Posts Categorized: special immigrant juvenile

01
June 2016

El “pequeño Marco” y sus menudos principios
Maribel Hastings

La Opinión/Impremedia

El Diario NY

Radio Bilingüe

Hoy Dallas

Contáctanos


POLÍTICA 2016

Marco Rubio se dice “honrado” de hablar por Trump en la convención, asegura que votará “y no por Hillary”
La Opinión/Impremedia

Análisis de las posibilidades presidenciales de Trump (Video)
Enfoque/Telemundo

Rocky de la Fuente, el “otro” demócrata en la boleta de California
La Opinión/Impremedia

Clinton y Sanders virtualmente empatados en California antes de la primaria del 7 de junio
La Opinión/Impremedia

Trump rechaza celebrar un debate con Sanders
EFE/La Opinión

Trump dice que EEUU trata mejor a indocumentados que a veteranos
EFE/La Opinión

Gary Johnson representará a libertarios en elecciones presidenciales
EFE/La Opinión

El Partido Libertario apuesta por Gary Johnson para seducir a los descontentos con Trump y Clinton
Univision.com

Inmigrantes salen a promover el voto en Los Ángeles
La Opinión/Impremedia

Las ideas de Donald Trump enfrentan a los estadounidenses cuerpo a cuerpo (Fotos)
Univision.com

Rosario Marín: “Trump ha destruido los esfuerzos republicanos para atraer a los latinos”
Latinocalifornia

EDITORIALES Y OPINIÓN

Trump y el juez “mexicano”
La Opinión/Editorial

De Rosa Parks a Donald Trump
Jorge Ramos/Univision.com

Trump pone en peligro todo lo que somos
Al Moncada/La Opinión

Bernie Sanders acabará con deportaciones que desgarran a nuestras familias
Sergio García/La Opinión

Trayectoria de Hillary Clinton con la comunidad latina amerita nuestro apoyo
John Trasviña/La Opinión

Los problemas del ‘unificador’ Trump
Jorge Delgado/La Opinión


COMUNIDAD HISPANA TEME MÁS REDADAS

Miedo se apodera de indocumentados en Carolina del Norte (Video)
Noticiero Univision

OTRAS NOTICIAS

Hispanos siempre presentes en las guerras en las que ha participado Estados Unidos (Video)
Noticiero Univision

Son veteranos de guerra, pero no pueden pisar suelo estadounidense
La Opinión/Impremedia

La ruta del migrante, cada vez más complicada (Video)
Noticiero Univision

Polémica política discriminatoria en Wisconsin (Video)
Noticiero Univision

La muerte de otro niño en el Mediterráneo recuerda al mundo el drama de la migración
Univision.com

‘Terminó la pesadilla’, dice inmigrante que pasó 16 años encarcelado erróneamente
La Opinión

El Papa a los niños: los inmigrantes no son peligrosos, están en peligro
EFE/La Opinión

Inician caminata por muerte de inmigrantes en el desierto de Arizona
EFE/Yahoo Noticias

Rhode Island: inmigrantes planean marchas por licencias
AP/Yahoo Noticias

Refugiados sí, turistas no: un graffiti en Mallorca destapa el hartazgo con los extranjeros adinerados
Yahoo Noticias

 

23
May 2016

 

Over the past few days, many of you probably heard that the Obama Administration is launching a new round of immigration raids targeting Central American women and children. The CARA Pro Bono Project staff have already begun to meet with families with final orders who were transferred to Dilley, Texas, over the past few days, and we will continue to monitor and report on the types of cases we see.

 

The American Immigration Council has been in the fight to defend Central American refugees through advocacy and research. The Council issued two pieces this week critical to the debate around how the United States should be responding to the Central American crisis. The first is a report on deported families, which tells the first-hand stories of women (former CARA clients) we interviewed who now are living in hiding in Central America because they fear for their lives. The second is an updated fact sheet highlighting the fact that a majority of children do attend their immigration hearings, particularly when they have legal representation. Both papers help explain how the current system is failing asylum-seeking children and families.

 

 

 

 

You may have also seen that, the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law asked a judge to order the government to comply with the Flores Settlement and appoint an independent monitor to oversee the Obama Administration’s ongoing family detention policy. The Council and CARA Pro Bono Project partners assisted in the collection of declarations that are the basis for the Plaintiffs’ motion to enforce the Flores Settlement. These declarations attest to the deplorable conditions in Customs and Border Protection holding facilities, as well as the rampant violations of the rights of children and mothers detained in family detention facilities.

