Connect with us

Politics

ICE accidentally released the identities of 6,252 immigrants who sought protection in the U.S.

Published

on

ICE accidentally released the identities of 6,252 immigrants who sought protection in the U.S.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement by accident posted the names, birthdates, nationalities and detention areas of greater than 6,000 immigrants who claimed to be fleeing torture and persecution to its web site on Monday.

The unprecedented knowledge dump might expose the immigrants — all of whom are at present in ICE custody — to retaliation from the very people, gangs and governments they fled, attorneys for individuals who have sought safety within the U.S. stated. The non-public data of individuals in search of asylum and different protections is meant to be stored confidential; a federal regulation usually forbids its disclosure with out sign-off by high officers within the Division of Homeland Safety.

The company is investigating the incident and can notify the affected immigrants in regards to the disclosure of their data. The company has stated it is not going to deport immigrants whose data it mistakenly posted till it’s decided whether or not the disclosure impacts their circumstances.

The federal government will notify individuals who downloaded the knowledge that they need to delete it.

Advertisement

ICE officers are involved in regards to the posting of the information — which included details about migrants who sought to keep away from deportation to international locations resembling Iran, Russia, and China — and are targeted on shortly fixing the problem, an company official stated.

The company mistakenly posted the information, which included immigrants’ names, case standing, detention areas, and different data, throughout a routine replace of its web site.

The immigrant advocacy group Human Rights First notified ICE officers in regards to the knowledge breach on Monday and shortly after, the company took steps to delete the information from its web site. The file was contained on a web page the place ICE recurrently publishes detention statistics.

The data was up for 5 hours and officers shortly labored to take it down after being notified it had been posted.

“Although unintentional, this launch of data is a breach of coverage and the company is investigating the incident and taking all corrective actions obligatory,” an ICE spokesperson stated in a press release.

Advertisement

The disclosure is “embarrassing” and doubtlessly harmful for these affected, one other DHS official instructed The Occasions.

Many immigrants worry that gangs, governments, or people again house will discover out that they sought safety within the U.S. Asylum seekers recurrently ask their immigration attorneys whether or not their house international locations will discover out about their functions. In a single case documented by Human Rights Watch, a Cameroonian man the U.S. deported to his house nation was summoned to courtroom upon his return for “having, in america, unfold false information … by declaring to be a sufferer of abuses by the Cameroonian Authorities.”

Anwen Hughes, a lawyer at Human Rights First, stated that she has a recurring nightmare about leaving a bag filled with consumer data on the subway.

She has by no means executed so. However the truth that the likelihood haunts her desires provides some indication of the seriousness of posting immigrants’ private data on the web, she stated. She hoped the error would function a reminder to the federal government to be particularly cautious with such knowledge.

“Refugees’ willingness to belief the U.S. authorities with their data depends upon dependable competence in addition to a basic intention to honor the legislation,” she stated.

Advertisement

Diana Rashid, managing lawyer of the Nationwide Immigrant Justice Middle, discovered the identify of one in every of her group’s shoppers — a Mexican lady — on the listing.

“We’re deeply involved about our consumer’s security after ICE publicly shared this very delicate details about her and 1000’s of others like her,” she stated. “She is in search of safety from elimination as a result of she fears persecution if returned to her nation of origin. Revealing this data makes her extra susceptible to the persecution and abuses she fears if deported.”

The disclosure of the knowledge put lives in danger, stated Heidi Altman, director of coverage on the Nationwide Immigrant Justice Middle, an immigrant advocacy group.

“The U.S. authorities has an important obligation to carry asylum seekers’ names and knowledge in confidence in order that they don’t face retaliation or additional hurt by the governments or people whose persecution they fled,” Altman stated. “ICE’s publication of confidential knowledge is against the law and ethically unconscionable, a mistake that mustn’t ever be repeated.”

Blaine Bookey, the authorized director on the Middle for Gender & Refugee Research on the UC Hastings School of the Legislation in San Francisco, stated she was conscious of circumstances by which detained immigrants have been threatened when details about their standing has turn into public.

Advertisement

“Any breach of asylum seeker data in such a public approach might fairly actually have life-or-death penalties and the federal government should take each precaution to guard their security,” she stated.

The company has made different high-profile errors over time, together with by accident arresting U.S. residents.

