US releases immigrant families, won't say how many

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration has released into the U.S. an untold number of immigrant families caught traveling illegally from Central America in recent months — and although the government knows how many it’s released, it won’t say publicly.

Senior U.S. officials directly familiar with the issue, including at the Homeland Security Department and White House, have so far dodged the answer on at least seven occasions over two weeks, alternately saying that they did not know the figure or didn’t have it immediately at hand. “We will get back to you,” the Homeland Security deputy secretary said Friday.

The figure is widely believed to exceed 40,000 since October. It’s believed to be slightly below the roughly 52,000 children caught traveling illegally from Central America over the same period, an extraordinary increase since last year that is driving a humanitarian crisis at the border.

Despite promises to the contrary, this is how it looks when the image-conscious Obama administration doesn’t want to reveal politically sensitive information that could influence an important policy debate. The mystery figure is significant because the number of families caught crossing from Central America represents a large share of new immigration cases that will further strain the overwhelmed U.S. immigration courts system. It also affects federal enforcement strategy, such as where to deploy the border patrol, and political calculations about whether Congress or the White House will relax American immigration laws or regulations before upcoming congressional elections in November.

Most of the immigrant families are from Honduras, El Salvador or Guatemala and cannot be immediately repatriated, so the government has been releasing them into the U.S. interior and telling them to report within 15 days to the nearest U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement offices. Despite promises for better transparency on immigration issues, the administration has been unwilling to say how many immigrant families it’s released — hundreds or thousands — or how many of those subsequently reported back to the government after 15 days as directed.

The government has limited options for detaining families caught crossing the border illegally, usually mothers with children. It has space for fewer than 100 family members at its only detention center for them, in Berks County, Pennsylvania. The administration announced Friday that it will open new detention facilities for immigrant families, including a 700-bed facility at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Artesia, New Mexico, which is home to the Border Patrol’s training academy. It didn’t say when that new immigration jail would open or how many others it will build.

The administration did not immediately respond Monday to renewed questions about why it won’t reveal the figure.

Here are details of at least seven occasions since June 9 when senior U.S. officials declined to say how many immigrant families the government has released in recent months:

—June 9: A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity during a conference call, told reporters there was no information available about the number of adults with children who were released.

—June 10: On Capitol Hill for a congressional briefing, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told an Associated Press reporter in response to a question about the figure: “I have no news for you.” He urged AP to ask the department’s public affairs office, which did not answer roughly a dozen requests for the information.

—June 12: At a news conference about immigration, the Homeland Security secretary did not respond to a shouted question about the number of immigrants released.

—June 13: The Customs and Border Protection commissioner, Gil Kerlikowske, told the AP that he didn’t know how many immigrants his agency released. He said the administration was compiling the data.

—June 13: During a visit to Chicago, Johnson told the AP he didn’t have the information with him.

—Friday: On a conference call, the Homeland Security deputy secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, said, “We will get back to you with respect to the precise numbers on the notices to appear.” He added later: “I don’t have the response to the data question that you asked.”

—Friday: When reporters asked White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest about the releases during a news conference, he responded: “I don’t have those numbers here … but what I do have is a clear commitment from this administration to deal with what is an emerging humanitarian situation.”

___

Follow Alicia A. Caldwell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/acaldwellap

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US releases immigrant families, won't say how many

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration has released into the U.S. an untold number of immigrant families caught traveling illegally from Central America in recent months — and although the government knows how many it’s released, it won’t say publicly.

Senior U.S. officials directly familiar with the issue, including at the Homeland Security Department and White House, have so far dodged the answer on at least seven occasions over two weeks, alternately saying that they did not know the figure or didn’t have it immediately at hand. “We will get back to you,” the Homeland Security deputy secretary said Friday.

The figure is widely believed to exceed 40,000 since October. It’s believed to be slightly below the roughly 52,000 children caught traveling illegally from Central America over the same period, an extraordinary increase since last year that is driving a humanitarian crisis at the border.

Despite promises to the contrary, this is how it looks when the image-conscious Obama administration doesn’t want to reveal politically sensitive information that could influence an important policy debate. The mystery figure is significant because the number of families caught crossing from Central America represents a large share of new immigration cases that will further strain the overwhelmed U.S. immigration courts system. It also affects federal enforcement strategy, such as where to deploy the border patrol, and political calculations about whether Congress or the White House will relax American immigration laws or regulations before upcoming congressional elections in November.

