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Some of 49 migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard by the state of Florida are now able to legally work in US

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Some of the illegal migrants sent from Florida to Massachusetts may be given the right to work and live in the U.S. as “victims” of “criminal activity.”

Forty-nine migrants were flown to Martha’s Vineyard in September 2022 by Gov. Ron DeSantis’s government in protest of blue states’ disregard for mass illegal immigration’s effects on southern states.

Some of these illegal migrants were from the state of Florida, and some of them were from Texas. The latter are now being given “U visas” that will allow them legal status and working capacity in the U.S. as victims of potential crimes, their attorney announced.

FLORIDA GOV. RON DESANTIS SAYS ‘NEXT STOP’ FOR HAITIANS WHO LAND IN FLORIDA KEYS MAY BE MARTHA’S VINEYARD

Venezuelan migrants gather at the Vineyard Haven ferry terminal in Martha’s Vineyard after arriving on a flight. (Carlin Stiehl for The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

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Sheriff Javier Salazar of Bexar County, Texas, certified that those illegal migrants formerly within his jurisdiction that were flown to Massachusetts are qualified for the visas after an investigation by the county’s Organized Crime Division.

Salazar has previously recommended that the Bexar County district attorney bring charges for crimes related to deceptive tactics of transporting the migrants to Martha’s Vineyard.

“The Governor of Florida orchestrated the abduction of 49 human beings. The actions of all those involved in this scheme were criminal,” attorney Rachel Self accused in a statement following the U visa eligibility announcement. “The Bexar County DA’s inaction in this matter is concerning and cannot be understated.”

MIGRANTS FLOWN TO MARTHA’S VINEYARD ON FLIGHTS COORDINATED BY DESANTIS CAN SUE AVIATION COMPANY

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to Iowa voters

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has expressed intentions to continue flying illegal migrants from Florida to Martha’s Vineyard despite outcry from the Massachusetts town. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

DeSantis had the migrants flown to the Massachusetts island to highlight the Biden administration’s border policies, which have been heavily criticized by Republicans amid record-numbers of illegal immigrants entering the U.S. 

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His initiative has run parallel to similar red state to blue state migrant flights in Texas.

Residents on Martha’s Vineyard were caught off guard and scrambled to provide resources for them upon their arrival. The National Guard was eventually activated in response. 

 

Migrants border

Migrants attempt to cross into the U.S. from Mexico at the border in Jacumba Hot Springs, California. (Nick Ut/Getty Images)

Earlier this year, the governor’s office told Fox News Digital that the flights were “conducted lawfully and authorized by the Florida Legislature.”

“We look forward to Florida’s next illegal immigrant relocation flight, and we are glad to bring national attention to the crisis at the southern border,” said DeSantis Deputy Press Secretary Julia Friedland.

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Fox News Digital’s Louis Casiano contributed to this report.

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Biden admin’s DOE investigating Emory University for alleged anti-Muslim discrimination

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The U.S. Department of Education’s (DOE) Office for Civil Rights is investigating Atlanta’s Emory University for alleged anti-Muslim discrimination on campus. 

The investigation comes as college campuses across America are being engulfed by disruptive, chaotic and often violent anti-Israel protests — leaving many Jewish students with no choice but to flee campus or fear for their safety.

The DOE’s investigation comes after the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Georgia) and Palestine Legal filed a civil rights complaint against the school on behalf of Emory Students for Justice in Palestine. 

The groups claim that Palestinian, Arab and Muslim students have been called “terrorists,” “fake Muslims” and endured severe harassment, intimidation and discrimination on campus and online. It claims students had their flyers, noting the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces, ripped down or thrown in the trash.

LIVE UPDATES: POLICE ARREST THOUSANDS AT COLLEGES ACROSS THE US TO CLEAR ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS, ENCAMPMENTS 

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Students chant during an anti-Israel protest at Emory University on April 25 in Atlanta.  (Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images)

“The last 6 months at Emory University have been difficult for Palestinian, Arab and Muslim students. We want the Department of Education to do what Emory failed to — which is [to] investigate our reports of bias properly, listen to our voices, and hold Emory accountable, so we can safely advocate for Palestinian rights without fearing for our safety on campus,” Emory Students for Justice in Palestine said in a release from CAIR-Georgia about the complaint. “No student should ever feel marginalized, intimidated and unsafe like we have been feeling. We are here to learn, and we should be able to do so in peace without being threatened, harassed and dox[x]ed simply for being Palestinian, Muslim, Arab or a supporter of Palestinian rights.”

