murders Across U.S.

Authorities have arrested the 'apparent leader' of a 'cult-like group' known as the Zizians along with two accomplices, Maryland state police officials reported (via The Associated Press). Jack Lasota, 34; Michelle Zajko, 33; and Daniel Blank, 26, were arrested on Feb. 16 on a slew of charges including trespassing, obstructing and hindering justice, and possession of a handgun. Lasota is believed to be the leader of the Zizians, described as a 'cult-like group' which is believed to be responsible for at least six homicides across the United States. The Zizians are tied to five separate murders in California, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. They are also suspected of killing David Maland, a U.S. Border Control agent, in a shootout during a routine traffic stop last month in Coventry, Vermont, a town roughly 20 miles from the Canadian began to piece together the group's involvement in the crimes after Maland's Jan. 20 murder. Although authorities have been tight-lipped regarding the interstate investigation, a separate inquiry led by The Associated Press found that the Zizians appear to be 'a group of young, highly intelligent computer scientists, most of them in their 20s and 30s' who 'met online, shared anarchist beliefs, and became increasingly violent.' 'Their goals aren't clear,' the outlet found, 'but online writings span topics from radical veganism and gender identity to artificial intelligence.' Lasota, who uses she/her pronouns, is thought to be the group's leader. Zajko and Blank's roles are unclear at this time, but they're alleged to have worked closely with the center of the organization is an enigmatic figure known as 'Ziz.' According to AP, Ziz has been seen by witnesses at multiple crime scenes and has connections to multiple suspects in the case. The outlet found that Lasota had published a series of blogs under that name, including violent fantasies and theories about the brain and gender. Police moved in after the trio arrived at the home of a man they did not know and requested to camp on the property for several weeks. The property owner asked the 'suspicious' group to leave, KRON 4 reported, and phoned police when they didn't. Officers arrived to find the suspects dressed in black and wearing gun belts holding live ammunition. They also recovered a rifle and a handgun from the suspects' truck. Zajko, who initially resisted arrest, also had a handgun on her. A bond hearing was held for Lasota at 11 a.m. local time on Tuesday. The Guardian reported that she was ordered held without bail pending trial, with prosecutors citing that she could be a flight risk and posed a danger to public safety as she 'appears to be the leader of an extremist group.'

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