Most of the immigrant families are from Honduras, El Salvador or Guatemala and cannot be immediately repatriated, so the government has been releasing them into the U.S. interior and telling them to report within 15 days to the nearest U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement offices. Despite promises for better transparency on immigration issues, the administration has been unwilling to say how many immigrant families it’s released — hundreds or thousands — or how many of those subsequently reported back to the government after 15 days as directed.

The government has limited options for detaining families caught crossing the border illegally, usually mothers with children. It has space for fewer than 100 family members at its only detention center for them, in Berks County, Pennsylvania. The administration announced Friday that it will open new detention facilities for immigrant families, including a 700-bed facility at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Artesia, New Mexico, which is home to the Border Patrol’s training academy. It didn’t say when that new immigration jail would open or how many others it will build.

The administration did not immediately respond Monday to renewed questions about why it won’t reveal the figure.

Here are details of at least seven occasions since June 9 when senior U.S. officials declined to say how many immigrant families the government has released in recent months:

—June 9: A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity during a conference call, told reporters there was no information available about the number of adults with children who were released.

—June 10: On Capitol Hill for a congressional briefing, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told an Associated Press reporter in response to a question about the figure: “I have no news for you.” He urged AP to ask the department’s public affairs office, which did not answer roughly a dozen requests for the information.

—June 12: At a news conference about immigration, the Homeland Security secretary did not respond to a shouted question about the number of immigrants released.

—June 13: The Customs and Border Protection commissioner, Gil Kerlikowske, told the AP that he didn’t know how many immigrants his agency released. He said the administration was compiling the data.

—June 13: During a visit to Chicago, Johnson told the AP he didn’t have the information with him.

—Friday: On a conference call, the Homeland Security deputy secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, said, “We will get back to you with respect to the precise numbers on the notices to appear.” He added later: “I don’t have the response to the data question that you asked.”

—Friday: When reporters asked White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest about the releases during a news conference, he responded: “I don’t have those numbers here … but what I do have is a clear commitment from this administration to deal with what is an emerging humanitarian situation.”

___

Follow Alicia A. Caldwell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/acaldwellap

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US releases immigrant families, won't say how many

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration has released into the U.S. an untold number of immigrant families caught traveling illegally from Central America in recent months — and although the government knows how many it’s released, it won’t say publicly.

Senior U.S. officials directly familiar with the issue, including at the Homeland Security Department and White House, have so far dodged the answer on at least seven occasions over two weeks, alternately saying that they did not know the figure or didn’t have it immediately at hand. “We will get back to you,” the Homeland Security deputy secretary said Friday.

The figure is widely believed to exceed 40,000 since October. It’s believed to be slightly below the roughly 52,000 children caught traveling illegally from Central America over the same period, an extraordinary increase since last year that is driving a humanitarian crisis at the border.

Despite promises to the contrary, this is how it looks when the image-conscious Obama administration doesn’t want to reveal politically sensitive information that could influence an important policy debate. The mystery figure is significant because the number of families caught crossing from Central America represents a large share of new immigration cases that will further strain the overwhelmed U.S. immigration courts system. It also affects federal enforcement strategy, such as where to deploy the border patrol, and political calculations about whether Congress or the White House will relax American immigration laws or regulations before upcoming congressional elections in November.

Most of the immigrant families are from Honduras, El Salvador or Guatemala and cannot be immediately repatriated, so the government has been releasing them into the U.S. interior and telling them to report within 15 days to the nearest U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement offices. Despite promises for better transparency on immigration issues, the administration has been unwilling to say how many immigrant families it’s released — hundreds or thousands — or how many of those subsequently reported back to the government after 15 days as directed.

The government has limited options for detaining families caught crossing the border illegally, usually mothers with children. It has space for fewer than 100 family members at its only detention center for them, in Berks County, Pennsylvania. The administration announced Friday that it will open new detention facilities for immigrant families, including a 700-bed facility at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Artesia, New Mexico, which is home to the Border Patrol’s training academy. It didn’t say when that new immigration jail would open or how many others it will build.

The administration did not immediately respond Monday to renewed questions about why it won’t reveal the figure.

Here are details of at least seven occasions since June 9 when senior U.S. officials declined to say how many immigrant families the government has released in recent months:

—June 9: A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity during a conference call, told reporters there was no information available about the number of adults with children who were released.

—June 10: On Capitol Hill for a congressional briefing, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told an Associated Press reporter in response to a question about the figure: “I have no news for you.” He urged AP to ask the department’s public affairs office, which did not answer roughly a dozen requests for the information.

