Santa Barbara County News and Events

¿Qué sigue para Liam Ramos, de 5 años, y su padre tras su liberación de la custodia federal?

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating

Por Hannah Park

De regreso a casa en Minneapolis después de más de una semana en un centro de inmigración en Texas, el niño ecuatoriano en edad preescolar Liam Conejo Ramos y su padre están tratando de recuperar una sensación de normalidad en medio de casos judiciales en curso y una tormenta nacional, después de que un juez ordenó que fueran liberados de la custodia federal de inmigración, poniendo fin a su detención pero dejando su futuro en los Estados Unidos sin resolver.

“Estamos encantados de que la familia ahora pueda centrarse en estar junta y encontrar algo de paz después de esta experiencia traumática”, dijeron los abogados de la familia en un comunicado.

El niño de 5 años y su padre fueron sacados de la entrada nevada de su casa en un suburbio de Minneapolis a principios de este mes y transportados más de 2092 kilómetros al centro de detención familiar Dilley en el sur de Texas, una medida que provocó indignación después de que circularan imágenes de un agente agarrando la mochila de Spider-Man del niño mientras miraba debajo de un sombrero de conejo de dibujos animados.

La familia entró legalmente a Estados Unidos y solicitó asilo a su llegada en 2024, según declaró su abogado. “Estaban siguiendo todos los protocolos establecidos, tramitando su solicitud de asilo, acudiendo a sus audiencias judiciales, y no representaban ningún peligro ni riesgo de fuga y nunca debieron haber sido detenidos”, declaró el abogado de la familia, Marc Prokosch.

Su liberación se produjo tras un fallo emitido el sábado por el juez federal de distrito Fred Biery, quien ordenó la liberación de Liam y su padre, al determinar que no existía causa probable suficiente para su detención. La decisión se centró estrictamente en la legalidad de su detención y no abordó el estatus migratorio de la familia ni su posibilidad de permanecer en el país.

Esto es lo que viene a continuación mientras el caso de inmigración de la familia avanza en los tribunales:

La administración Trump señaló que podría apelar el fallo que permitió la liberación de Liam y su padre, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias.

El subsecretario de seguridad adjunto Todd Blanche dijo el domingo que el gobierno está revisando sus opciones, aunque se negó a comentar directamente sobre la opinión del juez.

“La ley de inmigración, el cuerpo de leyes de inmigración, es muy diferente de nuestro proceso penal típico debido a la naturaleza administrativa de lo que hacemos todos los días”, dijo Blanche en “This Week” de ABC, y agregó que si bien un juez falló en contra del gobierno, “en la medida en que necesitemos apelar la decisión de ese juez, prometo que lo haremos”.

Blanche enmarcó el caso como parte de una disputa legal más amplia sobre si los migrantes deberían permanecer detenidos mientras sus procesos migratorios avanzan o ser liberados a la espera de su resolución. Sugirió que los tribunales de apelación, y posiblemente la Corte Suprema, podrían finalmente intervenir, describiendo lo que denominó una “división legal” en torno a la detención migratoria.

En su opinión, Biery criticó las órdenes administrativas , que los agentes federales de inmigración suelen utilizar para realizar arrestos y que no requieren la firma de un juez. Biery, que calificó esta práctica como “el zorro que cuida el gallinero”, escribió que la Constitución exige que los arrestos sean autorizados por un funcionario judicial independiente.

Si bien una apelación podría aclarar hasta dónde se extiende la autoridad de detención del gobierno, las cuestiones más amplias pla

Las 5 cosas que debes saber este 2 de febrero

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

Por CNN Español

Bad Bunny hace historia en los Grammy y apunta contra ICE. Trump sacude la política de armas en Estados Unidos. ¿Qué es el virus Nipah, cómo se transmite y dónde se están produciendo brotes? Esto es lo que debes saber para comenzar el día. Primero la verdad.

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🎙 Escucha las 5 cosas de CNN

Laura Fernández será la próxima presidenta de Costa Rica gracias a un triunfo contundente en primera vuelta, incluso mayor de lo que anticipaban la encuestas. Para convertirse en la segunda presidenta en la historia del país, la candidata del oficialista Partido Pueblo Soberano, de derecha, hizo una campaña con un fuerte discurso de “mano dura” como respuesta a la creciente inseguridad que afecta a los costorricenses.

