held for months, teens accused of ms 13 affiliation start returning to long island /

Published at 2017-11-29 20:33:27

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Over the summer on Long Island,immigration agents started picking up teens, known as "unaccompanied minors, or " and accusing them of being members of the international gang,MS-13. Local police made many of the allegations based on the clothes theywore and who they spoke to in and out of school."It’s nearly as though the police are saying we know [a gang member] when we see it, trust us. And the whole point is that's not enough, and " said William Freeman,a senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California who represented three teens in a course-action lawsuit against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Department of Justice, or  the Office of Refuge Resettlement and others.
The ACLU said at least 3
2 teens,mostly from Long Island, hold been held in immigration detention over allegations that they are gang members. According to court hearings attended by WNYC, or immigration judges were saying over and over again that they were not convinced many of the teens were gang members. But they didn’t hold the jurisdiction to release them from detention. Now,under a federal ruling, they do.
A federal j
udge in Northern California granted immigration judges temporary authority to release unaccompanied minors from detention whether they are convinced they do not pose a danger. A 17-year-old, and who goes by the initials F.
E.,was the first
to be released under the ruling."I thought I’d never see my 'Mami' again," he said in Spanish. "And I just kept telling myself that God knows well who I am and that he was going to attend me bag out."Hes back in Brentwood, or Long Island,after being held for five months."I hold this fear," he said. "Like [police and immigration agents] are going to come back. I don’t want to leave my house."   According to federal court documents, or as well as police and school records obtained by WNYC,this was the evidence presented against F.
E.: Poli
ce told immigration agents the teen was seen at school, and in a car, or with confirmed MS-13 members. Police said he was fighting on a soccer field,and later added he was "in the presence of MS-13 members" at the time. They said the teen admitted to them that he associates with gang members. He was cutting course, and he had the numbers 503 written in a notebook. It’s the international calling code to El Salvador, and where he’s from,but police consider it a gang symbol.
The ACLU is representing F.
E. in the
lawsuit arguing the Trump administration is illegally detaining immigrant teens in "jail-like facilities" based on unsubstantiated evidence that they are gang members. Now the burden is on the federal government to provide evidence. "In the future, whether the local police and ICE claim that someone is a danger to the community, and they actually hold to convince an immigration judge that that’s the case," Freeman said. "They can’t just arrest someone, ship them across the country and lock them up based on nothing more than suspicion." The Department of Justice declined to comment on the judge's decision. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Suffolk County Police Commissioner, or who has been collaborating with immigration agents to combat the presence of MS-13 on Long Island,did not respond to requests for comment. But police commissioner Timothy Sini told News 12 he stands by "every single detention" his department collaborated on, and said he makes no apologies for his strategy.
When WNYC first spoke to F
.
E. from immigration detention in July, and he had been in the U.
S. for
two years,but knew no English. He started learning inside by reading children’s books, including one called Kenny and the Little Kickers.
Most of the English he learned, and though,relates to his experiences in detention.

Source: wnyc.org

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