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ICE arrests 130+ illegal immigrant sex offenders in broad national operation

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ICE arrests 130+ illegal immigrant sex offenders in broad national operation

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) introduced Thursday that brokers have arrested over 130 unlawful immigrant intercourse offenders as a part of a nationwide operation – promising to proceed in its efforts to take away unlawful aliens convicted of such crimes.

ICE mentioned that its Enforcement and Removing Operations (ERO) had apprehended 138 “unlawfully current noncitizens” convicted of intercourse offenders, together with some with a present deportation order. The operation befell between Oct. 22 and Nov 4.

The company, in a launch, gave a prolonged listing of these arrested by brokers within the operations. They embody a 65-year-old Mexican convicted of steady intercourse abuse of a kid in March this 12 months, a Guatemalan arrested in Chicago who had a conviction for predatory prison sexual assault of a minor, and a 49-year-old Cameroon nationwide convicted of sexual abuse in June.

Moreover, brokers arrested a Bolivian in New York with a conviction of first-degree rape, a Mexican in Texas with a conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a kid, and a Nicaraguan in California with convictions for assault with intent to rape, second-degree theft and rape with drive/violence/worry of bodily harm.

SAN FRANCISCO ‘SANCTUARY’ POLICIES PREVENT ICE FROM INTERVIEWING PELOSI ATTACK SUSPECT 

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June 2, 2022: ICE brokers conduct an enforcement operation within the U.S. inside.
((Immigration and Customs Enforcement))

NONPROFIT THAT BACKS DEFUNDING ICE TO OVERSEE DHS PILOT PROGRAM AIDING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS

“Crimes of sexual violence are among the many most underreported in america — anybody could be a sufferer of one of these abuse, and our officers are devoted to finding and apprehending recognized noncitizen offenders as a part of their public security mission,” ERO Government Affiliate Director Corey Worth mentioned in an announcement. 

“ERO will proceed efforts comparable to these to take away unlawfully current people who’ve dedicated crimes in opposition to the harmless so they can’t proceed to hurt weak populations inside our communities,” he mentioned.

The Biden administration controversially moved to considerably slender ICE’s enforcement priorities. Steerage issued in 2021 restricted ICE to concentrate on aggravated felons, nationwide safety threats and up to date border crossers. That steering coincided with a pointy drop in deportations and arrests of unlawful immigrants.

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Earlier this 12 months, in response to a lawsuit from Republican states, that steering was blocked. Nevertheless, whereas that steering was in impact, ICE has performed comparable operations to usher in and take away intercourse offenders and there have been 3,415 sexual assault offenses related to arrests it made in FY 2021.

Final month, the company introduced it had arrested over 170 unlawful immigrants who had a number of DUI convictions in an analogous operation.

ICE mentioned in its assertion that ICE officers “make case selections in a accountable method, knowledgeable by their expertise as regulation enforcement professionals and in a manner that greatest protects in opposition to the best threats to the homeland.”

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Video: Blinken Plays “Rockin’ in the Free World” for Ukraine Soldiers

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Video: Blinken Plays “Rockin’ in the Free World” for Ukraine Soldiers

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Blinken Plays “Rockin’ in the Free World” for Ukraine Soldiers

During a visit to Kyiv, Secretary of State Antony Blinken played Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World” with a local band at a bar in a show of support for Ukraine.

Listen, I know this is a really, really difficult time. Your soldiers, your citizens, particularly in the northeast in Kharkiv, are suffering tremendously. But they need to know, you need to know, the United States is with you, so much of the world is with you. And they’re fighting not just for a free Ukraine, but for the free world. And the free world is with you, too. So maybe we can try something? I don’t know if we can pull this off — we’ll see. [music: “Rockin’ in the Free World”] [cheering]

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Biden moving forward on $1B in weapons for Israel after previous shipment paused over Rafah concerns: report

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Biden moving forward on $1B in weapons for Israel after previous shipment paused over Rafah concerns: report

The Biden administration is reportedly moving forward with a plan to send Israel $1 billion worth of weapons after the White House briefly paused a shipment last week over concerns about Israel’s planned ground invasion of Rafah. 

The weapons package, according to the Wall Street Journal, will include $700 million in tank ammunition, $500 million in tactical vehicles and $60 million in mortar rounds. 

President Biden is moving forward with a new $1 billion weapons package for Israel, according to the Wall Street Journal.  (Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images)

REPORTS OF BIDEN WHITE HOUSE KEEPING ‘SENSITIVE’ HAMAS INTEL FROM ISRAEL DRAWS OUTRAGE

Israel has portrayed Rafah as the last stronghold of Hamas, brushing off warnings from the United States and other allies that any major operation there would be catastrophic for civilians.

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This is a developing story. Check back for updates. 

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High-levels talks of U.S. aid to Ukraine, followed by Neil Young guitar riffs in a Kyiv bar

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High-levels talks of U.S. aid to Ukraine, followed by Neil Young guitar riffs in a Kyiv bar

Even as fierce new clashes erupt, one of Ukraine’s toughest fights these days is taking place off the battlefield: persuading allies that its outgunned, outnumbered army can ultimately prevail, and that billions of dollars in Western military assistance is money well spent.

President Volodymyr Zelensky made that case Tuesday to Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, who was visiting Kyiv for the first time since April’s long-delayed congressional approval of a $61 billion weapons package — perhaps the last major American assistance for some time to come.