When reached by Fox News Digital, Emory University said it received the complaint from the DOE and will respond, but said it is unable to discuss an open investigation. 

EMORY UNIVERSITY POLICE ARREST CONVICTED FELON WHO CROSSED STATE LINES TO JOIN ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS

Similarly, the DOE confirmed the investigation, but told Fox News Digital it “does not comment further on pending investigations.”

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CAIR-Georgia — a group whose main chapter top executive said he was “happy” to witness the Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel — praised the DOE’s investigation into Emory. 

“It is unconscionable that students have been made to suffer an unsafe and unwelcome learning environment without recourse despite asking the University for help multiple times,” Azka Mahmood, CAIR-Georgia’s executive director, said in a press release. “We hope that this investigation will compel Emory University administration to address the harassment and systemic discrimination faced by Palestinian, Muslim, and Arab students.”

The DOE’s investigation into anti-Muslim discrimination comes as students and outside agitators have staged often-violent anti-Israel encampments at universities across the U.S.

ANTI-ISRAEL STUDENTS AT EMORY UNIVERSITY BASH BIDEN, AVOID OUTRIGHT CONDEMNING OCTOBER 7

At Emory, at least 28 people were arrested during a recent demonstration at the Emory Quad. The school said its Police Department “issued criminal trespass warnings to six individuals suspected of committing recent acts of vandalism on campus” and “confirmed that none of these individuals are affiliated with Emory.”

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Video taken on campus showed police officers armed with Tasers, tear gas and pepper balls attempting to bring the rowdy anti-Israel agitators under control. 

Former FBI Special Agent and Fox News contributor Nicole Parker said the DOE investigating alleged anti-Muslim discrimination on Emory’s campus and not antisemitism is just par-for-the-course with the current federal criminal justice system under the Biden administration. 

“It seems that when it comes to investigating members of the liberal progressive movement, the FBI and DOJ almost turn a blind eye,” Parker told Fox News Digital. “But yet they drop the hammer on those on the conservative end of the spectrum.”

Parker stressed that she cannot speak about the DOE, but said the federal criminal justice system in general “picks and chooses who they are going to protect.”

“The FBI claims that the violent and dangerous actions against Jews on college campuses the past couple of weeks are simply an exercise of First Amendment rights,” Parker said. “If those activities don’t constitute violation of civil rights or a hate crime — I’m not sure what a hate crime is.”

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She pointed to the FBI’s definition of a hate crime. On its website, the FBI defines a hate crime as a “criminal offense against a person or property motivated in whole or in part by an offender’s bias against a race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender, or gender identity.”

COLLEGES CLAIM NOT ALL PROTESTERS GETTING ARRESTED ARE PART OF THEIR SCHOOL COMMUNITIES

When previously reached by Fox News Digital about the anti-Israel and often blatant antisemitic demonstrations on college campuses, the FBI released the following statement:

“The FBI is in close contact with state and local law enforcement partners and, as we do in the normal course of business, we will share any information regarding potential threats. We respect the rights of individuals to peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights and the FBI investigates individuals who violate federal law through violence or other criminal activity.”

Parker encouraged any students who feel they have been the victim of a hate crime to contact the FBI by calling 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov. 

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She said “hold them accountable.”

“First amendment free speech is embraced in our blessed nation, but violence, terroristic threats and destruction are not. In fact, those are serious crimes and should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” she said.

Fox News Digital reached out to Emory Students for Justice in Palestine, but has not yet heard back.

Fox News Digital’s Greg Norman and Timothy Nerozzi contributed to this report.

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Group sends letter to UN arguing Title IX overhaul could result in increased violence against women in sports

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The Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS) sent a letter to the United Nations in response to the Biden administration’s sweeping changes to Title IX. 