“This episode provides to ICE’s well-documented historical past of dysfunction and inside accountability lapses,” stated Nate Wessler, an lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union who makes a speciality of privateness points.

The company has fallen below heavy criticism over time — at one level it was the least-liked federal company — however has tried to shift its practices through the Biden administration. Beneath Biden, ICE has restricted the arrests of pregnant ladies and expanded “delicate” areas resembling playgrounds the place arrests are usually off-limits.

The company stated the information have been posted at 6:45 a.m. Pacific Monday and included the names and knowledge of 6,252 immigrants in search of safety. Simply earlier than 11 a.m., Human Rights First notified the company of the breach. ICE will inform the attorneys of the affected immigrants or the immigrants themselves in regards to the disclosure.

Advertisement

“This may permit noncitizens or their attorneys-of-record to find out whether or not the disclosure might affect the deserves of their safety declare,” an company spokesperson stated in a press release.

The company can also be monitoring the web for potential reposting of the information, a spokesperson stated.

Politics

GOP lawmakers demand major donors pull funding from Columbia over 'antisemitic incidents'

Published

on

GOP lawmakers demand major donors pull funding from Columbia over 'antisemitic incidents'

FIRST ON FOX: House Republican lawmakers are urging major Columbia University donors who are outraged at the anti-Israel protests on campus to speak out with their wallets. 

“As Members of Congress, we urge donors and individuals affiliated with Columbia University to condemn the antisemitic incidents occurring on the university’s campus by pulling donations and support for the university until there are demonstrable changes in leadership, including the resignation of Columbia University President Minouche Shafik,” House Republicans, led by Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., wrote in an open letter to the Ivy League’s vast and influential alumni and donor network.

For days, students at Columbia and its sister school, Barnard College, have camped out on the Upper Manhattan campus while holding demonstrations in protest of Columbia’s investments in companies with ties to Israel. It’s part of a wider progressive backlash against Israel’s response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks against the Jewish state.

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY MOVES TO HYBRID LEARNING ON MAIN CAMPUS AMID ANTISEMITIC PROTESTS

House Republicans, led by Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., inset, are urging Columbia University’s top donors to pull their dollars from the school over its anti-Israel protests. (Getty Images)

Advertisement

But that protest and similar ones cropping up at colleges around the country are now facing bipartisan backlash and accusations of having waded into antisemitic territory. 

Social media videos from the anti-Israel tent encampment on Columbia’s campus show activists cheering on the deaths of Israeli soldiers and showing support for Hamas. Jewish students have reported feeling unsafe on campus and shared stories of being verbally and physically assaulted.

“They were pushing and shoving me… They threw rocks at my face. At that moment, my life was totally threatened. And there was no safety authority on campus,” one student told NY1 over the weekend.

COLUMBIA SETS DEADLINE FOR AGREEMENT WITH PROTESTERS, THREATENS ‘ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS’ FOR CLEARING PROTESTERS

Columbia University anti-Israel protest

Columbia University, where students have set up what is being referred to as a Gaza Solidarity Encampment, is seen in New York on Wednesday. (Getty Images)

In their open letter, the House GOP lawmakers urged donors to follow the example of Robert Kraft, the billionaire owner of the New England Patriots, who pulled his support earlier this week in response to the protests.

Advertisement

“We encourage all supporters of the university to do the same and call for the resignation of President [Minouche] Shafik,” they wrote.

“The university should also provide a thorough review of all school funding and investigate the outside forces influencing students and agitators to participate in these disruptive and violent incidents that target and intimidate Jewish students on campus,” they continued.

“Additionally, we urge all individuals affiliated with the university to call for a transparent and thorough audit of all university funding concerning the anti-Israel movement on campus, and what outside groups are contributing and influencing students and agitators to participate. ”

OMAR’S DAUGHTER DECRIES ‘HYPOCRISY,’ SAYS ANTI-ISRAEL STUDENTS ARE ‘100% TARGETED’ AFTER SUSPENSION AND ARREST

Robert Kraft in January 2022

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft recently announced he would stop his donations over the protests. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Advertisement

It comes a day after Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., traveled to Columbia with House Education and Workforce Committee Chair Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., and three New York Republicans, where he denounced the protests and reiterated his earlier call for Shafik to resign.

“I’m here today joining my colleagues in calling on President Shafik to resign if she can not immediately bring order to this chaos,” Johnson said as students heckled. “As Speaker of the House, I have committed today that the Congress will not be silent as Jewish students are expected to run for their lives and stay home from their classes hiding in fear.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Columbia University for comment.