We will continue to update you as things develop through public statements, as well as the blog Immigration Impact.

Please reach out with any questions.

Contact Us

 

13
January 2016


Emergency rulings reveal indefensible deportation strategy for vulnerable Central American families

January 13, 2016

Washington D.C. – In the last week, 121 mothers and children were brought to the South Texas Residential Family Center in Dilley, Texas, after being rounded up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The CARA Family Detention Pro Bono Project reviewed the cases of 13 families, filed appeals for 12, and won stays of removal from the Board of Immigration Appeals for all 12 families – 33 mothers and children. While this is a major victory for these families, the troubling fact remains that many, who very likely also had claims for relief, were swiftly deported without the chance to consult with CARA staff or volunteers. The 12 families for whom CARA obtained stays were fleeing extreme domestic violence or targeted for recruitment, kidnapping, assault, or extortion by transnational criminal organizations.

We now call on the Obama Administration to release the families confined at Dilley pending their appeals. The continued detention of these children and mothers violates well-established law regarding the treatment of immigrant children, as reflected in the Flores Settlement Agreement. CARA Managing Attorney, Katie Shepherd explains, “Under Flores, the government may not hold children in unlicensed, secure detention centers like Dilley. The children should be released immediately, with their mothers, as the law requires. The plight of these families, victims of ICE’s recent raids, highlights more pervasive problems with our immigration system. The Obama Administration’s troubling approach toward refugee families needs to be rethought, beginning with the immediate closure of its current family detention centers.”

The CARA Project team served as the last hope for these families. Their successful stays of deportation raise serious concerns about the glaring due process violations that deprive bona fide asylum seekers of a meaningful opportunity to present their claims. Every single mother for whom the CARA Project filed an appeal had been denied due process in one or more ways, including:

  • Cases thrown on a “rocket docket,” leaving no time for their attorneys, if they were able to secure legal representation, to compile the evidence required;
  • Lack of information on what the process was and what their obligations were;
  • Officials pressuring them to sign legal documents without access to counsel;
  • Arrest and detention after they had cooperated with every single requirement ICE had mandated.

The government’s decision to round up Central American families over New Year’s weekend and its refusal to disavow such aggressive enforcement tactics against vulnerable mothers and children continues to reverberate across the United States and beyond. President Obama must fully acknowledge that these families deserve humanitarian protection rather than punishment. The Obama Administration has consistently refused to recognize and treat these families as refugees and has erected enormous obstacles again and again in an effort to deter future asylum seekers. This is a shameful choice that contradicts our own laws and our history as a nation of immigrants.

CARA looks forward to receiving details from the government regarding plans to partner with the United Nations to assist refugees fleeing Central American violence. But, in order to live up to our country’s values and principles, real solutions need to be sought and implemented for those fleeing violence who reach our borders, including meaningful access to counsel and full due process, as well as an immediate end to family detention. Additionally, the administration should immediately protect this vulnerable population from deportation by granting humanitarian parole, Temporary Protected Status, or another form of relief.

*The CARA Pro Bono Project is a partnership of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network (CLINIC), the American Immigration Council (Council), Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES), and the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), that provides legal representation and undertakes advocacy on behalf of mothers and children held in federal family detention centers.

13
January 2016

This Bulletin explains how the Asylum Division has prioritized the adjudication of affirmative applications for asylum. On December 26, 2014, we began prioritizing asylum applications for interview scheduling as follows:

1.) Applications that were scheduled for an interview, but the interview had to be rescheduled at the applicant’s request or the needs of USCIS;

2.) Applications filed by children; and

3.) All other pending affirmative asylum applications in the order they were received, with oldest cases scheduled first.

Generally, applicants in the first and second categories are scheduled promptly.

The table below lists how the asylum offices are currently scheduling asylum interviews for applications pending in the third category. It provides the filing dates (month and year) of most asylum applications scheduled for local interviews during that particular month. We have created this system to provide applicants in the third category an estimate for when they might expect their interview to be scheduled. The approximations provided in the table are based on interviews scheduled during the listed month and future movement will be determined by each office’s caseload and resources. For example, in June 2015, the Arlington Asylum Office conducted interviews for applications filed in August 2013. It currently does not include asylum interviews occurring outside of the eight asylum offices or the Boston sub-office (e.g. interviews occurring on circuit rides). Asylum offices schedule circuit ride interviews as resources permit. Please contact the asylum office with jurisdiction over your case for more detailed information.

