The Department of Homeland Security has revealed that The New York Times did not fully speak in an article about green cardholders who are being held for past criminal history beyond what was written in the work.
The era It has been reported The case of Alfredo Orellana, who worked as a caregiver for a man with severe autism in Northern Virginia, named Luke. The family who hired Orelana said he had worked for them for four years.
“Luke is like getting a mate to hang out,” they said.
“It surprised him that he was a caregiver.”
The era continues to report that permanent resident Olerana was detained for 12 hours in January after returning from El Salvador with his wife, an American citizen. They were told to return to Dulles International Airport in court documents the following month. When they returned in February, US immigration and customs enforcement agents detained Orellana.
“We were so shocked. We couldn't believe it. We both sobbed,” recalls his wife.
The Times reported that Orelana's detention and potential deportation came from when he “winded” the store before $200 before he was struggling with substance abuse.
Tricia McLaughlin, secretary for homeland security civil servants; Posted In X, that Orellana is subject to deportation because it has a much longer criminal history than its described era.
“of course [the NYT] The man did not mention multiple accusations between 2012 and 2019. Distribution of drugs, possession of drugs, assault and battery, failure to appear in court (two times), second theft, and theft. He was surprised he was a caregiver because he received violent accusations on his records,” McLaughlin said.
“More fake sob stories,” she added.
The Trump administration is pursuing zero tolerance for visa owners and applicants, as well as illegal immigration. Green cards are possible It was cancelled If a holder commits a crime, such as a felony, drug crime, or fraud, it threatens national security with connections with terrorist groups, for example.
DHS recently announced that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will screen legal permanent residents status and social media accounts of foreigners applying for student visas to see whether they have expressed support for terrorist organizations such as Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah and Hausis.
“The US has no room for the rest of the world's terrorist sympathizers. We don't accept them or require them to stay here,” McLaughlin said. “Secretary [Kristi] Noem made it clear that anyone who thinks they can come to America and hide behind the First Amendment to defend anti-Semitistic violence and terrorism is thinking once again. Not welcome here. ”
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