Kansas
For immigrants in Kansas who fear Trump’s deportations, getting out of Dodge is not an option
The Guatemalan woman holds out her hands, her fingers permanently bent from gripping knives and equipment used to slice and carve raw meat. They are hard evidence of the new life she made after arriving in the United States.
For years she worked long, gruelling hours in a meat-processing plant in southwestern Kansas doing dangerous yet essential work that many citizens refuse to do: cutting cows apart and pulling out strip steaks and ribeyes that would end up on Americans’ plates. She also worked with roast beef, thinly shaving it to perfection. Those shavings, she was told, made it to U.S. troops.
Now, after decades in the country, she is one of millions of people living in the United States who are fearful that they will be forced to leave under President Donald Trump’s plan to carry out mass deportations, which are already under way.
These days, she is rocked by nightmares. In her sleep, immigration agents come for her, pulling her out of bed and taking her away from her children.
“I feel nervous and scared,” she said, adding that she has tried to keep her feelings to herself. “My kids, my family, they have enough pain. I don’t want to scare them.”
The Globe and Mail is not naming the Guatemalan woman because she is afraid for her safety. The Trump administration has said it is targeting immigrants who have committed crimes, but border czar Tom Homan has also suggested that anyone in the country without legal documents could be targeted. In practice, people who had been living in the U.S. legally have also been swept up in the illegal immigration crackdown and deported.
As of two years ago, about a quarter of Dodge City’s residents were born outside the United States. Trump-era immigration policies could have far-reaching effects on the community.
The Globe recently travelled across southwestern Kansas, where places such as Dodge City and Garden City have long attracted immigrants because they can find employment in agriculture or meat processing.
According to DataUSA, as of 2023, the number of residents in both Dodge City and Garden City who were born outside of the country is higher than the national average. In Dodge City, which has a population of more than 27,000 people, 24.9 per cent of residents were born in another country. In Garden City, which is about the same size, 26.4 per cent of residents were not born in the United States.
Immigrants make up a big part of the labour force and contribute significantly to the economy. A New American Economy report from 2022 shows they made up 67.9 per cent of essential food manufacturing workers and 18.3 per cent of essential food workers in southwest Kansas.
In addition to the woman from Guatemala, who has a temporary work permit, The Globe spoke with a range of people who are terrified of Mr. Trump’s deportation plans, including Americans worried about loved ones who don’t have legal paperwork to stay in the U.S. Many are afraid they will be deported and separated from their American children.
Massive and public deportation measures, such as this military flight from El Paso to Guatemala, have alarmed immigrant workers across the United States.Christian Chavez/The Associated Press
Michael Feltman, an immigration lawyer in Cimarron, Kan., which is about halfway between Dodge City and Garden City, said that in 18 years, his office has never been so busy.
He has heard from people facing a range of immigration issues, including some who are eligible for programs and others who want to know what their options are. Most people, he said, are sad and incredibly nervous. “You can see the fear in their eyes,” he said.
Mr. Feltman said one woman he spoke with said she told her daughters in high school not to go out. A man asked him if it’s safe to go to the store. Mr. Feltman said the man had few legal options, so he advised him that people are picked up driving, and suggested he walk. “But at the same time, I’m saying, don’t live in fear.”
He said the majority of his clients work in meat-processing plants in Dodge City and Garden City and noted that mass deportations of individuals without legal status would drastically affect operations.
Mr. Feltman recently helped the Guatemalan woman apply for a U-visa, which is for victims of certain crimes who have endured physical or mental harm and are helpful to officials with the investigation and prosecution of those crimes.
As part of that application, she was recently granted a temporary work permit after initial review for vetting so she can work legally while her visa is processed, but it does not offer her any protection to remain in the United States until and unless the U-visa is granted.
The woman from Guatemala ran away from home when she was 10 years old. After her mother died, she had to escape her violent father.
She was pregnant by 15, after moving in with her partner and his family. When he went to the U.S. to work, he left her behind. She said his family abused her and told her that her daughter would be like her: a nobody. A servant. A teenage mother. His family kicked them out. And when she was 17, they fled to the U.S.
