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RockRaven

(15,025 posts)
Wed Jun 20, 2018, 01:07 AM Jun 2018

Remember when lawyers descended upon airports when the travel ban started?

Can we get some of that for these detained children? I'm not picky about how, any way, all ways is fine. It can be crowd-sourced, it can be pro bono, it can be organized by billionaires or by small non-profits, but let's flood the system with individual detainee legal representation, with class action lawsuits, with civil rights lawsuits, with lawsuits by state attorneys general.

Let's f*ck-up and bog-down the Trump admin in courts across the country. Let's sue the people who own the private prisons, let's sue the people who run them and who work in them. Let's charge them with local crimes where applicable. Let's name them, and shame them publicly. Let's make them embarrassed to go to the grocery store or to go to church on Sunday (or whatever). Let's get them excommunicated/banned from taking communion (or whatever). Let's name and shame politicians and pundits who take money from them.

Let's be as self-righteous and shrill about these children, these BABIES, as the right-wing m*therf*ckers who have been hollering for decades about the rights of "babies" when it comes to pro-choice/anti-abortion stuff.

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Remember when lawyers descended upon airports when the travel ban started? (Original Post) RockRaven Jun 2018 OP
They're going there-- dawg day Jun 2018 #1
Hundreds, and probably thousands, of GOOD PEOPLE are working on this, Rock - DUer mucifer Leghorn21 Jun 2018 #2
Great! That's an impressive list!! It gives me hope. Lil Missy Jun 2018 #4
Thanks. Bookmarking. Perhaps I can help out in some manner. RestoreAmerica2020 Jun 2018 #7
they are trying . the problem is they are not able to get access JI7 Jun 2018 #3
My son's firm is sending bilingual attorneys to the Valley Gothmog Jun 2018 #5
Truly hate to take away from the positive responses Nevernose Jun 2018 #6

dawg day

(7,947 posts)
1. They're going there--
Wed Jun 20, 2018, 01:09 AM
Jun 2018

ACLU is there too. I hope they can get a STAY order quickly.

Those poor kids. And the parents must be in anguish.

Leghorn21

(13,527 posts)
2. Hundreds, and probably thousands, of GOOD PEOPLE are working on this, Rock - DUer mucifer
Wed Jun 20, 2018, 01:18 AM
Jun 2018

posted this yesterday:

• The ACLU is litigating this policy in California.

• If you’re an immigration lawyer, the American Immigration Lawyers Association will be sending around a volunteer list for you to help represent the women and men with their asylum screening, bond hearings, ongoing asylum representation, etc. Please sign up.

• Al Otro Lado is a binational organization that works to offer legal services to deportees and migrants in Tijuana, Mexico, including deportee parents whose children remain in the U.S.

• CARA—a consortium of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, the American Immigration Council, the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, and the American Immigration Lawyers Association—provides legal services at family detention centers.

• The Florence Project is an Arizona project offering free legal services to men, women, and unaccompanied children in immigration custody.

• Human Rights First is a national organization with roots in Houston that needs help from lawyers too.

• Kids in Need of Defense works to ensure that kids do not appear in immigration court without representation, and to lobby for policies that advocate for children’s legal interests. Donate here.

• The Legal Aid Justice Center is a Virginia-based center providing unaccompanied minors legal services and representation.

• Pueblo Sin Fronteras is an organization that provides humanitarian aid and shelter to migrants on their way to the U.S.

• RAICES is the largest immigration nonprofit in Texas offering free and low-cost legal services to immigrant children and families. Donate here and sign up as a volunteer here.

• The Texas Civil Rights Project is seeking “volunteers who speak Spanish, Mam, Q’eqchi’ or K’iche’ and have paralegal or legal assistant experience.”

• Together Rising is another Virginia-based organization that’s helping provide legal assistance for 60 migrant children who were separated from their parents and are currently detained in Arizona.

• The Urban Justice Center’s Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project is working to keep families together.

• Women’s Refugee Commission advocates for the rights and protection of women, children, and youth fleeing violence and persecution.

• Finally, ActBlue has aggregated many of these groups under a single button.

This list isn’t comprehensive, so let us know what else is happening. And please call your elected officials, stay tuned for demonstrations, hug your children, and be grateful if you are not currently dependent on the basic humanity of U.S. policy.

Update, June 17, 2018: Thanks to readers who updated us with more organizations fighting this policy. Other good work is being done by the following:

• CLINIC’s Defending Vulnerable Populations project offers case assistance to hundreds of smaller organizations all over the country that do direct services for migrant families and children.

• American Immigrant Representation Project (AIRP), which works to secure legal representation for immigrants.

• CASA in Maryland, D.C., Virginia, and Pennsylvania. They litigate, advocate, and help with representation of minors needing legal services.

• Freedom for Immigrants (Formerly CIVIC), which has been a leading voice opposing immigrant detention.

• The Michigan Immigrant Rights Center represents all of the immigrant kids placed by the government in foster care in Michigan (one of the biggest foster care placement states). About two-thirds are their current clients are separation cases, and they work to find parents and figure out next steps.

• The Northwest Immigrant Rights Project is doing work defending and advancing the rights of immigrants through direct legal services, systemic advocacy, and community education.

• Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights works for the rights of children in immigration proceedings.

• The Women’s Refugee Commission has aggregated five actions everyone can take that go beyond donating funds.

• And finally, the International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP)—which organizes law students and lawyers to develop and enforce a set of legal and human rights for refugees and displaced persons—just filed suit challenging the cancellation of the Central American Minors program.

Update, June 18, 2018, 8:19 p.m.: Listed below are more organizations that are helping separated families at the border. Thanks again to readers who sent in information:

• Houston Immigration Legal Services Collaborative has a guide to organizations throughout Texas that provide direct legal services to separated children. Also listed within the guide are resources for local advocates, lawyers, and volunteers.

• Immigrant Justice Corps is the nation’s only fellowship program dedicated to expanding access to immigration representation. Some IJC fellows work at the border, and others work in New York, providing direct representation in immigration court to parents and children resettled in New York City and surrounding counties.

• The Kino Border Initiative provides humanitarian aid to refugees and migrants on both sides of the border. They have a wish-list of supplies they can use to help migrants and families staying in the communities they serve.

• The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network supports undocumented immigrants detained in Aurora, Colorado.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/06/how-you-can-fight-family-separation-at-the-border.html


———DUer Gothmog posted tonight that his son’s law firm is sending some lawyers there, and DUer nolabear just posted that the Mayor of Seattle AND OTHER MAYORS are heading to the border——-



I FUGGING LOVE THIS COUNTRY

Gothmog

(145,666 posts)
5. My son's firm is sending bilingual attorneys to the Valley
Wed Jun 20, 2018, 01:43 AM
Jun 2018

I suspect that most of the big firms will be doing the same

Nevernose

(13,081 posts)
6. Truly hate to take away from the positive responses
Wed Jun 20, 2018, 01:44 AM
Jun 2018

But I don’t think many people realize that many of the immigration courts are held in complete secrecy. No court address is revealed, no family is notified. When even attorneys show up to the correct building, they’re not allowed to the courtroom until it’s their own clients case (both abnormal and unconstitutional). Even if it IS their client’s case, they have to provide the floor and court number, and then have to wait outside in 130 degree heat until (hopefully) a bailiff comes to fetch them. Same goes for observers: you’re allowed to watch the proceedings, but only if you can figure out which secret building they’re being held in and even then only if you can provide case number info AND provide the courtroom scheduling info.

Kafka Lives.

It’s not for every case, but many are like this. How this isn’t against the sixth amendment (public trials) I’ll never believe in Their bullshit.

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