—June 12: At a news conference about immigration, the Homeland Security secretary did not respond to a shouted question about the number of immigrants released.

—June 13: The Customs and Border Protection commissioner, Gil Kerlikowske, told the AP that he didn’t know how many immigrants his agency released. He said the administration was compiling the data.

—June 13: During a visit to Chicago, Johnson told the AP he didn’t have the information with him.

—Friday: On a conference call, the Homeland Security deputy secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, said, “We will get back to you with respect to the precise numbers on the notices to appear.” He added later: “I don’t have the response to the data question that you asked.”

—Friday: When reporters asked White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest about the releases during a news conference, he responded: “I don’t have those numbers here … but what I do have is a clear commitment from this administration to deal with what is an emerging humanitarian situation.”

___

Follow Alicia A. Caldwell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/acaldwellap

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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying

An Iraqi immigrant was sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison for the 2012 bludgeon slaying of his wife in their El Cajon home.

Kassim Al-Himidi, 50, left a note near the body to mislead investigators into thinking that the fatal beating of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, 32, was an anti-immigrant hate crime, prosecutors said.

Still loudly protesting his innocence, Al-Himidi told Judge William McGrath at the sentencing Monday that he would prefer to be executed so his body could be returned to his native Iraq.

Documents found in the family vehicle indicated that Alawadi planned to divorce her husband and move to Texas to be with relatives.

The couple had fled Iraq to escape Saddam Hussein’s regime in the mid-1990s. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia for two years they went to Dearborn, Mich., and then to El Cajon. East of San Diego, El Cajon has a large Middle Eastern immigrant population.

Al-Himidi did not testify during the April trial in the El Cajon branch of the San Diego County Superior Court.  He wept openly at times and followed the proceeding with the help of an Arabic translator. He screamed in protest when the jury’s guilty verdict was read.

Alawadi, the mother of five children, was bludgeoned, possibly with a tire iron, according to prosecutors. She was found by her daughter and rushed to a hospital. She was taken off life support three days later.

The note found near Alawadi’s body, referring to the family as terrorists and containing the warning “this is my country. Go back to yours terrorists,” was found by the couple’s teenage daughter Fatima. Al-Himidi insisted that the attack occurred while he was taking the couple’s four younger children to school.

During the trial, prosecutors introduced video from security cameras that contradicted Al-Himidi’s version of what time he took his children to school. A security video also suggested that a vehicle like Al-Himidi’s was parked around the corner from the family home minutes before the attack.

The investigation took seven months before charges were brought against Al-Himidi. Al-Himidi accompanied his wife’s body for burial in Iraq in the holy city of Najaf, where her father is a prominent Shia cleric.

The Iraqi government urged the U.S. to find the killer and bring him to justice.

Follow @LATsandiego for the latest news from the region.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying

An Iraqi immigrant was sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison for the 2012 bludgeon slaying of his wife in their El Cajon home.

Kassim Al-Himidi, 50, left a note near the body to mislead investigators into thinking that the fatal beating of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, 32, was an anti-immigrant hate crime, prosecutors said.

Still loudly protesting his innocence, Al-Himidi told Judge William McGrath at the sentencing Monday that he would prefer to be executed so his body could be returned to his native Iraq.

Documents found in the family vehicle indicated that Alawadi planned to divorce her husband and move to Texas to be with relatives.

The couple had fled Iraq to escape Saddam Hussein’s regime in the mid-1990s. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia for two years they went to Dearborn, Mich., and then to El Cajon. East of San Diego, El Cajon has a large Middle Eastern immigrant population.

Al-Himidi did not testify during the April trial in the El Cajon branch of the San Diego County Superior Court.  He wept openly at times and followed the proceeding with the help of an Arabic translator. He screamed in protest when the jury’s guilty verdict was read.

Alawadi, the mother of five children, was bludgeoned, possibly with a tire iron, according to prosecutors. She was found by her daughter and rushed to a hospital. She was taken off life support three days later.

The note found near Alawadi’s body, referring to the family as terrorists and containing the warning “this is my country. Go back to yours terrorists,” was found by the couple’s teenage daughter Fatima. Al-Himidi insisted that the attack occurred while he was taking the couple’s four younger children to school.

During the trial, prosecutors introduced video from security cameras that contradicted Al-Himidi’s version of what time he took his children to school. A security video also suggested that a vehicle like Al-Himidi’s was parked around the corner from the family home minutes before the attack.