The woman remembered her mother and uncles talking about how the United States was the land of opportunity. She decided she and her daughter would go there.
When she arrived, she reconnected with her partner and they had three boys. His family’s taunts that their daughter would be unsuccessful were etched in her mind. She had to make sure she succeeded. Leaning across the table, her eyes lit up: “Now, she’s an engineer. A mechanical engineer.”
That’s the main reason the woman moved to the U.S. “Not everyone comes to make crimes, to hurt this country.”
She and her partner separated, she said, and she started dating a man who abused her and threatened to kill her. Now he is in jail, she said, for what he did to her.
She could be waiting a long time for her U-visa to be processed; only 10,000 are issued each year. In the meantime, she said she tries to go outside as little as possible, travelling only to work and back.
She has also had tough conversations with her kids. Her youngest, who is 13 years old, no longer wants her to drive him to school. He is worried she’ll be picked up by immigration officers.
“It’s stressful, it’s scary. I just don’t want anything else to happen to us. After all this happened, my kids, they’re dependent on me,” she said.
And, she said, she is not here to steal anyone’s job. As an immigrant, she said, she is willing to work no matter how hard it is, in order to provide for her family. Hard work in the United States has given her a new chance at life, allowing her to create a home to raise her children in and see that they get a good education.
“I’m here in the land of opportunity. So I want my kids to be part of our city. This building where we are sitting right now, where we’re talking, my daughter could be part of designing this building because that’s what she does now.”
The Guatemalan woman’s fear is shared by families across southwestern Kansas.
Vicky Ortiz, a librarian at the Dodge City Public Library, moved here from Mexico more than 35 years ago. She said she was able to receive legal documents within a month because of an amnesty program. She went to work at one of the meat-processing plants, she said, one of the few places to work that didn’t require employees to speak English. After seven years, she went to college.
Ms. Ortiz, 58, said people are afraid of Mr. Trump’s deportation plans, including those who are close to her who do not have legal documents and feel like they’re in limbo. One woman, who is worried about being deported, asked Ms. Ortiz if she could take care of her daughter if she is forced to leave the country.
“That’s very sad,” she said. “You know, I can take responsibility of that little girl if I have to. But you know, she don’t know me,” she said.
Vicky Ortiz, a U.S. citizen who immigrated from Mexico illegally, is worried about the fate of migrant workers in her community.
About an hour west, in Garden City, 33-year-old Marie said she is worried her husband will be deported and separated from her and their daughter.
She said her husband arrived at the U.S. border from Eritrea eight years ago and that he was granted Withholding of Removal, which means the U.S. government would not send him back to his home country because if he returned he could face persecution. However, individuals with this status could be sent to another country if they accept them.
Marie, who The Globe is only identifying by her middle name because she is fearful for her husband’s safety, said the situation has been confusing and stressful.
She said his work authorization expires in July and he will have to reapply. In November, he’ll have to check in with immigration officials. She is anxious about what could happen at either step.
Marie said she has wondered how he would maintain a relationship with their daughter if he gets deported. She said they haven’t had those conversations yet because she doesn’t want to worry her children.
“I just feel like it’s not fair that families are separated just because of where people are from. … Like he says, ‘We just want to focus on people that have committed crimes’ or things like that, but that’s not the case,” she said, referring to comments by Mr. Trump.
Marie recalled when children were separated from their families at the border during Mr. Trump’s first term. She said what’s unfolding now is another form of family separation with mass deportations, only now “it’s everywhere.”
“I’m a citizen, my kids are citizens, but it still impacts me, even though it hasn’t even happened yet to us, and my family, it’s still impacting us. It impacts my mental health. It still worries me about what could happen to them.”
John Hanna/The Associated Press
While people across southwestern Kansas wait to see how the Trump administration’s mass deportation plans continue to unfold, they strategize to keep themselves and others safe.
A pastor of a church in Garden City, who The Globe is not naming because they fear for the safety of their congregation, said church members say they’re scared and ask how they can prepare.