The brief requested that male participation in female sports be treated as an act of violence against women. The letter was first obtained by the Washington Examiner.

Title IX is a civil rights law that restricts sex discrimination against students, employees and others at public schools, colleges and universities that are federally funded. 

President Biden’s administration released a new set of rules earlier this year. Students and school employees at educational institutions that receive federal funds will begin seeing the Title IX overhaul changes this fall.

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United Nations headquarters in Lower Midtown Manhattan (Sergi Reboredo/VW Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Reem Alsalem was one of the recipients of the brief from ICONS, per the Examiner. According to Alsalem’s social media bio, she serves as the U.N. special rapporteur on violence against women and girls.

Alsalem previously took issue with the Title IX provision on the new definition of “‘sex.’”

“The erroneous redefinition of ‘sex’ through these implementing regulations constitutes a grave setback that will increase the vulnerability of the majority of women and girls to incursions into their privacy, including voyeurism, sexual harassment and physical and sexual attacks, by effectively removing single sex spaces,” Alsalem said in a press release last month. 

RILEY GAINES SLAMS NEW TITLE IX PROTECTIONS AS THE ‘MOST ANTI-WOMAN’ PURSUIT OF THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION

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The brief sent to the U.N. argued certain provisions in the rewrite of Title IX could negatively affect women.

“Title IX was a federal law written to protect women, and the Biden administration has now turned it into a law that protects men at the expense of women,” ICONS co-founders Marshi Smith and Kim Jones told the Washington Examiner. 

“With the stroke of a pen, Biden has reversed congressional intention and turned Title IX into blatant call to subjugate women and girls.”

Biden inflation reduction act september

President Biden (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

A federal lawsuit, led by Tennessee and West Virginia, asks a judge to halt and overturn the new policy. Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Virginia joined the lawsuit. It follows other legal challenges filed recently by nine other states, including Alabama, Louisiana and Texas.

Central to the dispute is a new provision expanding Title IX to LGBTQ+ students. The 1972 law forbids discrimination based on sex in education. Under the new rules, Title IX will also protect against discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

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The states involved say it amounts to an illegal rewriting of the landmark legislation.

They argue it will clash with their own laws, including those restricting which bathrooms and locker rooms transgender students can use, banning them from using facilities that align with their new gender identity.

“The U.S. Department of Education has no authority to let boys into girls’ locker rooms,” Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said in a statement. “In the decades since its adoption, Title IX has been universally understood to protect the privacy and safety of women in private spaces like locker rooms and bathrooms.”

DOE building in Washington

The U.S. Department of Education building in Washington, D.C., Aug. 18, 2020. (Erin Scott/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The administration’s new rules broadly protect against discrimination based on sex, but they don’t offer guidance about transgender athletes. The Education Department has promised a separate rule on that issue later.

The policies relating to male athletes’ participation in women’s sports have varied among athletic associations and sports leagues. The NCAA’s approach involved a “sport-by-sport” model as it relates to the accepted amount of chemically altered testosterone levels. Testosterone strengthens muscle tone and bone mass.

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“The new policy aligns transgender student-athlete participation with the Olympic Movement. The resulting sport-by-sport approach preserves opportunity for transgender student-athletes while balancing fairness, inclusion and safety for all who compete,” the NCAA said in 2022.

But ICONS argues using “acceptable” testosterone levels as a single indicator is “arbitrary and meaningless.”

“We know that male advantage can never be undone,” Smith and Jones wrote in the letter. “But even if it could, a man that has diminished his athletic ability through manipulation of his hormone levels is not a woman. The erasure of women as a sex class must be stopped.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Drum major’s hazing left heartbroken mother wondering what really happened: 'He was beaten to death'

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Robert Champion’s mother, Pam Champion, stared at her phone after hearing the heartbreaking news that left her breathless. Her son had collapsed and died.

“My son had a physical, and he was healthy,” Pam recalled to Fox News Digital. “I was trying to figure out what could have made my child just die so suddenly. I spent the whole day trying to figure that out, only to find out that it was all a lie. He didn’t just collapse and die. What happened was the unthinkable.”