The two met as Ukraine was attempting to fend off a Russian cross-border onslaught that began last week in the country’s northeast, the most concerted push of its kind since the early days of the war, which set off street-by-street fighting near the frontier and forced thousands of civilians to flee relentless bombardment.

Despite the war’s grim backdrop, Blinken sought a few moments away from staid diplomacy.

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After a day of meetings, the 62-year-old secretary of State, whose Instagram bio identifies him as a “(very) amateur guitarist,” hit a popular Kyiv nightspot to play rhythm guitar with a local band. The song selection: Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World.”

Accompanied by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, he also lunched at a pizza parlor owned and operated by military veterans.

But the tone of the day’s talks was undeniably somber.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, center, surrounded by security officers, walks in Independence Square in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday.

(Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press)

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“We know this is a challenging time,” Blinken told Zelensky. Arriving U.S. military aid, he said, is “going to make a real difference against the ongoing Russian aggression on the battlefield.”

Zelensky replied with thanks for the new weaponry already beginning to reach Ukraine — coupled with familiar pleas for additional help.

“People are under attack — civilians, warriors, everybody,” the Ukrainian leader said, asking for two Patriot air-defense batteries to protect Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which lies only a few dozen miles from the latest Russian onslaught.

Analysts said if Russia advances farther in Kharkiv province, it will again place the city of more than 1.3 million people, already pummeled by Russian missiles and so-called glide bombs, within range of punishing artillery barrages.

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In some ways, the Blinken visit pointed up the same delicate line Zelensky has trod since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion more than two years ago: impressing upon Western partners that Ukraine’s military needs are urgent and dire, and at the same time asserting that the fight is not a hopeless one.

And even while thanking Western governments for support, Zelensky bluntly declared that delays — whether bureaucratic holdups or political disputes such as the GOP infighting that blocked U.S. assistance for six months — translate directly into loss of civilian and military lives.

“We need to significantly speed up the supply process,” the Ukrainian leader said in an address to compatriots on Tuesday night. “Currently, the time gap between the announcement of packages and the actual appearance of weapons on the front line is too large.”

Blinken had a nuanced message to deliver as well: looking ahead to the day that Ukraine “stands strongly on its own feet militarily, but also economically and democratically” — suggesting that even unstinting support cannot continue indefinitely.

Dignitaries’ war-zone visits like these are commonplace, but traveling to the Ukrainian capital is still dangerous enough that such visits are not announced in advance. It’s not possible to fly in to Kyiv; Blinken arrived via overnight train from Poland.

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At the Kremlin, Russian President Vladimir Putin, newly sworn in for an essentially uncontested fifth term in office, was busy signaling his intent to pursue his war aims for as long as necessary.

Over the weekend, the Kremlin announced the appointment of a new defense minister — an economist, Andrei Belousov, who will be tasked with harnessing the power of Russia’s military-industrial complex to sustain the fight.

Putin is also traveling this week to Beijing for a meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping, at which he is expected to press for a continuation of the partnership that has helped the Kremlin escape the effects of Western wartime sanctions, reap robust oil and gas revenues and obtain needed technology and spare parts — though China does not directly supply Russia with weapons.

For all of the solidarity Blinken extended to Zelensky, Ukraine is keenly aware that in a U.S. election year, backing for the war amounts to a significant expenditure of political capital.

Other major Western allies are also calibrating their own longer-term plans for Ukraine with an eye to November’s U.S. election.

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Britain was attempting to smooth over a flap that arose over Foreign Secretary David Cameron’s recent pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago, former President Trump’s Florida resort. Britain’s Sunday Times newspaper reported over the weekend that Cameron had made the case to Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, that aid to Ukraine now would set favorable terms for Trump to swiftly negotiate a peace deal if he regained office.

The British defense secretary, Grant Shapps, clarified in a radio interview Tuesday that Britain would not try to force Ukraine to accept a peace treaty that entailed a loss of territory.

Ukraine garnered additional support Tuesday from France, whose government on Tuesday announced that unspecified new military aid would be arriving soon, following a phone conversation between Zelensky and President Emmanuel Macron.

Ukraine is also hoping to gain pledges of ongoing support at a peace summit in Switzerland next month — to which Russia has not been invited — and at gatherings this summer, including a NATO summit in July in Washington, marking the alliance’s 75th birthday.

For the government in Kyiv, though, the short-term picture is clouded. Russia has deployed about 2,000 troops in a drive toward the Kharkiv province town of Vovchansk, according to Ukrainian military officials.

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The Russian forces were making “tactically significant advances” in what appeared to be an attempt to establish a buffer zone along the frontier north of Kharkiv city, according to the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War.

Ukraine is already struggling to hold key positions in the country’s east, and analysts have said the Russian push in Kharkiv could divert troops needed to blunt advances elsewhere. Ukraine’s general staff on Tuesday reported two dozen separate attacks in the partly Russian-occupied Donetsk province.

The regional governor, Oleh Sinegubov, said on Ukrainian television that the latest fighting in the northeast had set off street-to-street battles on the outskirts of Vovchansk, the largest town in the area, most of whose inhabitants have fled.

The governor reported two deaths in the latest shelling, and the evacuation of more than 7,500 civilians.

The nation’s military intelligence chief, Kyrylo Budanov, said he expected the border situation in Kharviv province to stabilize — but speaking on Ukrainian television, he warned of a new Russian buildup, in the Sumy region to the north.

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That could set off a similar scenario to that in Kharkiv: Ukrainian forces stretched even thinner.

“The situation is under control,” Zelensky said in his nightly address. But he added: “Everything is quite tense.”

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