The pastor said if it came to hiding people who were at risk of being wrongly swept up in deportations, they would. The pastor said the country is not at that point yet – but if it came down to that, they would go to jail for someone if it meant keeping them safe.
“There comes a time when we as Christians, we are called to follow the law, until the law goes above what God’s commandments are. And so if it gets to that point, then I have to follow God.”
Kansas
Kansas bats back up Cook’s gem to clinch series against Arizona
Mason Cook got thrust into a bullpen role last Friday against Kansas State. He delivered 4.2 after a shortened start to help Kansas take game one against its in-state rival.
On Saturday, Cook returned to the weekend rotation with a bang to help the Jayhawks clinch the series against Arizona with a 7-2 win. The right-hander delivered a quality start, tossing six innings of one-run ball with seven strikeouts. Cook has bounced between starting and providing bulk innings in relief but hasn’t shifted his mentality based on his role.
“Let’s just get guys out. It’s that simple,” Cook said postgame. “No matter what spot you’re in, it doesn’t really like change or anything. Just go in there, first pitch strike, and get guys out.”
Cook’s start backed up Dominic Voegele’s 15-strikeout complete game in Friday night’s win. After seeing Voegele’s start, Cook gained confidence that he could have a strong start of his own.
“I kind of joked with him after the game, was like, ‘I tried to go nine, man’” Cook said. “There’s so much momentum about [it]. Like it just boosts your confidence. He can do it, I mean he’s a great pitcher. Anybody can do it.”
The Jayhawks’ lineup backed Cook up, breaking things open with a four-run fourth. Kansas tallied four straight extra-base hits, capped by a two-run homer from Josh Dykhoff to give Kansas a 5-2 lead.
“Hitting is just contagious,” Dykhoff said. “It’s just that energy kind of throughout the dugout. And then you get those guys in there, like a lot of swings in a row too… Just something that seems to happen to us honestly.”
Kansas wins seventh straight series behind strong start from Cook
The win over Arizona clinched Kansas’ seventh straight series win. The Jayhawks have won nine and a row and will aim for their fifth Big 12 sweep on Sunday. Kansas has also yet to lose a conference game at Hoglund Ballpark, holding a 16-2 overall home record.
“I’ve said it a million times, they’re the best student section in college baseball,” Dan Fitzgerald said. “They show up every day, and they’re a huge energy source for us. And I think this is a team, like I’ve said a trillion times, they just love being together.”
The Kansas bats backed Cook early, putting runners on 2nd and 3rd with one out via a Jordan Bach single and Tyson LeBlanc double. Brady Ballinger cashed in on a shallow fly to right field. Bach tested the arm of Caleb Danzeisen, sliding in safely to give the Jayhawks a 1-0 lead.
Cook continued to make quick work of the Arizona bats. The Wildcats got their first two baserunners in the next two innings, but Cook strung together zeros. The right-hander tallied seven strikeouts through four frames.
Kansas opened things up against Patrick Morris in the bottom of the fourth. The Jayhawks tallied four consecutive extra-base hits, with Tyson Owens and Augusto Mungarrieta trading RBI doubles. Josh Dykhoff followed with a two-run laser to give the Jayhawks a 5-1 lead before recording an out.
The Wildcats reached scoring position for the second time all game in the fifth. Carson McEntire blooped a single to left to put runners on the corners with two outs. Cook delivered again, inducing a groundout to put up another zero.
Andrew Cain and Tony Lira tallied consecutive singles to open the sixth, putting runners on the corners. The Wildcats got on the board, but Cook limited the damage to one run as he induced a double play.
Jayhawks add runs late, clinch series win
Cook gave way to Toby Scheidt and Riane Ritter, who each tallied scoreless innings. Arizona matched with three scoreless innings, but the Jayhawks broke out of their slumber in the eighth.
The first three batters of the inning reached, and Cade Baldridge brought home a run on a fielder’s choice. LeBlanc laid a bunt down the third-base line for an RBI infield single to give Kansas a 7-1 lead heading into the ninth.
