Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Under Age and Alone, Immigrants See a Softer Side of Detention

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/15/nyregion/15minors.html

Under Age and Alone, Immigrants See a Softer Side of Detention

Librado Romero/The New York Times

Albert Munoz teaching English at the Children's Village, a Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., shelter for minors.

By ANN FARMER

Published: July 14, 2009

DOBBS FERRY, N.Y. — Jose was 14 when he left his home in Oaxaca, Mexico, and paid a smuggler $1,200 to sneak him across the border. He made it to Phoenix and started on a long and familiar odyssey as he scratched out a living, first picking oranges in Florida, then cooking in restaurants in Connecticut.


But his modest existence was upended in March after he was stopped for speeding in Connecticut and the police discovered that he did not have a driver's license. Eventually, officials determined he was in the United States illegally, and he was taken into custody by the Department of Homeland Security.. Because Jose told a judge he was 21, he was held in an adult detention center in Massachusetts.


After Jose's brother, with the help of the Mexican government, was able to prove to immigration officials that Jose was just 17, he was transferred in April to a shelter for immigrant youths in Westchester County.


Jose's case represents one of the thornier aspects of the immigration debate: how to treat the roughly 7,200 unaccompanied minors apprehended in the United States each year.

Jose, whose last name was withheld because of his age, was detained at the Children's Village in Dobbs Ferry, one of 41 facilities across the country contracted by the Department of Health and Human Services to hold unaccompanied minors until they are either allowed to remain in the United States or are deported. (Jose ultimately returned to Mexico voluntarily.)


Despite an alarm system and locks, conditions in the Tudor-style bungalow at the Children's Village where young detainees live are a vast improvement, immigrants' advocates say, over the federal detention centers where such unaccompanied minors used to be held.

The housing of young detainees in the same places as adults, often without access to education, proper medical care or translators, led to a class-action lawsuit in 2001. As a result, Congress in 2003 shifted responsibility for unaccompanied minors from immigration officials to the Office of Refugee Resettlement, part of Health and Human Services.


Besides separating minors from adults, the office has established standards for accommodating minors in less restrictive settings, while providing a variety of social services. Among other things, Homeland Security officers are required to take any unaccompanied minor they apprehend to a juvenile facility, usually within 24 hours.

The new procedures have created some tension between Health and Human Services and Homeland Security, which believes that law enforcement standards should apply equally to all illegal immigrants, no matter their ages.


The Justice Department ultimately determines if unaccompanied minors are allowed to stay, ruling on whether they qualify for special immigrant juvenile status because they have been abused, neglected or abandoned and need long-term foster care. Such status can lead to a green card, which permits permanent residence in the United States.


Some supporters of strict enforcement of immigration laws are critical of the juvenile green cards and say parents in other countries must be discouraged from sending their children to the United States illegally.


Detainees at Children's Village spend their days in cheerful rooms painted in vibrant hues of pink and green and decorated with potted plants. On a recent visit, the smell of bacon being cooked by the staff wafted from the kitchen. "It's almost like home," Jose said in an interview before he went back to Mexico. When he was not exercising or on field trips on the woodsy 180-acre campus, he studied English, history and social studies.


"The rule of law doesn't have to be meanspirited," said Jeremy C. Kohomban, president and chief executive of Children's Village. "If nothing else, the way we treat them inspires them about how we practice the rule of law."


Founded in 1851 as a charity to provide shelter for orphaned and homeless children, Children's Village started a coeducational facility for unaccompanied minors in 2004 in Queens and three years later opened a boys-only residence in Dobbs Ferry, where it has other programs for youngsters.


When illegal immigrant youths arrive. they are often disoriented and frightened, Children's Village officials said. Some have been scooped up during workplace raids, while others have been picked up along the Mexican border and taken north because they have relatives in New York who may sponsor them while their future is sorted out.


"I have seen terrible traumas," said Steven Alba, who manages the program for unaccompanied minors at Children's Village, recalling a boy whose leg was so badly burned as he crossed the border in a vehicle that he required a skin graft.


"We feed them immediately," Mr. Alba said. They are also given clothes and toiletries, undergo a medical evaluation and watch a video explaining their legal rights. A social worker collects phone numbers of any family members. "We start putting the puzzle together about the child and his options," Mr. Alba said.