Continue Reading

Politics

Column: Will Trump be tried for Jan. 6? After Supreme Court arguments, it's more uncertain than ever

Published

on

Column: Will Trump be tried for Jan. 6? After Supreme Court arguments, it's more uncertain than ever

For those rightly concerned about the timing of Donald Trump’s federal Jan. 6 trial, Thursday’s oral arguments before the Supreme Court gave plenty of reasons for worry. Moreover, the court’s conservative majority seemed inclined to define presidential immunity from prosecution in a way that could undermine some of the charges in special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment.

Much of the court’s questioning went well beyond the immediate issue of Trump’s immunity for the criminal acts alleged. The court’s conservatives focused almost exclusively on abstract questions of immunity for future presidents rather than the charges against the former president. Even the more moderate members of the conservative majority seemed preoccupied with the difficulty of drawing the line between official and unofficial acts, assuming that the former deserve extensive protection from prosecution.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett read a litany of acts from the indictment and asked Trump’s lawyer whether they were official or not. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. indicated that the line between public and private presidential conduct is hard to draw, saying he was concerned that the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals “did not get into a focused consideration of what acts we’re talking about or what documents we’re talking about.”

At best, the court’s questioning augurs an opinion setting out general principles of immunity and necessitating a remand to the lower courts to apply the justices’ guidance. As Justice Neil M. Gorsuch put it, “We’re writing a rule for the ages.” That would add further delay to a schedule that already seems to be putting a trial shortly before or beyond the November election.

And that wasn’t even the most serious implication for Smith’s case.

Advertisement

The conservative justices’ questioning of Michael Dreeben, the special counsel’s well-regarded Supreme Court specialist, was sharp and fast. And their questions to both sides suggested they might conclude that inquiring into a president’s motives for certain acts would violate the constitutional separation of powers. That would point to a decision requiring the courts to set aside all evidence of a president’s malign intent.

If motive has to be disregarded in determining whether the president’s actions are official or not, it could undermine much of the case against Trump — including, for example, his brazen attempt to strong-arm the Department of Justice into falsely informing Georgia officials that the state’s election results were flawed.

Such a limitation might even provide immunity in the hypothetical extreme proposed during arguments before the D.C. Circuit: a president ordering Navy Seals to assassinate a political opponent. The force of that example is that it shows how an official act could have a patently malign motive.

As Justice Elena Kagan interjected in reference to the implications of her colleagues’ questions and Trump lawyer John Sauer’s response: “You’re asking us to say that a president is entitled … for total personal gain, to use the trappings of his office.” Exactly right.

Gorsuch threw another lifeline to Trump’s lawyer, asking whether he would accept a definition of official acts like the one in the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in Blassingame vs. Trump, which concerned presidential immunity from civil suits. That case drew a distinction between Trump’s acts as an officeholder and as an office-seeker. Applying it to the criminal case would likely immunize Trump for some of the conduct in the indictment, in particular his allegedly corrupt use of the Justice Department, though he would presumably remain on the hook for political conduct such as organizing false electors.

Advertisement

It got worse for the prosecution. More or less out of nowhere, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh suggested that one of the charges against Trump, conspiracy to defraud the United States, relies on a statute that is so broad and vague that it could be misused by future prosecutors against future presidents. Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. jumped in to second the suggestion, taking up a criticism of the prosecution that Trump’s lawyers hadn’t even raised.

Since the court just heard arguments in a separate case that could invalidate two of the four charges against Trump — those under a federal obstruction statute — an opinion invalidating another charge could force Smith to soldier on with only one remaining charge against Trump, conspiracy against rights. That charge relies on the electorate’s right to have votes counted, which is a somewhat indirect approach to accountability for Trump’s pernicious post-election conduct.

That’s not all. Kavanaugh also raised the Trump team’s suggestion that perhaps Congress should have to make a “clear statement” of intent to apply any criminal law to the president, a stratagem the court previously conjured to deal with separation-of-powers concerns. Justice Sonia Sotomayor pointed out that it would in effect excuse a president for violations of most of the federal code.

Dreeben hardly had time to make his points until the end of the nearly three-hour argument, when Kagan gave him some room to do so. Kagan also asked the special counsel’s representative a friendly question getting at the possibility that the court could limit its decision to the charges against Trump to permit the trial to go forward expeditiously. But the odds that the court will take that guidance now look extremely slim.

