ah yes. the leftist are staking their claim for open borders at the expense of actual citizens. yeah .. that's gonna trend well with the MAJORITY of real Americans. NOT.
Cities prepare for showdown with Trump over ICE raids: You 'have to come through us'
https://www.yahoo.com/news/state-ala...171341676.html
  Trevor Hughes,USA TODAY 3 hours ago                
                                                DENVER – Fear and anxiety spread through immigrant communities  nationwide over anticipated federal raids aimed at detaining and  deporting thousands of people accused of remaining illegally within the  United States.
  Immigration reform advocates said that communities around Atlanta,  Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York and  San Francisco were being targeted by raids expected to start Sunday and  last through at least Thursday.
  “It’s almost like getting ready for a hurricane – it’s that state of  alarm that people are feeling,” said Melissa Taveras of the Miami-based  Florida Immigrant Coalition. “People are asking, ‘Is it OK for us to go  work? Is it OK to take our kids to school?’”
  The raids are different from 
routine Immigration and Customs Enforcement detentions,  and advocates for immigrant communities say the raids appear designed  to sow terror and discord among the approximately 2,000 families  expected to be targeted, especially in light of 
news reports of some detainees dying in custody.
  “It terrorizes the community,” said Milli Atkinson, legal director of  the San Francisco Immigrant Legal Defense collaborative in San  Francisco. “It’s really going to impact our community to see that  happen, because with any detention they’re separating the men and the  women and the children.”
  The Trump administration argues the nation's immigration laws have long been ignored, and that 
tougher enforcement is necessary  because Congress has failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform.  The president on Friday said the raids would primarily target immigrants  who have already been convicted of other crimes.
   Democrats must change the Loophole & Asylum  Laws - but they probably won’t! They want Open Borders, which means  massive crime and drugs! https://t.co/IWxH16arMW
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)    July 6, 2019  
In  Denver, Mayor Michael Hancock said city police officers would avoid  helping ICE agents but said city human service workers were on alert to  assist any minor children left behind if their parents are arrested.
 In  many cases, immigrants who lack legal permission to remain in the  United States have minor children who are U.S. citizens. That puts  officials in liberal cities like Denver or San Francisco in the tough  position of opposing the ICE raids themselves but still having to manage  the consequences.
 "We're not going to put children in cages or  leave them in inhumane conditions," Hancock said during a call with  reporters on Friday morning. "Our job is to help those families as best  we can."
 
Immigrant advocates say many of the people expected to  be targeted in the raids have been issued a "final order of removal" but  were never told when or where that previous hearing was taking place,  and thus never attended.
this is an outright LIE. illegals AVOID hearings knowing they have no case to remain in the US. they change address intentionally to avoid notices. this is a FACT.
In Houston, a city of 1.6 million  immigrants and more than 500,000 undocumented immigrants, the phone at  FIEL Houston, an immigrants’ rights group, has been ringing non-stop and  five forums the group organized since the raids’ announcement have been  standing-room only, said Cesar Espinosa, FIEL’s executive director.
Que the obligatory "pity" photo ... 
  
 
“There’s a lot of tension in the community right now,” he said.
 FIEL  created a “rapid-response network,” enlisting around 80 community  members throughout the city who will alert the group if and when a raid  is happening. The goal is to get to the scene of the raid as it’s  happening, document the procedure and advise the targeted immigrants of  their rights, Espinosa said. One of their biggest concerns is that  undocumented immigrants who are not the target of the raids get swept up  in the operations, he said.
 “We hope nothing happens,” Espinosa said. “But if something does happen, we’re preparing our community to be ready to react.”
 Elsewhere,  advocates were preparing fliers and staffing hotlines to alert  immigrant communities of their rights, including requiring a judicial  warrant to enter a private home. Advocates said ICE agents working  routine removal cases usually stake out their targets' homes and wait  for them to leave for work, and that Sunday operations would be highly  unusual.
 “Sometimes with this administration, there’s so many  attacks that [undocumented migrants] feel like there’s no recourse,"  said Shannon Camacho of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los  Angeles. "Don’t open your door. Remain silent. They don’t have to offer  any information to ICE, and ICE can’t enter their homes unless they  have a judicial warrant, signed by a judge. The vast majority of the  time, they don’t have those warrants."
 In New York City, the New  Sanctuary Coalition’s New York branch and the New York Immigration  Coalition planned a rally for Friday night, against both the southern  border detention camps and the expected ICE raids.
 “While maybe  the scale of what ICE will be doing this weekend will be more than what  they actually do at any one time … the reality is that immigrant  communities have been living under this kind of fear for the last  two-and-a-half years,” said Anu Joshi, senior director of immigrant  rights policy for the New York Immigration Coalition.
  The  coalition, representing more than 200 member organizations across New  York State, has joined with local organizations in know-your-rights  training classes for immigrant communities and other instructional  services.
yeah .. let's blame that "orange meanie" Trump. like this just started when he got elected. this has been an issue for decades and mass roundups have occurred before as far back as the Eisenhower administration. 
 