Mira aquí el mapa con las votaciones por provincias

Una semana antes de su presentación en el medio tiempo del Super Bowl LX, y mientras “Debí tirar más fotos” se convertía en el primer álbum en español en ganar la categoría de álbum del año de los Grammy, Bad Bunny aprovechó su tiempo en el escenario para lanzar un contundente mensaje contra la ofensiva inmigratoria en Estados Unidos. “Fuera ICE”, dijo el artista, y luego agregó: “No somos salvajes. No somos animales. No somos extraterrestres. Somos humanos y somos estadounidenses”.

From A to Z, here’s everything you need to know about the history of the Super Bowl

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

By Don Riddell, CNN

(CNN) — Super Bowl LX is almost upon us, and the coming clash between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks is fascinating. Few would have expected either team to make it this far; both were given odds of greater than 50-1 at the start of the season and neither quarterback, Sam Darnold nor Drake Maye, had won so much as a playoff game before this campaign.

Last season, the Patriots lost 13 games. No team has ever recovered so quickly to make the Super Bowl, and if they win again on Sunday, they’ll become the first team to win it seven times.

History will also be made in the halftime show, as Bad Bunny becomes the first Latin male performer.

Now in its 60th year, this is one of the greatest events in all of sports. So, to get you in the mood for the week of build-up ahead, here’s a A-Z guide to the history and traditions of the Super Bowl.

A is for Anthem

There is no sporting event anywhere in the world that embraces pageantry quite like the Super Bowl, and nowhere else is “The Star-Spangled Banner” guaranteed an audience of over 100 million Americans. The performance is always intensely scrutinized, just in case somebody drops a note or flubs a line of the national anthem. Billy Joel has sung it twice; 1930s and ‘40s actor Pat O’Brien chose to speak the words at Super Bowl IV in 1970; and Whitney Houston’s 1991 rendition during the Gulf War is considered the best, even though she later revealed that it was lip-synced. Angelic.

B is for Bills

Nobody knows heartbreak like the Buffalo Bills, who played in four consecutive Super Bowls and lost them all. The Bills have never won the Super Bowl, and they’ve never returned to football’s biggest stage since their last, fateful appearance in 1994. Brutal.

C is for Commercials

There’s something for everybody on Super Bowl Sunday, and the commercial breaks have become a key element of the entertainment package. Some of the ads are so eagerly anticipated that there are even trailers to promote them.

Leading brands will plan their annual marketing campaigns around the game and will pay handsomely to display their wares in the world’s biggest shop window. NBC says they sold all their Super Bowl LX ad space before the season had kicked off. With a 30-second slot selling for an average of $8 million, that’s $266,667 per second. Costly.

D is for Defense

They say, “Offense wins games, defense wins championships,” and that was never truer than Super Bowl XII when the Dallas Cowboys beat Denver 27-10. The Cowboys’ defensive linemen Harvey Martin and Randy White made three sacks between them, leading a defense that forced eight turnovers and limited Denver to 156 total yards. They were so good that it’s the only time two MVPs have been named in one game. Doomsday.

E is for Elvis

Yes, Elvis really did play the Super Bowl halftime show; no, not that one. In 1989, the Joe Robbie Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, became the stage for a giant magic trick at halftime, with “Elvis Presto” holding court. The show was broadcast in 3D, viewers who had purchased promotional packs of soda had the glasses to watch it. Remarkably the performer slated to play Elvis quit the gig to shoot a Lee jeans commercial, so Alex Cole stepped in with just three days’ notice for the performance of a lifetime. Cole went out on top, he later said it was the last time he ever performed on a stage. Entrancing.

F is for Forty Nin

Speaker Johnson must sell conservatives on funding deal Democrats pushed for — or risk lengthy government shutdown

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

By Sarah Ferris, Aileen Graef, CNN

(CNN) — House Speaker Mike Johnson is back in Washington this week with a tough ask for his fellow Republicans: accept a funding deal that Democrats pushed for or risk another painful, prolonged government shutdown.

Two days after a partial lapse in federal funding, the House returns Monday to prepare a vote that many GOP lawmakers are already dreading. Republicans are under pressure to give final approval to a deal between President Donald Trump and Senate Democrats that temporarily extends Department of Homeland Security funding for two weeks — alongside a broader, full-year spending deal — so the two parties can negotiate over Democrats’ demands to rein in Immigration and Customs Enforcement tactics.

The final vote is expected as early as Tuesday, which would allow federal workers to avoid feeling any major effects of the shutdown.