Abigail Cushing, a lawyer with Catholic Charities who works with the detainees at Children's Village, said, "Kids need to be treated humanely regardless of their immigrant status in the U.S."


One of the youngsters at Children's Village, a 17-year-old from Guatemala, said he came to the United States when he was 13 to escape family abuse.


His illegal status was uncovered in April after the police in the western New York community of Jamestown came to his aid when he was being beaten by strangers. He told the authorities that he was over 18, which led to his being held in a detention center in Pennsylvania where he was given a blanket and slept on a concrete block.


"Each place they brought me, they just asked me questions and I just answered them," said the teenager, whose name was withheld because of the abuse accusations involving his family. "I thought maybe they would let me go."


After establishing his true age, he was sent to Children's Village. "I realized when I came here that I was going to be better," he said, though he added, "The days are sad because I don't know what's going to happen."


Jose said he decided not to press his case, in part because if he lost he knew it would make it even harder for him to return to the United States legally. Besides, he said, "I miss my mom and my grandmom."


"What I would tell other Mexican kids is that life is hard in the U.S.," he added. "You don't have your mother and father to support you. If you don't work, you don't eat. When you're old enough to know what you're doing, you can come. But some kids don't want to listen."

 
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Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sotomayor, tough-minded yet true to her roots, defies simple labeling

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/71571.html
  • Posted on Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sotomayor, tough-minded yet true to her roots, defies simple labeling

WASHINGTON — Sonia Sotomayor is a groundbreaking nominee for the Supreme Court who defies easy pigeonholing.

She's a tough-minded former prosecutor who's denounced the death penalty.


She's a product of South Bronx public housing who excelled in the Ivy League.


She's fiercely proud of her Latino heritage but has both challenged and embraced racial discrimination claims.


Now, starting Monday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will give lawmakers and the world at large a crack at the question: Just who is Sonia Sotomayor?


"Sonia does not fit the label of a liberal or a conservative," said Hugh Mo, a former colleague in the New York district attorney's office. "She also is not going to fit the label of someone who is a so-called activist judge or a strict constructionist."


By nominating the 55-year-old Sotomayor, Obama picked a candidate with one of the most distinctive backgrounds of any Supreme Court nominee.


Sotomayor was born June 25, 1954, in New York. From the start, she's overcome multiple hurdles. At age 8, she was diagnosed with Type I diabetes. This lifelong disease renders her more susceptible to heart failure, stroke and nerve damage, as well as a shorter life span.

A year after her diabetes diagnosis, Sotomayor's father, Juan, died of heart complications.

Urged on to be an avid reader by her mother, Celina, Sotomayor attended the Bronx's competitive Cardinal Spellman High School. There, students wear uniforms and school policy directs them to comport themselves as "Christian ladies and gentlemen."


Sotomayor entered Princeton University in September 1972. As she later told audiences, she recognized that her test scores alone wouldn't have won her admission to the Ivy League school. Affirmative action helped, too.


"At Princeton, I began a lifelong commitment to identifying myself as a Latina, taking pride in being Hispanic, and in recognizing my obligation to help my community reach its fullest potential in this society," Sotomayor said in 1996.


Sotomayor outworked many of her peers, graduating summa cum laude. She also started becoming an aggressive advocate, joining a complaint filed in 1974 with the federal government over Princeton's low Hispanic representation.


Sotomayor continued her activism after college and law school. From 1980 to 1992, she was active with the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, whose priorities ranged from boosting bilingual education to opposing the death penalty.


"Capital punishment is associated with evident racism in our society," Sotomayor and two other defense fund leaders wrote in a March 1981 memo. "The number of minorities and the poor executed or awaiting execution is out of proportion to their numbers in the population."

Republican critics cite these Puerto Rican advocacy efforts. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the Senate Judiciary Committee's senior GOP member, called the organization "clearly outside the mainstream."


Others have labeled her an "activist judge."


They criticize her for siding in a recent discrimination case with the city of New Haven, Conn., which denied promotions to several white firefighters because no blacks and only one Hispanic scored high enough on the promotion exam.


