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July 29, 2010

As Desert Deaths Soar, a Morgue Grows Crowded

"The Pima County morgue is running out of space as the number of Latin American immigrants found dead in the deserts around Tucson has soared this year during a heat wave."

JAMES C. McKINLEY, Jr. in the New York Times.

Arizona Girds For Long Legal Fight Over Immigration

"In blocking the heart of the bill, Judge Susan Bolton's ruling could not have been clearer, says Gabriel Jack Chin, a professor of law at the University of Arizona.  "It's basically a complete victory for the United States," Chin said."

TED ROBBINS on NPR.

July 27, 2010

Hollman Morris Granted Visa

"The U.S. State Department has reversed its decision to deny a visa to a leading Colombian journalist whose reporting has been highly critical of the country's U.S.-allied president.  "Happy, happy! This was terrible," a relieved Hollman Morris, an independent TV producer and reporter, told The Associated Press after he and his family picked up their visas at the U.S. Embassy on Tuesday.  Morris, his wife and their two children can now travel to Harvard for a yearlong Nieman Foundation fellowship for mid-career journalists."

FRANK BAJAK for the Associated Press.

Arizona Law Needs U.S. Cooperation

"Arizona authorities battling the Obama administration over the state's new immigration law may face an unforeseen obstacle in enforcing the measure: While local police can arrest illegal immigrants, only the federal government can deport them."

MIRIAM JORDAN in the Wall Street Journal.

July 25, 2010

Dallas County is part of Secure Communities program that raises immigrant profiling concerns

"More than half of Texas counties are now part of the program known as Secure Communities. The program relies on an FBI database and a fingerprint database of anyone who has had contact with federal immigration authorities.

Dallas County was the second county in the nation to sign up for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement program."

DIANNE SOLÍS in the Dallas Morning News.

July 23, 2010

Deportation Madness

"Carlos Roybal always thought of himself as an American. Born in Chile, he’d lived in the United States legally since he was five months old, growing up in a middle-class Miami neighborhood. In 2006, Roybal was studying to become a sound engineer at Miami Dade College. “That was my dream,” he says.

When Roybal—who asked that a pseudonym be used for this story—returned to the United States from a vacation in January 2006, things turned nightmarish. After Roybal presented his permanent resident card to U.S. immigration authorities, they checked it against a Department of Homeland Security database and found that he had a criminal record—dating back almost a decade—of two misdemeanor convictions for possessing half a marijuana joint and a single tab of LSD. That August, Roybal was ordered to appear in immigration court. He was deported to Chile, a country he had not visited since infancy—and where only a few of his relatives remained."

MELISSA DEL BOSQUE in the Texas Observer.

No Visa, No School, Many NY School Districts Say

"Three decades after the Supreme Court ruled that immigration violations cannot be used as a basis to deny children equal access to a public school education, one in five school districts in New York State is routinely requiring a child’s immigration papers as a prerequisite to enrollment, or asking parents for information that only lawful immigrants can provide.

 The New York Civil Liberties Union, which culled a list of 139 such districts from hundreds of registration forms and instructions posted online, has not found any children turned away for lack of immigration paperwork. But it warned in a letter to the state’s education commissioner on Wednesday that the requirements listed by many registrars, however free of discriminatory intent, “will inevitably discourage families from enrolling in school for fear that they would be reported to federal immigration authorities.”"

NINA BERNSTEIN in the New York Times.

July 21, 2010

For Those Deported, Court Rulings Come Too Late

"Vincenzo Donnoli was 9 when his family immigrated legally to Brooklyn. He attended Erasmus Hall High School, married and divorced in Flatbush, ran a landscaping business and had five children. But at 51 he is back — alone and jobless — in Pomarico, the hill town in southern Italy where his father was a shepherd, as a deportee banned for life from returning to the United States."

NINA BERNSTEIN in the New York Times.

Brave DREAMers

"On a patch of asphalt outside the White House this week, Renata Teodoro, Maricela Aguilar and scores of other students are risking deportation simply by sharing their full names and immigration status with anyone who asks.