But even with Trump endorsing the package, several GOP hardliners are revolting against the idea. One, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, has been adamant that she will not support any funding deal if it doesn’t include a strict voter ID law — something Senate Democrats would not support.

The push by Democrats to enact reforms to ICE practices comes after the recent killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. The fact that the White House was willing to cut the deal with Senate Democrats underscores the Trump administration’s desire to avoid another drawn-out federal funding fight. It also served as a tacit acknowledgement of the political risks of ignoring the public outcry in the wake of the killings.

As GOP senators left town Friday after passing the deal, many were confident their House counterparts would accept the bill, pointing to the White House’s own approval.

“The president saying, ‘This is the best that we can do’ and that it’s really important to get government going once again, I think that’s going to carry a lot of weight with our conservative friends in the House,” Sen. Mike Rounds said Friday. He stressed that Republicans would have their own DHS demands during negotiations, such as ending so-called sanctuary cities, where local officials do not enforce certain federal immigration laws.

“I just can’t imagine the folks in the House are going to say, ‘No we’re going to shut down government,’ just simply because we’re trying to find a path forward where we can actually address sanctuary cities as well,” the South Dakota Republican said.

Every vote matters in Johnson’s slim majority. The Louisiana Republican can afford to lose only two defections on a party-line vote. That margin will soon be even lower: House Democrats elected another member from Texas — Christian Menefee — in a special election over the weekend. Once Menefee is sworn in, Johnson can afford only a single defection.

Top House Democrats, for their part, have communicated to Johnson they are not inclined to help him advance the deal that Trump made with Senate Democrats.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told Johnson during a call Saturday that Democrats won’t help Republicans pass the bill if they attempted to fast-track the measure Monday, according to two sources familiar with the call. After that move, Republican leaders decid

Justice Department expected to ramp up efforts to deliver on Trump’s ‘weaponization’ priorities

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

By Paula Reid, Casey Gannon, CNN

(CNN) — Justice Department officials are expected to meet Monday to discuss how to reenergize probes that are considered a top priority for President Donald Trump — reviewing the actions of officials who investigated him, according to a source familiar with the plan.

Almost immediately after Pam Bondi stepped into her role as attorney general last year, she established a “Weaponization Working Group” to review law enforcement actions taken under the Biden administration for any examples of what she described as “politicized justice.”

She said the group would focus on investigations into Trump conducted by former special counsel Jack Smith and his staff; Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and New York Attorney General Letitia James; and any “improper” investigations into the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

But after a year, the group has not produced anything publicly.

In recent weeks, Trump has been pressuring Justice Department officials for results in these and other investigations, recently admonishing a group of US attorneys for failing to deliver on cases he wants brought.

The Weaponization Working Group is now expected to start meeting daily with the goal of producing results in the next two months, according to the person familiar with the plan.

Throughout her time as attorney general, Bondi has repeatedly criticized the Biden administration for alleged political weaponization while, at the same time, federal prosecutors brought investigations and indictments against Trump’s political adversaries.

“I took office with two main goals: to end the weaponization of justice and return the department to its core mission of fighting violent crime,” Bondi told lawmakers in October.

A Justice Department spokesperson on Sunday declined to provide specifics around the meetings, noting the agency does not discuss ongoing investigations, but acknowledged the efforts of the Weaponization Working Group continue.

“The Justice Department is actively looking into the areas outlined in Attorney General Bondi’s Day One memo,” the spokesperson said. “The Weaponization Working Group is diligently working to restore integrity to the Department of Justice and is utilizing resources across the entire agency to fulfill this effort.”

Goals of the group

Bondi established the Working Weaponization Group last February after Trump issued an executive order titled “Ending the Weaponization of The Federal Government.”

She signed a memo outlining the purpose of the group that was sent to department employees on her first day on the job.

The memo stated the group will conduct a review of “the activities of all departments and agencies exercising civil or criminal enforcement authority of the United States over the last four years,” and work to find instances in which practices were “designed to achieve political objectives or other improper aims.”

The memo outlined seven areas that would be examined by the Weaponization Working Group. In addition to the Trump cases, it is tasked with looking at other issues that Republicans raised during the Biden administration, including allegations of discrimination against Catholics, a Biden-era memo about protecting school board members against threats from parents, protections for whistleblowers, and prosecutions against anti-abortion demonstrators.

The group was at

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