  “It’s  not just during the raids that people need to know their rights,” said  Joshi. “For the last two-and-a-half years ICE has been indiscriminately  going in and targeting people.”
US criminals have rights .. to be tried and convicted if proven guilty  .. illegals have NO rights at all. NONE.
 
“It’s  not just during the raids that people need to know their rights,” said  Joshi. “For the last two-and-a-half years ICE has been indiscriminately  going in and targeting people.”
US criminals have rights .. to be tried and convicted if proven guilty  .. illegals have NO rights at all. NONE. 
 Bitta Mostofi, commissioner of  the New York City Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, condemned the  anticipated raids during a Friday morning interview with NY1, the city’s  24-hour cable news channel.
 “You have to call it what it is, and  say clearly that this is deplorable and cruel,” said Mostofi. “You are  talking about instilling fear and chilling people who in some cases have  been here for decades, and others who have U.S. citizen families and  children. It is a moment in time for us, certainly as a city and  community members, to ensure we are empowering our communities, making  sure you know you have rights regardless of your immigration status, and  that you can access free and safe legal support that the city has  funded.”
 
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. added his  voice in opposition to the raids. "NYC is living proof that sanctuary  policies make us safer," he tweeted. 
Cyrus Vance, Jr. does that name sound familiar?? it should.  
 
 In Atlanta, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms called the looming raids Friday "unwelcome."
 "The  White House is compounding an already spiraling humanitarian crisis  with detention centers,” Bottoms said in a statement. “If they want to  truly help cities, they should ask us what we need, because political  shows of force will only harm—not help.”
 Many large U.S. cities,  including Los Angeles, Denver, Seattle and Miami, have declared  themselves "sanctuaries" for undocumented immigrants, and adopted  policies barring local government workers from cooperating with federal  immigration authorities. Federal raids risk severing the carefully built  bonds between local police and immigrant communities, Hancock said,  making it less likely that undocumented immigrants would ask for help or  testify in court against violent criminals.
 On Friday, San  Francisco Mayor London Breed reiterated that the city’s police would not  cooperate with any ICE operations and that the city was gearing up to  protect its immigrants. “If you want to come after them, you’re going to  have to come through us,” she said.
 It remained unclear how the  Trump administration would process and house the large number of  detainees, with some advocates saying they had heard people might be  kept in hotels if there wasn't enough space in already  overcrowded detention centers.
 Officials from Marriott International and Choice Hotels said they did not want their facilities used for such purposes.
  “While  we have no particular insights into whether the U.S. government is  considering the use of hotels to aid in the situation at the border,  Marriott has made the decision to decline any requests to use our hotels  as detention facilities,’’ the company said in a statement.
 Sara  Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, called  on airlines to say they won’t work with ICE during the raids.
 “We  need your commitment and moral clarity,’’ Nelson said in a tweet Friday  singling out United, American, Delta, Alaska, Spirit and Frontier.
 Flight  attendants were highly critical of reports last summer that airlines  were transporting children separated from their families, and several  airlines pledged not to carry them. Last month, the union’s board  unanimously passed a resolution “to support keeping families together,  children safe and in opposition to ICE raids that are spreading fear in  our communities.’’
 Nelson also praised Marriott International’s decision not to house detainees at its hotels.
 
Contributing:  Rick Jervis in Houston, Elizabeth Weise in San Francisco, Kevin McCoy  in New York City, Jared Weber in Los Angeles, Nicquel Terry Ellis in  Atlanta, Dawn Gilbertson in Chicago and Alan Gomez in Miami.
 This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: In what cities will the ICE raids start? Migrants are worried across US