9:29 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice · 5 Comments
14 Feb 2011The jury in the case against Shawna Forde, founder of Minutemen American Defense, for brutally murdering 9 year old Brisenia Flores and her father Raul Flores, is still out.
Real justice would be not having to witness your partner and child killed in front of you because, as I wrote when little Brisenia and her father were taken, this is a casa of violence used against a family viewed as expendable to help further their cause of using violence against those viewed as expendable.
Namely immigrants, Latinos and those perceived as such.
Since Brisenia and her father were taken, things have not gotten better for immigrants, their children, our community. The dehumanization continues, with laws being presented that refer to children as anchors, with laws proposed that want to make it illegal to exist. In the absence of real laws and more importantly, the absence of a real shift that views the humanity of all people, especially women and children, the answer has become more violence. When that violence isn’t coming from someone like Shawna Forde, it comes from the policies itself, that detain, deport, and seek to disenfranchise whole communities by disappearing, one community member at a time.
Justice is a beautiful thing, it resembles the innocence of a 9 year old’s smile, and is worth fighting for in memory of that smile.
9:31 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Justice|Politics · 9 Comments
21 Dec 2010The Deets
This past Saturday The DREAM Act failed to pass a procedural cloture vote 55-41. While most of the votes against moving forward to actually debate and vote on DREAM were Republicans, there were Democrats who also voted against the DREAM Act including Montana Sen. Jon Tester, who called DREAM, “amnesty”. Other Democrats who helped the DREAM Act die in this Senate session are Ben Nelson, NE; Max Baucus, MT; Mark Pryor, AK and Kay Hagan, SC. There were, on the upside, some Republicans who voted for the DREAM Act. Those were Bennett (UT), Lugar (IN), and Murkowski (Alaska).
Let the Finger-Pointing Begin
As mentioned above, Democratic senators blamed the Republican Senators, especially ones who supported DREAM in the past, senators like Sen. Orrin G. Hatch. President Obama blames the GOP. Most pro-immigrant orgs have released statements blaming the Republicans. A handful of bloggers have noted that had the 5 Democrats mentioned above voted yes, the 60 votes mark would have been reached. There is discussion about if the White House pushed hard enough and if progressive organizations outside the immigration and Latinosphere did enough.
What’s Next
Let’s be real, there were/are some who declared the DREAM dead even before this last Senate cloture vote. There were some who felt that the vote was a useless show. The DREAMers are heartbroken and angry and the big question for them is where they go from here as individuals and in the wider movement(s). Even before this last failed vote, Congressman Luis Gutierrez announced pressing Obama to sign a moratorium on detentions and deportations. There is some indication that some DREAMers may push for something like this as well with a focus on those like them, those brought hto the U.S. as children. There are some calls for the renewal of movement towards Comprehensive Immigration Reform.
Legislatively speaking, DREAM and anything remotely looking like CIR doesn’t seem likely. The CIR plans that came out over the last few years, pushed by Democrats were laden with pre-enforcement efforts. Imagine what CIR proposals with a Republican Congress would look like?
Some have set there eyes into the future, 2012, promising to vote out those who didn’t vote for them but in the meantime what?
I am not an undocumented immigrant. I am not an immigrant. My stake and my decision making power is not important here. What is important is working in the streets and in our communities to make sure that the lives of immigrants are protected. I fully expect things to get harder before they get easier. So the challenge I put out there for myself and for others, is what will people do to make sure that immigrant communities and the families within then are protected, educated and healthy? I am not talking policy. Policy will not, can not, and does not save our lives. We will, we can, and we have to.
10:46 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|pennsylvania · 11 Comments
18 Oct 2010
Last week, a jury in a Federal Court in Pennsylvania convicted Derrick Donchak and Brandon Piekarsky of violating the civil rights of Luis Ramirez, when the two former high school football players from Shenandoah, PA beat and kicked the Mexican immigrant to death in July 2008.
From the Cypress Times:
The jury found the defendants guilty of violating the criminal component of the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it a crime to use a person’s race, national origin or ethnicity as a basis to interfere, with violence or threats of violence, with a person’s right to live where he chooses to live. In addition, the jury found that Donchak conspired to, and did in fact, obstruct justice.
The Feds stepped in with Hate Crime charges after the state court allowed Donchak and Piekarsky to get away with murder. Now the two face life in prison. Sentencing will be Jan. 24, 2011.
Is this the road to justice though?
12:37 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|North Carolina · 7 Comments
14 Oct 2010Yesterday the ACLU filed a lawsuit against the United States, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, and a number of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (I.C.E) officers over the wrongful deportation of 33 year old Mark Lytlle, a U.S. citizen of Puerto Rican background who has mental disabilities.
According to the complaint( PDF File), in the fall of 2008, Lyttle was detained by I.C.E. in North Carolina, identified as a Mexican national and subsequently deported to Mexico. Lyttle had no ties to Mexico and spoke no Spanish. For four months he lived on the streets and in the shelters and prisons of Mexico, Honduras, Nicaragua and Guatemala.
From the ACLU :
Lyttle’s entanglement with immigration authorities began when he was about to be released from a North Carolina jail where he was serving a short sentence for inappropriately touching a worker’s backside in a halfway house that serves individuals with mental disorders. Despite having ample evidence that Lyttle was a U.S. citizen – including his social security number, the names of his parents, his sworn statements that he was born in the United States and criminal record checks – officials from the North Carolina Department of Correction referred him to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as an undocumented immigrant whose country of birth was Mexico. Lyttle had never been to Mexico, shared no Mexican heritage, spoke no Spanish and did not claim to be from Mexico.