Five other members of the 2nd U.S.. Circuit Court of Appeals joined the decision, which the U.S. Supreme Court overturned late last month.


Critics also zeroed in on her statement in 2001 that her "hope" was that a "wise Latina with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life."


Former colleagues and court adversaries, however, said that Sotomayor is no extremist. If anything, her years as a prosecutor have made her more sympathetic to law enforcement.

"She comes with a prosecutorial bent," said Gerald Lefcourt, a longtime New York criminal defense attorney who has argued against her in court. "And she was a zealous prosecutor."

Sotomayor joined the New York district attorney's office in 1979. Close associates said she was a workaholic who spoke more frequently of upcoming trials than of her personal life.

Sotomayor started off working misdemeanor and minor felonies. By 1983, she helped convict the "Tarzan murderer," who'd terrorized the city by climbing into apartments to rob and killing victims in a three-month crime spree.


"She was right there in the trenches," said Mo, her former colleague.


That year, Sotomayor's seven-year marriage to lawyer Kevin Noonan ended in divorce. She's never remarried.


In April 1984, Sotomayor joined the firm Pavia & Harcourt, a small commercial law firm with a host of top-drawer international clients. The Ivy League-groomed girl from the Bronx represented the quintessence of stylish living: the international jewelry retailer Bulgari, the sunglasses company Lozza and the Italian handbag manufacturer Fendi.


The work had its dramatic moments, especially when Sotomayor went after gang-affiliated stores and street vendors selling counterfeit goods.


"It was like the wild, wild West," recalled Baker & Hostetler lawyer Heather McDonald, who worked alongside Sotomayor. "We would come zooming up in these blue vans . . . and we would find ourselves on these nasty floors in Chinatown, counting these counterfeit items."


Sotomayor made a good but not spectacular living in private practice, earning about $230,000 in today's dollars in her final year. She hasn't become much wealthier on a judge's salary, which is $174,000 a year. Her $1 million, two-bedroom condo in New York is now her greatest asset, and she doesn't report owning any stocks or bonds.


Sotomayor's real social elevation occurred once she joined the federal bench.


She won a 10-year term on the Princeton University Board of Trustees, where she mingles with columnist George Will and ABC News anchor Charles Gibson.


In 2008, she joined the Belizean Grove, which describes itself as "a constellation of influential women who are key decision makers." On June 19, Sotomayor resigned from the all-female club.


"I believe that the Belizean Grove does not practice invidious discrimination . . . but I do not want questions about this to distract anyone from my qualifications and record," Sotomayor explained.


Appointed to the federal bench by President George H..W. Bush and confirmed in 1992, Sotomayor oversaw 61 cases that went all the way to verdicts or judgments. Her most noteworthy decision came in 1995, when she issued a temporary injunction to end the baseball strike.


The National Labor Relations Board had accused baseball owners of unfair labor practices. Meanwhile, the clock was ticking on the baseball season.


"When we went into court Monday morning to argue the case, Judge Sotomayor said the only thing I know about this case is what I read in The New York Times," said Daniel Silverman, then an attorney for the National Labor Relations Board. "By Friday, she had read everything we had written and everything the employers had written."


President Bill Clinton elevated Sotomayor to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 1998. Out of some 380 majority opinions, the Supreme Court considered six of her written decisions and reversed Sotomayor four times, a rate comparable to other appellate judges' batting averages before the Supreme Court.


Sotomayor has written only 21 dissents as an appellate judge, rarely venturing beyond a meat-and-potatoes prose style. More than 90 percent of the time, she's voted to affirm criminal convictions.


Sotomayor is known as a tough and persistent questioner from the bench, which has alienated some attorneys. Some, speaking anonymously, have been highly critical of her aggressive posture.


Mo, however, likened this persistence to the way she used to come into his office during tough cases and pepper him with questions.


"She wanted to make sure that she truly understood what she was talking about," he said.

"Sonia is the perfect example of someone who is striving to achieve."


