Mexican Nationals Charged with Resisting Deportation Officers in Georgia, Officials Say
- On June 10, ICE agents resumed workplace raids, detaining workers at Glenn Valley Foods, sparking protests across communities.
- That resumption resulted from DHS reversing an earlier pause, with Trump’s approval and enforcement quotas requiring 3,000 daily arrests, impacting critical industries.
- USDA estimates half of agri-food workers lack legal authorization, causing absenteeism and disrupting harvests.
- Immigrant families face heightened fear and safety concerns as deportations tear them apart, undermining community stability in Santa Barbara County.
- Reformers recommend creating a specialized agri-food visa with flexible entry and protections to promote fair wages and safe conditions.
11 Articles
11 Articles
How a Nebraska immigration raid tied to an identity theft investigation unfolded
In Nebraska, the state’s largest worksite immigration raid sent a chilling effect across the city of Omaha this month when federal immigration authorities arrested 76 employees of a meatpacking plant
U.S. Attorney’s Office, Northern District of Georgia: Two Illegal Aliens Charged with Assaulting and Resisting Federal Law Enforcement Officers
Ricardo Trejo-Martinez and Hector Beltran-Ledesma, both illegal aliens from Mexico, were charged this week with assaulting or resisting federal deportation officers. The charges arise from two separate incidents. Additionally, Beltran-Ledesma was charged with illegally re-entering the United States after prior deportation. “Interference with law enforcement and attacks on officers are unjustifiable,” said U.S. Attorney Theodore […] The post U.S.…
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