The investigation took seven months before charges were brought against Al-Himidi. Al-Himidi accompanied his wife’s body for burial in Iraq in the holy city of Najaf, where her father is a prominent Shia cleric.

The Iraqi government urged the U.S. to find the killer and bring him to justice.

Follow @LATsandiego for the latest news from the region.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying

An Iraqi immigrant was sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison for the 2012 bludgeon slaying of his wife in their El Cajon home.

Kassim Al-Himidi, 50, left a note near the body to mislead investigators into thinking that the fatal beating of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, 32, was an anti-immigrant hate crime, prosecutors said.

Still loudly protesting his innocence, Al-Himidi told Judge William McGrath at the sentencing Monday that he would prefer to be executed so his body could be returned to his native Iraq.

Documents found in the family vehicle indicated that Alawadi planned to divorce her husband and move to Texas to be with relatives.

The couple had fled Iraq to escape Saddam Hussein’s regime in the mid-1990s. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia for two years they went to Dearborn, Mich., and then to El Cajon. East of San Diego, El Cajon has a large Middle Eastern immigrant population.

Al-Himidi did not testify during the April trial in the El Cajon branch of the San Diego County Superior Court.  He wept openly at times and followed the proceeding with the help of an Arabic translator. He screamed in protest when the jury’s guilty verdict was read.

Alawadi, the mother of five children, was bludgeoned, possibly with a tire iron, according to prosecutors. She was found by her daughter and rushed to a hospital. She was taken off life support three days later.

The note found near Alawadi’s body, referring to the family as terrorists and containing the warning “this is my country. Go back to yours terrorists,” was found by the couple’s teenage daughter Fatima. Al-Himidi insisted that the attack occurred while he was taking the couple’s four younger children to school.

During the trial, prosecutors introduced video from security cameras that contradicted Al-Himidi’s version of what time he took his children to school. A security video also suggested that a vehicle like Al-Himidi’s was parked around the corner from the family home minutes before the attack.

The investigation took seven months before charges were brought against Al-Himidi. Al-Himidi accompanied his wife’s body for burial in Iraq in the holy city of Najaf, where her father is a prominent Shia cleric.

The Iraqi government urged the U.S. to find the killer and bring him to justice.

Follow @LATsandiego for the latest news from the region.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying

An Iraqi immigrant was sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison for the 2012 bludgeon slaying of his wife in their El Cajon home.

Kassim Al-Himidi, 50, left a note near the body to mislead investigators into thinking that the fatal beating of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, 32, was an anti-immigrant hate crime, prosecutors said.

Still loudly protesting his innocence, Al-Himidi told Judge William McGrath at the sentencing Monday that he would prefer to be executed so his body could be returned to his native Iraq.

Documents found in the family vehicle indicated that Alawadi planned to divorce her husband and move to Texas to be with relatives.

The couple had fled Iraq to escape Saddam Hussein’s regime in the mid-1990s. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia for two years they went to Dearborn, Mich., and then to El Cajon. East of San Diego, El Cajon has a large Middle Eastern immigrant population.

Al-Himidi did not testify during the April trial in the El Cajon branch of the San Diego County Superior Court.  He wept openly at times and followed the proceeding with the help of an Arabic translator. He screamed in protest when the jury’s guilty verdict was read.

Alawadi, the mother of five children, was bludgeoned, possibly with a tire iron, according to prosecutors. She was found by her daughter and rushed to a hospital. She was taken off life support three days later.

The note found near Alawadi’s body, referring to the family as terrorists and containing the warning “this is my country. Go back to yours terrorists,” was found by the couple’s teenage daughter Fatima. Al-Himidi insisted that the attack occurred while he was taking the couple’s four younger children to school.

During the trial, prosecutors introduced video from security cameras that contradicted Al-Himidi’s version of what time he took his children to school. A security video also suggested that a vehicle like Al-Himidi’s was parked around the corner from the family home minutes before the attack.

The investigation took seven months before charges were brought against Al-Himidi. Al-Himidi accompanied his wife’s body for burial in Iraq in the holy city of Najaf, where her father is a prominent Shia cleric.

The Iraqi government urged the U.S. to find the killer and bring him to justice.

Follow @LATsandiego for the latest news from the region.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying
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Iraqi immigrant asks to be executed, gets prison for wife's slaying

An Iraqi immigrant was sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison for the 2012 bludgeon slaying of his wife in their El Cajon home.

Kassim Al-Himidi, 50, left a note near the body to mislead investigators into thinking that the fatal beating of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, 32, was an anti-immigrant hate crime, prosecutors said.

Still loudly protesting his innocence, Al-Himidi told Judge William McGrath at the sentencing Monday that he would prefer to be executed so his body could be returned to his native Iraq.

Documents found in the family vehicle indicated that Alawadi planned to divorce her husband and move to Texas to be with relatives.

The couple had fled Iraq to escape Saddam Hussein’s regime in the mid-1990s. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia for two years they went to Dearborn, Mich., and then to El Cajon. East of San Diego, El Cajon has a large Middle Eastern immigrant population.

Al-Himidi did not testify during the April trial in the El Cajon branch of the San Diego County Superior Court.  He wept openly at times and followed the proceeding with the help of an Arabic translator. He screamed in protest when the jury’s guilty verdict was read.

Alawadi, the mother of five children, was bludgeoned, possibly with a tire iron, according to prosecutors. She was found by her daughter and rushed to a hospital. She was taken off life support three days later.

The note found near Alawadi’s body, referring to the family as terrorists and containing the warning “this is my country. Go back to yours terrorists,” was found by the couple’s teenage daughter Fatima. Al-Himidi insisted that the attack occurred while he was taking the couple’s four younger children to school.

During the trial, prosecutors introduced video from security cameras that contradicted Al-Himidi’s version of what time he took his children to school. A security video also suggested that a vehicle like Al-Himidi’s was parked around the corner from the family home minutes before the attack.

The investigation took seven months before charges were brought against Al-Himidi. Al-Himidi accompanied his wife’s body for burial in Iraq in the holy city of Najaf, where her father is a prominent Shia cleric.

The Iraqi government urged the U.S. to find the killer and bring him to justice.

Follow @LATsandiego for the latest news from the region.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Aurora looking to create Immigrant Welcome Center

A group of immigrant students works through a citizenship class. One in five people of the estimated 340,000 who live in Aurora were born in another

AURORA — The city of Aurora, Aurora Public Schools and other agencies are in talks to open an Immigrant Welcome Center in the city.

Discussions are still in the early stages, but the coalition hopes to have a plan in place by later this summer.

Officials say the need is real: One in five people of the estimated 340,000 who live in Aurora were born in another country; and the Ethiopian community is estimated at 30,000 in northwest Aurora and east Denver.

Aurora is also the landing spot for refugees who flee other countries and come to Colorado to start a new life.

“We are really trying to find a facility to meet the needs of the immigrant community,” said Roberto Venegas, an Aurora assistant city manager who is coordinating the city’s efforts regarding an Immigrant Welcome Center.

A welcome center would likely be a one-stop shop, where immigrants coming to the area can get help or information in a variety of areas, such as housing, employment and education.

While no facility has yet been chosen, one possibility is the centralized admissions office for APS on Peoria Street and East 11th Avenue. That would be near where many immigrants and refugees live and would make for easy access for those who do not have vehicles.

Georgia Duran, spokeswoman for the school district, said it is too early to tell whether the center would be located there or somewhere else.

That building, though, has been accessible for parents in the past and could work for a new Immigrant Welcome Center.

“We’ve looked at a couple of facilities,” Duran said. “We’re exploring some options there, but it’s very premature.”

The welcome center is part of a larger effort by Aurora city officials to reach out and embrace the large immigrant population. Proponents of creating an Immigrant Refugee Commission in the city found that a large percentage of local immigrants feel isolated and underrepresented in the community.

However, the city does have an International Roundtable to foster collaboration with the international community in Aurora and the metro area. Also, for the first time last year, the city held an international flag ceremony at the Aurora Municipal Center, displaying the flags of 25 countries inside the lobby.

Potential partners for a welcome center have not been identified, and there also is the issue of funding a center.

Even so, Aurora spokeswoman Kim Stuart said the center is part of the city’s long-term goal of embracing its immigrant community.

“This is a very important part of our community and part of the richness of Aurora,” Stuart said of the growing immigrant community in the city.

Jane-Frances Echeozo was born in Nigeria but has lived in Aurora for more than 10 years. She is one of several foreign-born people who sit on the Aurora International Roundtable. She applauds the city for reaching out to its immigrant community and says a welcome center is a good step in that direction.

She added: “It is needed because there is such a diverse culture here.”

Carlos Illescas: 303-954-1175, cillescas@denverpost.com or twitter.com/cillescasdp

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