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Champion, a Florida A&M drum major, was killed in November 2011. He was 26. His case is featured in Investigation Discovery’s (ID) true-crime series, “Murder Under the Friday Night Lights.” It examines homicides involving high school and college football teams.

FORMER RUSSIAN SEX SPY SAYS SHE WAS TRAINED AS A ‘MASTER MANIPULATOR’

In this Oct. 8, 2011, file photo, Florida A&M Marching 100 Drum Major Robert Champion performs at halftime of a game against Howard University at Bragg Memorial Stadium in Tallahassee, Fla. (AP Photo/Don Juan Moore)

Pam said it wasn’t until the next day that she heard her son’s name on the local news. The broadcast showed a photo of him she didn’t recognize. She soon learned her son had bruises on his chest, arms, shoulders and back when he died. Witnesses told emergency dispatchers Champion was vomiting before he was found unresponsive.

“My son didn’t just collapse and die. He was beaten to death,” said Pam. “He was murdered. And I needed to know what happened.”

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Champion, who was part of the famed Florida A&M University (FAMU) Marching 100, was described as an inquisitive child who always had a passion for music. He fell in love with the marching bands of Georgia, where he was born, and dreamed of becoming a drum major.

A young Robert Champion posing with his family in a portrait

A young Robert Champion with his family. (ID)

“He identified drum majors as gentlemen with their capes, long tail jackets and high hats,” said Pam. “He wanted to be one of them. Robert had a tender heart for people. He never met an enemy. He trained to play the clarinet, played the drums at our local church and taught himself to play the keyboard. Music was his love. And he wanted to share that love with others. He found joy in performing in front of a large audience and dancing.

“He was large in stature but very gentle. He even volunteered to be an organ donor because he wanted to help save a life. And that’s how he felt about people.”

As Champion thrived at FAMU, Pam vividly recalled one conversation she had with her son.

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Robert Champion directing his band

Robert Champion leading his band (ID)

“Rob was talking about how people were trying to get him to do something,” Pam explained. “He never identified what that was, but he didn’t want to do it. My comment to him at the time was, ‘You don’t have to do anything you don’t want to do. You’re in control.’ But in terms of him using the term ‘hazing,’ that never occurred.”

Champion appeared “tired” the last time his mother saw him.

“He didn’t seem the same,” Pam recalled. “He was backing out of the driveway. I said, ‘Rob, the only thing I want for you is to be happy.’ And he said, ‘Oh mom, you know me.’ It wasn’t unusual for him to stay in his room playing his instruments, but it was just something about his demeanor. But he never disclosed anything that went on within the marching band.”

Robert Champion wearing a suit and bow tie for a class photo

Robert Champion died in 2011. He was 26. (ID )

According to the Orange County Medical Examiner, Champion died of “hemorrhagic shock due to soft tissue hemorrhage, due to blunt force trauma.” The episode revealed that, just hours before his death, Champion had marched with his band during a football game between Florida A&M and Bethune-Cookman University.

Pam claimed she had to call the school numerous times to get any details about what happened to her son that night.

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“It took six months for the Orange County prosecutor at the time to contact us at all,” said Pam. “We heard nothing from them. Everything we got came from the media.”

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Pamela Champion and her husband looking somber in court.

Pam and Robert Champion Sr. were determined to find out what really happened to their son. (Getty Images)

According to Pam, a reporter stopped by her house with “stacks of complaints that rose high,” revealing a horrifying culture of hazing within the band. 

“This was no secret to the school, the violence that went on,” Pam alleged. “And the hard thing for me was, you had staff within the band that was supposed to be educating the students about hazing. There’s corruption and negligence. … And for the school to take a stance and say publicly that they were not responsible for my son’s death – how low can you go? Was my son Robert responsible for his own death?”

Interviews with defendants and other band members revealed Champion endured a brutal ritual known as “crossing over.” The university maintained that Champion, who witnessed others being hazed, consented to the ritual to gain respect among fellow band members.

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Florida state attorney speaking out to the press

Florida State Attorney Lawson Lamar announces charges in the hazing death of FAMU drum major Robert Champion May 2, 2012, in front of the Orange County Courthouse in Orlando, Fla.  (Jacob Langston/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

With chances for initiation ending with the football season, fellow band members said Champion agreed to run through a gauntlet of people kicking and beating him with drumsticks, mallets and fists. The hazing took place aboard “Bus C,” which was described as the band’s notorious venue for hazing after its performances during FAMU football games.