In an act of defiance unimaginable to many in their parents' generation, they are publicly declaring that they are in the United States illegally as a way to push for change that would help thousands of undocumented young people like them. And they are doing so in one of the most highly patrolled -- and politicized -- spots in the country."

TARA BAHRAMPOUR in the Washington Post.

Seeking A Better Life

"While the Census Bureau does not track immigration status, Kansas' foreign-born population has risen from 2.5 percent in 1990 to about 6 percent currently. Similarly in the heartland states, communities are rapidly diversifying, a relatively new phenomenon in the Midwest caused by an influx of refugees and other immigrants who work in labor shortages."

SHAJIA AHMAD in the Garden City Telegram.

Groups Help Refugees Assimilate

"When GCCC's Adult Learning Center first began providing services to a growing number of refugees in southwest Kansas at the start of last year, the program in its infant stages was servicing a few hundred each month who sought assistance filling out job applications, visiting doctor's offices, or help with child care or legal issues.

In just more than a year, that number has doubled: Between 500 and 600 refugees in Garden City now seek help every month at the small office located in the basement of the Student and Community Services Building, according to the refugee program's coordinator, Velia Mendoza."

SHAJIA AHMAD in the Garden City Telegram.

July 19, 2010

Immigration Caseload Is Growing

"Oklahoma's immigration court, which is part of the regional Dallas office, is experiencing a decade-high number of cases and an increasing backlog.

Immigrants will wait at least nine months to a year between the initial appearance and a hearing date. In some larger cities, the wait can be up to three years."

GINNIE GRAHAM in the Tulsa World.

Officer Sues Over Arizona Immigration Law

""If he enforces the law, he can be sued. If he doesn't enforce the law, he can be sued" by a private citizen, said Stephen Montoya, the attorney for Mr. Salgado. His client "is caught between a rock and a hard place," he said."

MIRIAM JORDAN in the Wall Street Journal.

July 16, 2010

Twin West Texas Border Towns Endure Despite Drug War Hardships

BRANDI GRISSOM in the Texas Tribune provides an excellent three-part series "examining life in three pairs of sister cities along the Texas-Mexico border and how residents on both sides of the line are affected by the bloody drug war."

Tragedy in Juárez Spurs Economy in El Paso - July 14, 2010.

Town Bolsters Security as Mexican Deaths Continue - July 15, 2010.

Isolation Poverty Keep Tiny Towns Safe - For Now - July 16, 2010.

July 14, 2010

Native Americans Trapped...In America

You can't make this stuff up:

"The State Department may have given its OK, but the Iroquois Nationals lacrosse team still needs clearances from the Canadian and British governments before it can take off for the world championships in England, making it doubtful whether the team can fly today."

MIKE McANDREW in the Syracuse Post-Standard.

""They're telling us: 'Go get U.S. passports or Canadian passports,'" Frichner said Wednesday shortly after getting the news. "It's pretty devastating."  The team's 23 players - who are all eligible for passports issued by those nations - say that accepting them would be a strike against their identity."

SAMANTHA GROSS for the Associated Press.

"[T]he crux of the problem: the Iroquois do not recognise either the US or Canadian governments and regard themselves as a sovereign nation.  The Iroquois team chairman, Oren Lyons, said the team was now unlikely to board a flight in time for the opening game of the two-week tournament.  The Iroquois, who helped invent the game more than 1,000 years ago, had hoped to have a few days in the UK to practise. "This has not been the best preparation for a world tournament," Lyons said."

EWEN MacAKSILL in the Guardian.

[Link to U.S. Department of State briefing, fyi.] 

July 10, 2010

Journalist Denied Visa Despite Past US Visits

"The U.S. government has denied a visa to a prominent Colombian journalist who specializes in conflict and human rights reporting to attend a prestigious fellowship at Harvard University.

