A federal judge has ordered ICE to reduce populations at three Florida detention centers to 75% capacity within two weeks, saying crowded conditions exposing detainees to COVID-19 violate their constitutional rights.
A federal judge in Miami has ordered U.S. immigration authorities to begin releasing detainees held at three facilities in South Florida.
About 1,200 people are being held in the three detention centers in conditions that Cooke said places them at a heightened risk of contracting COVID-19. Social distancing is also not practiced at the other facilities, the Broward Transitional Center in Pompano Beach and the Glades County Detention Center in Moore Haven.
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
New York City funeral home was storing bodies on ice in trucksA New York City funeral home used moving trucks loaded with ice to store the bodies of dozens of coronavirus victims after running out of space, police officials say.
Lire la suite »
Class action suit aims to free all transgender ICE detaineesAs hundreds of coronavirus cases are reported at US immigration facilities, a class action suit is calling for the release of dozens of transgender migrants from what it calls ICE “death traps.”
Lire la suite »
Phish's Page McConnell on Their New Album and the Story of 'Phish Food' Ice Cream“Mass gatherings are the thing you can’t do, and it’s the thing that we do,” he says. “I’m confident we’ll be doing this again in front of people”
Lire la suite »
Two ICE guards die after contracting coronavirus as cases in detention facilities continue to rise'They didn't have to die,' immigration activist and Families Belong Together co-director Paola Luisi said.
Lire la suite »
Antarctica And Greenland Are Losing Thousands Of Gigatons of Ice — That's A LotAntarctica and Greenland have lost more than 5,000 gigatons of ice in the last 16 years, according to results from a new NASA mission. That's enough to fill Lake Michigan.
Lire la suite »