Manning West took the mound to start the ninth, but he allowed a walk and run-scoring double. Boede Rahe prevented things from getting out of hand, striking out all three Wildcats to clinch the series win.
Kansas
Kansas City, Missouri, police searching for 30-year-old missing man
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department is asking for the public’s help locating a missing man.
Jacob Phillips, 30, was last talked to around 10:17 p.m. Wednesday.
Phillips is 5 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs 130 pounds. He has brown hair and hazel-colored eyes, according to KCPD.
Police said his family is concerned for his well-being.
If anyone sees Phillips, they are urged to call the KCPD Missing Persons Unit at 816-234-5043 or 911.
—
Kansas
Kansas State freshman Jack Fleischaker, 19, dies after falling from fraternity house window
A Kansas State University freshman died after he fell from a fraternity house window — just weeks away from the end of the semester.
Jack Fleischaker, 19, plunged from a second-floor window at the Sigma Chi house on the Manhattan, Kan., campus around 3:15 a.m. on April 25.
He was rushed to the hospital for emergency treatment, but died three days later, according to the Riley County Police Department.
Police are investigating exactly how the fatal fall unfolded, but said foul play is not suspected.
“RCPD extends its deepest condolences to the family, friends and the K-State community during this very tragic time,” the department said in a statement to People.
The fraternity said Fleischaker’s death appears to be accidental.
“This was a heartbreaking accident, and there is no indication that anyone is at fault,” Sigma Chi International Fraternity spokesperson Michael Church said.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with Jack’s family and loved ones during this difficult time. We are actively supporting the chapter with mental health and wellness resources and are grateful for the assistance provided by Kansas State University’s administration as well.”
Fleischaker, from Overland Park, Kan., was studying accounting and finance and was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity, according to his LinkedIn and Instagram profiles.
As police continue to investigate, Kansas State University said it is reviewing the circumstances surrounding the incident.
“The university has offered support to the family and has also offered assistance and student support resources to the fraternity members,” spokesperson Michelle Geering said in a statement to the Kansas City Star.
“We are reviewing available information to determine the next steps in accordance with our policies and procedures.”
The horrifying incident comes four years after Sigma Chi’s University of Kansas chapter was shut down by its national organization in 2022 over hazing violations and lying about it.
There have been no recent hazing reports involving the Kansas State chapter, according to the Kansas City Star.
Friends and family are reeling from the sudden loss.
“This is a tragic accident that nobody anticipated,” family pastor and friend Gar Demo told KMBC.
“Every trajectory in their life has changed in an instant,” he added.
Demo said the family has faced devastating loss before. Fleischaker’s sister Natalie died 13 years ago from a brain tumor.
“[The family] went through the incredible pain of losing a child then, and I think they’re asking the question,” Demo said.
“All of us who know them are asking, why did this happen? How could this happen to this family?”
“I think to walk with them again in a different kind of situation but still to lose another child is just not something I have a playbook for,” he said.
“But we walk with our faith and we walk there and we show our strength with them and surround them with the love that we can share.”
In the days after the fall, hundreds gathered at the hospital to say their goodbyes, according to KAKE News.
Fleischaker was an organ donor and is expected to help save lives.
-
Atlanta, GA40 seconds agoAfter years of protests and clashes, training center opinions haven’t changed
-
Minneapolis, MN7 minutes agoSouth Minneapolis crash: Stolen car hits state trooper at 80 mph, slams into home
-
Indianapolis, IN13 minutes agoMultiple Fatal Shootings Rock Indianapolis in Overnight Violence
-
Pittsburg, PA19 minutes agoPanini A. Chowdhury: How much did Pittsburgh buy with its national introduction?
-
Augusta, GA25 minutes agoWest Augusta festival celebrates Cinco de Mayo with Latin cuisine
-
Washington, D.C31 minutes agoDC Weather: Sunny and pleasantly cool start to May
-
Cleveland, OH37 minutes agoMan in critical condition after shooting on Cleveland’s East Side: EMS
-
Austin, TX43 minutes ago
William Brian Moriarty Obituary