What awaited Champion was a punishing ordeal in which about 15 people pushed, struck, kicked and grabbed at participants as they tried to wade down the aisle from the bus’s driver’s seat to touch the back wall, according to interviews. One witness said bigger band members waited at the back to make the final few steps the most difficult. Several others who went through it said the ordeal leaves participants dizzy and breathless at a minimum.

After finishing the gauntlet, Champion vomited and complained of trouble breathing. He quickly fell unconscious and couldn’t be revived. An autopsy concluded Champion died from shock caused by severe bleeding.

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Pam Champion and Robert Champion Sr. walking toward a group of press

Robert Champion, left, and his wife Pam leave after a news conference about new developments of the hazing death of their son Robert D. Champion, a FAMU drum major. (Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Champion’s death illustrated how ingrained hazing was in the band, although previous hazing incidents were well documented at the school in lawsuits and arrests. Two band members previously received serious kidney injuries during hazing beatings, and another member suffered a broken thighbone just weeks before Champion’s death.

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Still, going aboard “Bus C” was voluntary, defendant Caleb Jackson told detectives. Pam said she and her family had a hard time believing Champion, who was outspoken about hazing, would agree to such brutality. They noted that “no one signs up for murder.”

Even though band members are required to sign a pledge promising not to participate in hazing, initiations were planned that night for Champion and two other band members. Along with “crossing over,” the bus was also known for “the hot seat,” which involved getting kicked and beaten with drumsticks and bass drum mallets while covered with a blanket.

Dante Martin wearing glasses and a dark suit in court

A jury found Dante Martin of Florida A&M University’s Marching 100 band guilty of manslaughter in the fatal hazing of drum major Robert Champion.  (Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Fifteen former band members were charged in Champion’s death. Purported ringleader Dante Martin was sentenced to 6½ years in prison in 2015. Jessie Baskin served just shy of a year in county jail after entering a no-contest plea to manslaughter. Most of the others were sentenced to community service and probation.

Jackson, 26, pleaded no contest to manslaughter and hazing in 2013. He was sentenced in 2015 to four years in prison. Jackson’s sentencing ended all prosecution in the case.

Longtime band director Julian White resigned in 2012 and contributed to the resignation of university President James Ammons.

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Shawn Turner in a grey suit looking to the side in court

Shawn Turner, Florida A&M University marching band drum major, enters an Orange County courtroom June 14, 2012. Turner was appointed a public defender in the hazing death of drum major Robert Champion.  (Pool photo by Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

That same year, a report from the Florida Board of Governors inspector general’s office concluded the university lacked internal controls to prevent or detect hazing. It cited a lack of communication among top university officials, the police department and the office responsible for disciplining students.

A spokesperson for FAMU didn’t immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment about Pam speaking out in the series.

Caleb Jackson looking to the side in a navy blue jumpsuit

Former FAMU percussionist Caleb Jackson April 16, 2013, before he entered a plea of no contest in Orange County court.  (Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Today, Pam is co-founder of Be A Champion, a foundation that aims to raise awareness of the violence of hazing and other forms of bullying.

“We have to make it public that this isn’t acceptable,” said Pam. “We have to follow through with tough laws. … Every year, a young student loses their lives to this nice fluffy word called hazing. That has to stop. … And students have the power to end this. They just don’t know they have that power. They have the power to refuse. We need to combat this infectious disease we call hazing, one that is well covered, treatable and preventable.

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Robert Champions family looking somber

Pam Champion, mother, 2nd right, and Robert Champion, father, right, listen as the verdict is read Oct. 31, 2014, after a jury found Dante Martin, a former member of Florida A&M University’s Marching 100 band, guilty of manslaughter in the fatal hazing of drum major Robert Champion Jr.  (Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

“Robert was known to speak out against violence,” Pam reflected. “He wanted to help others. I’m here to do that for him.”

ID’s “Murder Under the Friday Night Lights” is available for streaming on Max. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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