Hollman Morris, who produces an independent TV news program called "Contravia," has been highly critical of ties between illegal far-right militias and allies of outgoing President Alvaro Uribe, Washington's closest ally in Latin America.

The curator of the Nieman Foundation at Harvard, which has offered the mid-career fellowships since 1938, said Thursday that a consular official at the U.S. Embassy in Bogota told him Morris was ruled permanently ineligible for a visa under the "Terrorist activities" section of the USA Patriot Act."

FRANK BAJAK for the Associated Press.

and

"In his work reporting on this country's drug-fueled conflict, Colombian journalist Hollman Morris has met frequently with high-ranking American officials and been received at agencies from the State Department to the Pentagon.

In January, it was a lunch with State's No. 2, James B. Steinberg, at the residence of the American ambassador in Bogota. A few months before that, he had met Daniel Restrepo, senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs at the National Security Council, to discuss alleged abuses by Colombia's secret police.

But when Morris sought a U.S. student visa so he could take a fellowship for journalists at Harvard University, his application was denied. He was ineligible, U.S. officials told him, under the "terrorist activities" section of the USA Patriot Act."

JUAN FORERO for the Washington Post.

July 09, 2010

Anti-Arpaio protesters awarded settlement from 2008 arrests

"Seven political activists claiming their civil rights were violated after they were arrested and cited for protesting against Sheriff Joe Arpaio's immigration policies recently were awarded nearly $475,000 by Maricopa County.

The settlement, reached this week, was nine times more than what the county's self-insured trust had originally authorized in February, and significantly higher than what the county planned to offer just days before the settlement, according to memos obtained by The Arizona Republic."

CRAIG HARRIS and YVONNE WINGETT in the Arizona Republic.

July 08, 2010

Reunited boy may be deported

"Nearly a decade had passed since Zulma Arevalo last laid eyes on the baby boy she left behind in El Salvador.

She always knew that someday they would be reunited — and that moment came last year, after Enrique, then 9, was caught crossing illegally into the United States to join her. Because of Enrique's age, authorities summoned Arevalo, who was in Omaha.

“It was so strange,” the mom recalled. “I left my son as an infant, and I didn't recognize him. We just stood there staring at each other.

“Then we hugged.”

Arevalo, who has temporary protected status in the United States, was able to take the boy, pending the federal government's final decision on his deportation.

Enrique, who turned 11 this past weekend, easily transitioned into a household of mixed U.S. citizenry. He has lived there since March 2009, the middle of five kids.

His family time here could end, however, after a Monday immigration hearing."

CINDY GONZALEZ in the Omaha World-Herald.

July 07, 2010

Justice Department sues Arizona over immigration law

"The Obama administration sued Arizona over the state's new immigration law on Tuesday, an assertion of federal power that sets up a rare clash with a state on one of the nation's most divisive political issues."

JERRY MARKON and MICHAEL D. SHEAR in the Washington Post.

July 06, 2010

Turning anger on immigration law into votes

"Rafael Robles has been eligible to vote ever since he became a U.S. citizen 23 years ago, but nothing has spurred him to register until two young activists visited his house here last week.

The canvassers were part of an ambitious push to increase turnout of Latino voters in the wake of a controversial state law that requires police to determine the immigration status of people they legally stop and suspect are in the country illegally.

Robles, 60, recounted how his 39-year-old daughter, a Phoenix native, has been stopped multiple times by officers who ask her in broken Spanish where she was born.

"It's only because she is Hispanic," Robles said as he filled out a form to become a voter. He noted how, in decades past, signs were posted at establishments across the Southwest saying no dogs or Mexicans were allowed.

"It can all return," he said."

NICHOLAS RICCARDI, SANDY POINDEXTER and DOUG SMITH in the Los Angeles Times.

July 04, 2010

Colombian journalist and Nieman Fellow Hollman Morris denied visa

"Renowned Colombian journalist Hollman Morris' U.S. visa application was rejected on June 16, The Progressive is reporting."

SUMMER HARLOW blogging for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas, University of Texas at Austin.