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Khatami writes: "Ahead of mass raids planned by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency in 10 U.S. cities Sunday, immigration advocacy groups are rushing to alert migrants of their rights if agents show up at their doors."

ICE enforcement and removal operations unit raid to apprehend immigrants without any legal status and who may be deportable in Riverside. (photo: Ifran Khan/LA Times/Getty Images)
ICE enforcement and removal operations unit raid to apprehend immigrants without any legal status and who may be deportable in Riverside. (photo: Ifran Khan/LA Times/Getty Images)


ALSO SEE: US Cities Prepare for Possible ICE
Raids Targeting Undocumented Families

Here's What to Do if ICE Shows Up at Your Door

By Elham Khatami, ThinkProgress

23 June 19


Mass raids are slated to take place on Sunday. Know your rights.

head of mass raids planned by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency in 10 U.S. cities Sunday, immigration advocacy groups are rushing to alert migrants of their rights if agents show up at their doors.

The raids are slated to take place before dawn on Sunday. (Update: Trump delayed the raids by two weeks on Saturday afternoon.) Known as the �family op,� ICE and Department of Homeland Security agents plan to target up to 2,000 families in Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York and San Francisco. The objective is to round up migrants who were previously ordered to be deported.

Numerous city officials have pushed back. New York Attorney General Letitia James called the plan an �immoral and unconscionable act by a president and an administration hellbent on dividing our country.� And Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot vowed that the city police would not cooperate with ICE agents.

Groups like RAICES, United We Dream, and Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FIRM) took to social media to share infographics about immigrant rights before the raid, urging migrants to remain silent, not to share personal information with agents, and to document their interactions with officers. They also urged community members to notify advocacy groups if they see a raid taking place.

Here�s exactly what the aforementioned immigration groups are urging migrants to do if ICE agents come knocking:

Don�t open the door.

RAICES, United We Dream, and FIRM have all urged migrants not to open the door for ICE agents. Instead, they say, ask the agents from inside if they have a warrant. If they say yes, ask them to slip it under the door. You are not obligated to answer any questions.

Look for your name, address, and a signature on the warrant. As AJ+ reported, a removal order from ICE is not enough to allow for deportation. Determine what kind of warrant you are being given. A search warrant that is signed by a judge allows agents to search your house. If it�s an arrest warrant, step outside, but make sure everyone else remains inside the house.

Ask for a lawyer.

All the aforementioned immigrant rights groups also reminded migrants that they have a right to an attorney. If agents attempt to enter your house forcefully, tell them you �do not authorize entry� and ask to speak with a lawyer.

Remain silent and protect your information.

As advocacy groups instructed, if you are being detained or arrested, exercise your right to remain silent and do not sign anything. Do not give your personal information or provide fingerprints. Do not provide your identification card or your papers.

If you�re in a public space, ask the agents if you are being arrested. If they say yes, you have a right to remain silent until your lawyer is present. If they say no, you can leave.

If you are detained, you have the right to ask for bail.

Document everything.

According to United We Dream, it is also important to document everything. You have the right to take video and pictures. Take notes of the officers� license plates and badge numbers. Then, report the raid by calling the United We Dream hotline.

Most groups also provided Spanish language translations of their guidelines. Here are United We Dream�s instructions:


UPDATE: On Saturday afternoon, Trump announced via Twitter that he was cancelling the ICE raids until the July 4th holiday weekend �to see if the Democrats and Republicans can get together and work out a solution to the Asylum and Loophole problems at the Southern Border.�

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+3 # curmudgeon 2014-08-28 22:47
Used to be police and fire HAD to live in cities they were employed in.

Then it became too expensive in some areas for them to reside.

Bit by bit....
 
 
+2 # margpark 2014-08-29 10:18
As I read I was thinking that police pay may not afford housing in many cities.
 
 
+2 # rockieball 2014-08-29 08:20
I mentioned this in a post on another article about police not living where they work. this past year the paper here in Las Vegas reported police officers living a 100 miles away in kingman AZ. Several in California and even one whose family lives in Florida. Also police do not walk a beat anymore, they are not assigned to patrol a regular area. They are not as was the tradition where I grew up and as far as I know still is, required to go to the area they are assigned to and introduce themselves door to door. Instead of "Be My Friend," policy it's "Be Afraid of Me," policy. Police do not get training in personnel contact and civil relations. Some not all because I have met quiet a few out here, but some have a Wyatt Earp attitude.
 
 
+2 # Jingze 2014-08-29 10:46
Tells you why many people consider the police a form of occupying force. They live in other places, don't even walk a beat, never sit in a local diner for meals. They don't greet people. Greet? They don't have the slightest idea who the people are that they here hired to protect, and they just don't care. All they want is to be well-paid and to have a high pension. They hold picnics for the kids in their community - which means the places where they live, not where they occupy.
 
 
-1 # MidwesTom 2014-08-29 11:33
In Ferguson's case it was a mainly white community 15 years ago, but as the blacks moved in, the whites moved out. Many of the white officers have been with the force for years. To maintain racial balance they would have to fire the majority of their most senior officers. The 'conversion' of Ferguson happened quickly as those blacks that gained good jobs all left the black community in Saint Louis. Should communities fire experienced police officers to maintain racial balance?
 

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