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A California law bans immigration enforcement at courthouses. ICE under the Trump administration is detaining people there, anyway, arguing it’s a safe place to apprehend someone.
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Rigoberto Hernandez Hernandez’s release came suddenly Wednesday morning without a court order.
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The president-elect pledges to welcome as many as 125,000 refugees a year — up from the Trump administration's record-low cap of 15,000. Here are some challenges that await.
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A court filing says many of the parents are presumed to no longer be in the United States. Efforts to locate them have been hampered by the coronavirus pandemic, according to the filing.
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The justices will hear oral arguments Nov. 30, increasing the potential for Trump to try to omit unauthorized immigrants from the census numbers used to reallocate House seats during his current term.
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An attempt by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to detain two men in Bend did not go as planned Wednesday afternoon, after hundreds of protesters stalled the action for more than 10 hours, leading to a standoff with Border Patrol agents later that night.
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Isidro Andrade-Tafolla was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in 2017 after being mistaken for another person.
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The Trump administration will reject new applications while it undertakes a "comprehensive review" of DACA, a senior administration official said Tuesday during a call with reporters.
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The president is calling for unauthorized immigrants to be excluded from census numbers used to divide seats in Congress. The Constitution says the count must include every person living in the U.S.
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A federal judge announced on Tuesday that ICE has reached an agreement with schools that sued it over the rule change. The directive will now be rescinded nationwide.
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The Oregon Department of Justice and two of its largest universities have joined a legal fight against the Trump Administration over new limits on international students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The new guidelines would force international students to leave the United States if they are enrolled in a college or academic program that only offers courses online.
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International students pursuing degrees in the U.S. may have to leave the country if their universities switch to online-only courses this fall. That's causing concern — and pushback — from universities in Oregon.