Asylum Office Directors have the discretion to consider applicants’ requests for urgent interview scheduling outside of the above prioritization categories on a case-by-case basis. Please submit any urgent interview scheduling requests in writing to the asylum office with jurisdiction over your case. Go to the USCIS Service and Office locator page for contact information.

Please Note: The table does not include interviews for Form I-881, Application for Suspension of Deportation or Special Rule Cancellation of Removal (Pursuant to Section 203 of Public Law 105-100 (NACARA).

Interview Schedule for Affirmative Asylum Applicants in Category 3

This chart will be updated monthly. Please check back for updated information.

If you live under
the jurisdiction of…

We scheduled
interviews in…

For people
who filed in…

Arlington, VA

December 2015

September 2013

November 2015

September 2013

October 2015

August 2013

Chicago, IL*

December 2015

May 2013

November 2015

May 2013

October 2015

May 2013

Houston, TX*

December 2015

April – May 2014

November 2015

April – May 2014

October 2015

April – May 2014

Los Angeles, CA*

December 2015

August 2011

November 2015

August 2011

October 2015

August 2011

Miami, FL*

December 2015

April 2013

November 2015

February 2013

October 2015

February 2013

Newark, NJ

December 2015

June 2013

November 2015

June 2013

October 2015

May - June 2013

New York, NY

December 2015

June 2014

November 2015

May 2014

October 2015

Feb. – March 2014

San Francisco, CA

December 2015

November 2013

November 2015

October 2013

October 2015

September 2013

* Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and Miami have been scheduling interviews in the first two categories due to high volumes in those categories as well as in the credible and reasonable fear caseloads.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 01/11/2016

05
January 2016

USCIS approved the statutory maximum of 10,000 petitions for U-1 nonimmigrant status for FY2016.

This marks the seventh straight year that USCIS has reached the statutory maximum since it began issuing U visas in 2009. For eligible petitioners who cannot be granted a U-1 visa solely because of the cap, USCIS will send a letter notifying them that they are on a waiting list. USCIS will resume issuing U visas on October 1, 2016.

Contact Us

04
January 2016

Initial December 24 and 25 media reports of the planned roundups:

* https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/us-plans-raids-to-deport-families-who-surged-across-border/2015/12/23/034fc954-a9bd-11e5-8058-480b572b4aae_story.html

* https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/25/us/politics/us-plans-raids-in-new-year-to-fight-surge-in-border-crossings.html?_r=0

* https://www.cbsnews.com/news/advocates-treat-central-americans-like-the-refugees-they-are/

What is going on: * We heard the raids will start 1/2/15, and so far have seen one unverified media report: which recounts home raids in Atlanta.

https://mundohispanico.com/videos/mundohispanico/inmigracion-salio-a-arrestar-gente

* We have heard that ICE will focus on families that actually appeared in court, rather than those ordered removed in absentia (as we initially believed would be the target population). This needs to be verified and monitored.

Advocacy and efforts to assist families that are picked up * Broad sign-on letter: On December 31, AILA drafted a letter joined by over 160 national and local immigration, refugee, civil rights, faith, children and women’s organizations to the President opposing the reported raids and urging the Administration not to move forward:

https://www.aila.org/advo-media/aila-correspondence/2015/sign-on-letter-opposing-dhs-nationwide-raids

Telemundo phone-in day:

On Jan 11th RAICES will hold phone-in day with Telemundo on these raids. This information is still developing and not complete. We will update you as we gain more information. Here is our resource page: https://www.aila.org/uac

 

29
December 2015

El Servicio de Ciudadanía e Inmigración de Estados Unidos (USCIS, por sus siglas en inglés) ha aprobado la cantidad máxima reglamentaria estatutaria de 10 mil peticiones de estatus de No Inmigrante U (Visas U) para el año fiscal 2016. Esto marca el séptimo año consecutivo en que USCIS ha alcanzado la cantidad máxima estatutaria desde que comenzó a expedir visas U en el año 2009.

Cada año, 10 mil Visas U están disponibles para víctimas de ciertos crímenes clasificados que han sufrido abuso mental o físico sustancial y están dispuestas a ayudar a las autoridades del orden público a investigar o procesar dichos crímenes. Una petición de Visa U requiere que se certifique que la víctima ha ayudado a las agencias del orden público.