MORE FROM MCCLATCHY

Lawyers group gives Sotomayor its highest approval rating


Supreme Court rules for white firefighters in bias case


La Raza leader surprised to be drawn into Sotomayor debate


Poll: GOP risks loss of respect if it goes after Sotomayor


Latina pride presents challenge and opportunity for Sotomayor


Sotomayor's greatest impact could come from who she is


Sotomayor likely to get gentle scrutiny


Affirmative action decisions at heart of Sotomayor reaction


Follow the latest legal affairs news at McClatchy's Suits & Sentences

McClatchy Newspapers 2009
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Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email:
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More on Immigration and Crime

http://reason.com/blog/show/134732.html

More on Immigration and Crime

Following up on my story about El Paso's large immigrant population and low rate of violent crime, the Immigration Policy Center points to a study I missed by the America's Majority Foundation. The study looks at overall social indicators in states with high immigration rates versus the rest of the country during the immigration boom between 1999-2006. On the subject of crime, the study finds....


• While the overall crime rate in the U.S. dropped 10.9 percent, the crime rate in the 19 states that saw the largest influx of immigrants dropped 13.6 percent.


• In 1999, the 19 states that would settle the largest number of immigrants over the next seven years had a crime rate higher than the national average. By 2006, their crime rate was lower.


• Violent crime in the 19 high-immigration states dropped 15.0 percent over seven-year period. Violent crime in the other 32 states (the study included D.C.) dropped just 1.2 percent.


The authors are careful to explain that lots of variables contribute to a state's crime rate, and they warn that one should not conclude from their study alone that immigration reduces crime. But it does present a pretty strong refutation of the argument that immigrants are creating more crime in the states where they settle.


Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist Bud Kennedy also kindly mentioned my article today, and added an interesting statistic of his own: "Illegal immigrants generated an extra $17.7 billion in the Texas economy when the state comptroller checked in 2006. That was after subtracting the cost of emergency healthcare and their American-born children's education."

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Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Dearly Beloved in Christ.

Eleven Month
 
Dearly Beloved in Christ.
 
Calvary greetings in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, I am Mrs. Victoria Balli, I am a nationality of the United Kingdom, and I am presently hospitalized, due to my illness.  I am 59 years old and I was diagnosed with Esophageal Cancer for about two years. I am a widow to Late Mr. William Balli. You see, my husband was once the Managing Director of Shell Oil Company in South Africa, where we spent most of our lives and I have served the Lord all through my life.
 
From all indications, my condition is serious and is quite obvious that I may not live more than six months, because the cancer stage has gotten to a very severe state and my doctor has told me this. The one that disturbs me most is the stroke that paralyzed half of my body before my late husband was killed during his reign as the Managing Director of Shell Oil Company.
 
My late husband was wealthy and after his death, I inherited all His business and wealth. Presently my doctor told me that I may not live for more than six months, though I am not scared about this, I am not afraid of death, hence I will be in the bosom of the Lord forever, any time my God calls me home. So, I now decided to look for an organization or an individual who is God fearing, that will use the funds for charity organization, by contributing to the development of evangelism in the world, assisting motherless babies homes and poor churches all over the world.
 
I selected you after searching the Internet for this purpose and prayed over it, for the fact that I always go to God in prayers in situation like this, because He is the Alfa and Omega. I am willing to donate half of my husbands wealth to you for the development of evangelism and also as aids for the less privileged around you rather than allow my husbands relatives to use my husband hard earned funds ungodly. You may contact my lawyer, James Cole, with the specified address-:
 
CHAMBERS OF James Cole
Barrister James Cole
9 Bedford Row London WC1R 4AZ
E-Mail: james_cole_lawfirm111@inmail.sk
Phone: +44 702-405-2752
 
 
Ensure that you copy this correspondence to his email address above and tell him that I have asked you to reach him. Please, do not reply if you have the intention of using this fund for personal use, you will have a reasonable percentage of the total funds before investing the remainder of the funds for God`s works. Lastly, I want you and your church to keep praying for me regarding my health, because I have come to find out that wealth acquisition without Jesus Christ in one's life, is vanity upon vanity. If you have to die says the Lord, keep fit and I will give you the crown of life.  May the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the sweet fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you now and forever more, amen.
 
Goodluck in all your future endeavors and God bless you.
 
Thanks,
 
Mrs. Victoria Balli.