Going into Thursday’s showdown, the critical question was whether the court’s opinion would permit the trial to go forward without further proceedings. In the wake of the arguments, that seems more unlikely than ever. Indeed, the court’s questions raised the additional alarming prospect that it could confer the kind of expansive presidential immunity that would further weaken the constitutional principle that a president is not a king.

Advertisement

Harry Litman is the host of the “Talking Feds” podcast and the Talking San Diego speaker series. @harrylitman

Continue Reading

Politics

Alabama lawmakers advance bill that could lead to prosecution of librarians

Published

on

Alabama lawmakers advance bill that could lead to prosecution of librarians

Alabama lawmakers on Thursday advanced legislation that could see librarians prosecuted under the state’s obscenity law for providing “harmful” materials to minors, the latest in a wave of bills in Republican-led states targeting library content and decisions.

The Alabama House of Representatives voted 72-28 for the bill that now moves to the Alabama Senate. The legislation comes amid a soaring number of book challenges — often centered on LGBTQ content — and efforts in a number of states to ban drag queen story readings.

ALABAMA LAWMAKERS ADVANCE BILLS ENSURING BIDEN APPEARS ON NOVEMBER BALLOT

“This is an effort to protect children. It is not a Democrat bill. It’s not a Republican bill. It’s a people bill to try to protect children,” Republican Rep. Arnold Mooney, the bill’s sponsor, said during debate.

Alabama lawmakers have advanced legislation that could see librarians prosecuted for providing “harmful” materials or programs to minors.

Advertisement

The Alabama bill removes the existing exemption for public libraries in the state’s obscenity law. It also expands the definition of prohibited sexual conduct to include any “sexual or gender oriented conduct” at K-12 public schools or public libraries that “exposes minors to persons who are dressed in sexually revealing, exaggerated, or provocative clothing or costumes, or are stripping, or engaged in lewd or lascivious dancing, presentations, or activities.”

Under the process laid out in the bill, a librarian in a public library or public K-12 school could face a misdemeanor charge if the librarian fails to remove material or cease conduct that violates the state’s obscenity law within seven days of receiving a written complaint from the public.

Opponents argued that proposal would threaten librarians with criminal prosecution at the whims of community members who disagreed with their decisions on books and programs.

“This process will be manipulated and used to arrest librarians that you don’t like, and not because they did anything criminal. It’s because you disagree with them,” Rep. Chris England, a Democrat from Tuscaloosa, said during debate.

Craig Scott, president of the Alabama Library Association, said libraries already have longstanding procedures for reviewing the suitability of content and for the public to submit challenges if they disagree with a decision.

Advertisement

“Why are they coming into libraries or thinking that they can come in and run the place better than us as professionals?” Scott said in a phone interview. He predicted the state will lose “lawsuit after lawsuit” if the bill becomes law.

A judge in July temporarily blocked Arkansas from enforcing a similar law that would have allowed criminal charges against librarians and booksellers for providing “harmful” materials to minors.

Scott, who began his career in 1977, said he has never seen anything like the current climate. He said the Gadsden Public Library where he works has seen one person — who eventually obtained a role in library governance — challenge 30 books. Most of the book challenges are related to books with content about gender identity. But they also have included a book about a boy who wants to become a ballet dancer, he said.

“We are for the entire community. We have to be. We’ve got some books in here that are far right. We’ve got some books on the far left. But the library is for the entire community. We’ve got to stay in the middle as best we can, and they want to push us way off to the far right,” Scott said.

Republican Rep. David Faulkner, who worked on a substitute version of the bill that was approved by the House, disputed that the bill could have wide-ranging impact. He said courts have long interpreted what is obscene material.

Advertisement

The law takes away immunity that K-12 and public libraries had under the obscenity law, but it puts limits on when prosecutions could occur, Faulkner said.

“It’s only going to be a misdemeanor, and it’s only if, after knowing about the material, they didn’t do anything about it,” he said.

Rep. Neil Rafferty, a Democrat from Birmingham, said he was concerned that the bill’s language would allow someone to “target and harass people who might be dressed up in a Halloween costume” or wearing summer clothing that someone considered too revealing.

“I feel like this is a violation of the First Amendment, and it’s easily going to be abused,” he said.

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending