Indiana, District 5

Indiana, District 5

Former Dean of Yale Law School Says to Reject Immigrants is to Reject 'Exactly the Thing That Makes Americans Unique' 

Former Dean of Yale Law School Says to Reject Immigrants is to Reject ‘Exactly the Thing That Makes Americans Unique’ 

Harold Hongju Koh knows exactly how much the children of immigrants are capable of achieving in a short period of time. “Through educational opportunities, [they] have extraordinary upward mobility in one generation,” says Koh. “My own family is proof of that.” His parents, who met after coming to the United States… Read More

How the Immigration Court Backlog Would Skyrocket Under Donald Trump’s Plan

How the Immigration Court Backlog Would Skyrocket Under Donald Trump’s Plan

For more than a decade, the immigration court system has struggled with an enormous backlog. The latest figures from  (TRAC) record the backlog at an all-time high of 521,676 as of the end of October, the first month in Fiscal Year (FY) 2017. The data release coincides with… Read More

When a 5th Grader Acts Out, a Teacher Finds Out Why: His Mother Had Been Deported

When a 5th Grader Acts Out, a Teacher Finds Out Why: His Mother Had Been Deported

Laura Kohl has spent the last two decades teaching elementary and middle school students, but it was one fifth grader who motivated her to become active with the North County Immigration Task Force (NCITF). The student had become hostile to her and had begun to bully other children, and she… Read More

With Young Workers Leaving, Immigrants Are Key to Growing Maine’s Economy, Says Chamber President

With Young Workers Leaving, Immigrants Are Key to Growing Maine’s Economy, Says Chamber President

As president of the Maine Chamber of Commerce, Dana F. Connors serves as the voice for 5,000 businesses from across all sectors and regions. “Our emphasis is on those policies and legislative issues that will help grow our economy and improve the business climate with a focus on creating and… Read More

Morales Group Founder Knows Immigrants Are Vital to Filling the Indianapolis Labor Shortage

Morales Group Founder Knows Immigrants Are Vital to Filling the Indianapolis Labor Shortage

The headquarters of the Morales Group is decorated with flags of 27 countries, and the word “Welcome” written in 27 languages. It’s a reminder of the many thousands of people, from around the world that the Indianapolis-based staffing agency has helped to begin new careers in America. The Morales Group,… Read More

For Successful Executive, Immigration is a Part of the Family History

For Successful Executive, Immigration is a Part of the Family History

Today, Sunny Lu Williams is a successful corporate executive who has brokered deals with Google and HTC, but she still remembers the day many years ago when her grandfather—a Chinese rice-farmer and later military man—spread some colorful banknotes on the table in front of her. The crumpled New Taiwan dollars… Read More

1986 Immigration Reform Allowed This Mexican Immigrant to Capture his American Dream

1986 Immigration Reform Allowed This Mexican Immigrant to Capture his American Dream

Oscar Gutierrez is Controller of one of Indiana’s wealthiest cities and has an impressive record of service in the U.S. military. And yet, as a child, he never wanted to come to America. His childhood in Toluca, a bustling town near Mexico City, was comfortably middle class, thanks to the… Read More

Tennessee Needs Carlos

Tennessee Needs Carlos

Tennessee needs more doctors, and college is first step to med school. But undocumented students who graduate from Tennessee high schools don’t qualify for in-state tuition. Let’s give them the chance to pay their way to college. Let’s give Carlos his shot at the American Dream. Read More

DHS Begins Review of Deportation Cases, Issues Awaited Prosecutorial Discretion Guidelines

DHS Begins Review of Deportation Cases, Issues Awaited Prosecutorial Discretion Guidelines

Today, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) directed ICE attorneys to begin a review process of current immigration cases pending before immigration courts in order to close or dismiss those cases warranting prosecutorial discretion. The attorneys also received additional guidance on how to apply discretion in certain low priority cases. At the same time, DHS announced new training modules for all ICE field agents on prosecutorial discretion. The package of initiatives are a follow up to ICE Director John Morton’s June 17th memo which describes how, when, and why ICE officials should exercise prosecutorial discretion in immigration cases. Read More

Prosecutorial Discretion Survey Demonstrates Need for More Training, Consistency Across ICE Field Offices

Prosecutorial Discretion Survey Demonstrates Need for More Training, Consistency Across ICE Field Offices

It’s been almost six months since ICE Director John Morton issued new guidelines on prosecutorial discretion to help ICE agents, attorneys and other officials distinguish between high priority cases (national security threats and serious criminals) and low priority cases (DREAM Act students). A recent survey released by the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) and the American Immigration Council takes a look at how well those guidelines are translating into actual practice at ICE offices around the country. While the results show that prosecutorial discretion was applied in some cases, the majority of cases show that ICE field offices are confused and hesitant to make decisions, demonstrating the need for more guidance and training from DHS headquarters. Read More

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