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Mexicans, Venezuelans charged with transporting 30 migrants to stash houses

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According to this article on Border Report, by Julian Resendiz

“EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) – Two Venezuelan nationals are facing smuggling charges in connection with a migrant stash house operation in Central El Paso.

U.S. Border Patrol agents spotted the two individuals driving a Dodge Ram pickup and a Dodge Journey SUV near Strauss Road in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, on Sunday. Members of the agency’s anti-smuggling unit caught up to one of the vehicles and conducted an immigration stop. The vehicle carried seven unauthorized Mexican nationals, the Border Patrol said in a statement.

The agents obtained information from the detainees that led them to the location of the second vehicle. It was found in a mobile home park across the state line in El Paso, where agents identified a trailer holding additional unauthorized migrants, the agency said.”

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As delays mount for immigrant victims to get visas, NC advocates join federal lawsuits

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According to this article on Charlotte Observer, by DJ SIMMONS

“Three North Carolina organizations have joined federal lawsuits that could provide relief for immigrant victims of crime following a backlog of visa applications.

More than 150 immigrant victims of crime are being represented by the Charlotte Center for Legal Advocacy, the North Carolina Justice Center and the Legal Aid of North Carolina in two lawsuits filed in January and February against the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

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He was mayor of a town in Haiti. Now he has to pay his victims $15M, U.S. court rules

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According to this article on Miami Herald, by JACQUELINE CHARLES

“A former mayor of a small town in Haiti’s western region has been ordered by a federal court in Boston to pay $15.5 million in damages after being found guilty in a civil case of torture, extrajudicial killings, attempted killing and arson.

Jean Morose Viliena, a U.S. permanent resident living in Malden, Massachusetts, had served as mayor of Les Irois in Haiti’s Grand’Anse region from December 2006 until February 2010 and then was appointed mayor again in 2012 by former Haitian President Michel Martelly. He got the job despite a murder indictment in the Haitian courts.”

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Asylum Rule Faces Immigration Questions On Logic And Legality

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According to this article on Forbes, by Stuart Anderson

“The Department of Homeland Security’s proposed asylum rule likely will need to overcome design flaws and legal problems to achieve its goals. The rule may violate U.S. immigration law and relies on policies providing lawful paths of entry that might not be available in the future. As a result, the rule may fail in its objective to reduce illegal entry and could lead to fewer people receiving humanitarian protection. The rule could enable a future administration to end virtually all or most asylum applications at the Southwest border by allowing few or an insufficient number of appointments to be scheduled via the government’s mobile app.”

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