8:13 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|pennsylvania · 3 Comments
9 Oct 2010The Federal Hate Crime trial against Brandon Piekarsky and Derrick Donchak, accused of beating Luis Ramirez to death because he was Mexican/Latino is underway.
This trial comes after indictments in December of last year that charge the two men and three police officers in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania of violating Luis Ramirez’s civil rights and conspiring to cover up that violation. In the original criminal trial held last summer, Piekarsky was found not guilty of third degree murder, while Donchak was acquitted of aggravated assault.
In other words, they got away with murder and will continue to get away with murder.
8:51 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Justice · 1 Comment
1 Oct 2010Eight undocumented youth and students today will be appearing in a Washington D.C. court on charges stemming from sitting in the offices of Senator Reid (D-NV) and Senator McCain (R-AZ) on July 20th of this year. The eight: Reyna Wences from Illinois, Dulce Matuz from Arizona, Myrna Orozco from Missouri, Tania Unzueta from Illinois, Erika Andiola from Arizona, Nicolas Gonzales from Illinois, Laura Lopez from California, and Isabel Castillo from Virginia were charged with “illegal entry” and if found guilty could face up to a year in prision and $1000 fine. Additionally once the criminal trial is over, Department of Homeland Security could get involved and place the students in deportation proceedings.
The eight are expected to present their own defense including presenting testimony, interrogating witnesses, and making closing arguments.
Via / DREAMActivist
9:15 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice · 1 Comment
29 Sep 2010Today, President Obama, the Department of Homeland Security’s Secretary Janet Napolitano, Attorney General Eric Holder and members of Congress will receive a letter signed by representatives from 578 civil rights, labor, criminal justice, immigration, and faith organizations from around the country demanding that the Obama administration stop the devolution of federal immigration responsibilities to state and local law enforcement. VivirLatino is one of those.
“The Obama administration’s overreliance on local law enforcement agencies to arrest, detain and deport immigrants legitimizes the racial discrimination that persists in the criminal justice system,” said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center. “For all our communities, this marriage of convenience between the immigration system and the criminal justice system will only serve to further deter immigrants from cooperating with the police, and sever the already tenuous ties between law enforcement and vulnerable community members.”
6:36 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|Media|Movies · 1 Comment
29 Sep 2010Here at VivirLatino, We have written about racial profiling, especially the impact it has had on Latino immigrant communities and how racial profiling by both local and federal law enforcement across the United States has helped to foster anti-immigrant violence by civilians.
The Restore Fairness campaign and the Rights Working Group, have just released a documentary short, Face the Truth, showcasing the devastating impact of racial profiling on communities around our country, including the African American, Latino, Arab, Muslim and South Asian communities.
The documentary brings to life a new report by the Rights Working Group released along with 275 local and national partners on the one year anniversary of the Face the Truth campaign to end racial profiling. Both the documentary and the report urge Congress to pass the End Racial Profiling Act (ERPA), highlighted in a Congressional briefing on Thursday, September 30th in Washington D.C.
Face the Truth: Racial Profiling Across America from Breakthrough on Vimeo.
1:19 pm By Maegan La Mala · Justice|New York City · 3 Comments
13 Sep 2010Iman Morales was a loving son, brother and friend.
Please join his family as they remember his life and denounce his death at the hands of the NYPD.
The vigil will mark two years since Iman Morales, a 35-year-old man with mental illness was tased to his death by NYPD officers on September 24th, 2008.
After receiving the tasing order from NYPD Lieutenant Michael Pigott, despite an NYPD procedure forbidding tasing someone on an elevated surface, NYPD Sergeant Nicholas Marchesona tased Iman.
Iman, who stood naked on the ledge of a store front awning 10 feet above ground when he was jolted by the taser, was propelled to his death in front of his horrified mother as her cries for help to couch his fall were repeatedly ignored.
Lieutenant Michael Pigott who gave the taser order took his own life days later. Sergeant Marchesona, who fired the taser that killed Iman was promoted to Detective six weeks after the Killing.As Iman’s family, community members and activists, we are outraged by yet another instance of police brutality against our community and in particular against a person with mental illness. Iman’s death once again highlights the blatant misconduct exhibited by the police when responding to mental health crisis calls and underscores the lack of consideration and empathy not only for communities of color but for their own members of the New York City Police Department.
Please Join Us
Date: Friday, September 24, 2010 6:30pm – 8:00pm
Location: 489 Tompkins Avenue btwn. Decatur St.& Macdonough St. Brooklyn, NY
Directions: C Train to Kingston-Throop Station or the B25 bus to Brooklyn Ave.
Sponsored and organized by the Justice Committee
For more info contact justicecommittee@gmail.com or 212-614-5343
6:12 am By Maegan La Mala · California|Immigration|Justice · Comments Off
11 Sep 2010
Early this year we told you about how law enforcement in parts of California were setting up sobriety checkpoints that seemed to be more about racial profiling than public safety.
Yesterday, the U.S. Justice Department launched an investigation targeting the Southern California City of Bell. The investigation will determine whether city officials violated civil rights of Latino residents by aggressively towing cars and charging residents exorbitant fees to get their vehicles back.
From Southern California Public Radio:
Some Bell residents have complained police officers pulled over motorists and towed their vehicles if the drivers didn’t have licenses. Bell has a large immigrant population, as well as many illegal immigrants.
Image Via / by ChrisDag
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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