Aunque USCIS ha alcanzado el límite máximo reglamentario de 10 mil visas U, continuará revisando las peticiones que están pendientes de elegibilidad. Los peticionarios elegibles a quienes no se les pueda otorgar una Visa U-1 únicamente debido al tope máximo, recibirán de parte de USCIS una carta notificándoles que han sido colocados en una lista de espera para recibir una Visa U cuando éstas estén disponibles nuevamente. La carta también informará a los peticionarios acerca de las opciones que tienen disponibles mientras están en la lista de espera. Los peticionarios y los familiares que cualifiquen deben continuar en cumplimiento con los requisitos de elegibilidad al momento en que la Visa U sea expedida.

USCIS continuará expidiendo Visas U el 1 de octubre de 2016, primer día del año fiscal 2017, cuando las visas estén disponibles nuevamente.

El Congreso creó el programa de Visa U para fortalecer la capacidad de las agencias del orden público para investigar y procesar casos de violencia doméstica, abuso sexual, trata de personas y otros crímenes, mientras ofrece protección a las víctimas. Más de 117,579 víctimas y sus familiares han recibido Visas U desde que se creó el programa en el año 2009.

Visite www.uscis.gov/es para más información sobre el programa de Visas U o lea nuestra página web sobre Víctimas de Actos Criminales.

21
December 2015

On November 20 and 21, 2014, President Barack Obama announced a series of administrative reforms of immigration policy, collectively called the Immigration Accountability Executive Action. The centerpiece of these reforms is an expansion of the current Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative and the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents (DAPA) initiative for the parents of U.S citizens and lawful permanent residents who meet certain criteria.

Together, these initiatives could provide as many as 5 million immigrants with temporary relief from deportation. Moreover, DAPA and expanded DACA is expected not only to keep families united, but also to increase U.S. gross domestic product, increase tax revenue, and raise wages.

Read more »

02
December 2015

Travel to U.S. Territories such as the US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico by people who have been granted deferred status by USCIS is similar to travel to any one of the 50 states. However, we strongly recommend that you carry your USCIS documents showing deferred status with you in order to facilitate your ability to return to your residence. Please note that depending on the location of your travels, you may be subject to certain processes, including customs inspections.

Please be aware that for travel to any location other than the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, you must have advance parole from USCIS prior to departure, just as with any other international travel. Additional information may be found on USCIS’ web site.

For Travel Requirements and Restrictions visit USCIS.gov.

30
November 2015

 

COBERTURA DE CRISIS DE REFUGIADOS SIRIOS

Sospechas por llegada de refugiados sirios (Video) Noticiero Univision 41

MÁS COBERTURA SOBRE DAPA

Los dos escenarios para DAPA tras el recurso de prórroga de Texas ante la Corte Suprema Univision.com

La suerte de DAPA depende ahora de una acción de la Corte Suprema La Opinión/Impremedia NOTAS SOBRE EL RACISMO

¿Está aumentando el racismo? Más gente en EEUU dice que es un gran problema, según una encuesta de CNN/KFF (Video) CNN en Español

Sobre la encuesta de CNN/Kaiser Family Foundation CNN en Español

ELECCIONES 2016/CANDIDATOS/POLÍTICA

Bernie Sanders promete proteger de la deportación a los indocumentados que lleven cinco años en EEUU Univision.com

NBC no se disculpará con hispanos por presentar a Trump en Saturday Night Live CNN en Español

Lluvia de críticas a Trump por decir que vio celebraciones tras atentados del 11 de septiembre CNN en Español

Rivales repubilicanos de Donald Trump reciben tiempo equitativo en NBC CNN en Español

Encuesta: mayoría de republicanos enojados con el gobierno prefieren a Trump CNN en Español

CRISIS MIGRATORIA DE CUBANOS EN CENTROAMÉRICA

Cancilleres debaten en El Salvador crisis de migrantes cubanos AFP/El Nuevo Herald

Aumenta desesperación de cubanos varados en Costa Rica (Video) Noticiero Univision 23

Latinoamericanos buscan acuerdo para paso seguro de cubanos a EEUU AFP/Yahoo Noticias

Iglesia católica de Centroamérica aboga por corredor humanitario para cubanos EFE/Yahoo Noticias

EDITORIALES Y OPINIÓN

¿Migrantes en México? Francisco Masse/Excélsior (México)

Republícratas y demócanos Guillermo Descalzi/El Nuevo Herald

OTRAS NOTICIAS

Ser un ‘Dreamer’ no es limitante para comprar una casa (Video) Noticiero Univision Arizona

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