
‘Very scared' immigrants continue to answer ICE summons as protesters target S.F. building
Activists suspected a trap and brought immigration attorneys to counsel confused immigrants and their families who feared violating the terms of their conditional release if they failed to show and arrest if they did appear. So far, the office has remained locked and closed, as protesters chanted and banged drums at the Tehama Street building.
'People were very scared and very panicked,' said Luis Angel Reyes Savalza, a San Francisco deputy public defender. 'It's very irregular to receive a last minute message to report on a weekend. In my 10 years of practicing, I've never heard of reporting on a weekend.'
Savalza and other attorneys, most volunteering their time, said Saturday they assisted more than 50 participants in the Alternatives to Detention or Intensive Supervision Appearance Program. About 7.6 million immigrants participate in the program, which allows them to live at home as their cases are processed, according to ICE figures from October.
Four program participants who received similar text messages were arrested after reporting to the ISAP office in Fresno on Saturday, Savalza said.
'We have a very strong reason to believe that our mobilization and support stopped ICE from detaining people at the office yesterday,' Sanika Mahajan, an organizer from Mission Action, said Sunday.
ICE officials did not immediately return a request for comment Sunday.
The mysterious weekend reporting requests coincided with massive No Kings Day marches and rallies in San Francisco and nationwide in response to a growing opposition movement to President Donald Trump as he pushes to deport immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally.
The text messages, sent in Spanish, told recipients to report to the Tehama Street facility during business hours Saturday or Sunday.
'If you do not present yourself according to instructions it will be considered an infraction,' the messages read.
Savalza said attorneys have counseled immigrants who went to the facility to inform their reporting officer and to verify their arrival with a photo at the location. Immigrants continued to show up Sunday, though it remained locked in the morning.
Protesters circled in front of the front door, chanting and holding signs, such as 'I.C.E. Out the Bay.' Anti-ICE graffiti remained on the walls from the day before.
In the past, ICE protests have focused on more high-profile buildings such as the field office on Sansome Street and the San Francisco Immigration Court on Montgomery Street.
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New York Post
36 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump's ‘Alligator Alcatraz' migrant center: Letters to the Editor — July 7, 2025
The Issue: President Trump's 'Alligator Alcatraz' immigrant detention center in the Everglades. Is that what Dems think a concentration camp is ('Peek into 'Swamp cooler,' ' July 2)? The main component of concentration camps were the gas chambers. Alligator Alcatraz has air conditioning. This is a good place for the ICE rioters to go. I love it. Carol Meltzer Manhattan Forget attractions like Miami Beach and Disney World. Florida has a new tourist destination called 'Alligator Alcatraz.' That's right: The state is spending $450 million a year to lock up every immigrant it can catch; many who have been here for years picking produce, cleaning toilets, changing sheets at our hotels, fixing your roof, washing dishes at your favorite restaurant and doing jobs that no American wants to do. Some states have very patriotic symbols of immigration: New York has the Statue of Liberty that long welcomed immigrants to our shores. Here in the 'Free State of Florida,' we have Alligator Alcatraz. Since we use these immigrants for their services more than any other state, that makes us the nation's biggest pack of hypocrites. John Bonano Gulfport, Fla. So now the weak, cowardly, infantile, looney Democrats are whining about sending illegal immigrant thugs to a prison surrounded by alligators. And the Dems still can't figure out why we don't vote for them. Jake McNicholas Whitestone The newly built Alligator Alcatraz center to detain illegal migrants slated for deportation has been branded by liberals like Joy Reid as a 'concentration camp for brown people.' Reid is a hard-core, far-left radical and this 'concentration camp' label is a reflection of her severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome. Democrats need to have their history refreshed. 'Concentration camps' was the term mostly used during Nazi Germany's brutal rule. They were death camps set up specifically for one use only: the assembly-line murder of 6 million completely innocent Jews. No one came out alive. Plus: The left probably knows, but chooses to ignore, the fact that during World War II it was a Democratic president, Franklin Roosevelt, who incarcerated innocent, law-abiding, American citizens simply because they were of Japanese descent. Max Wisotsky Highland Park, NJ I never thought that I would live long enough to see a US president support a detention facility that holds people without due process in the Florida Everglades surrounded by snakes. Vin Morabito Scranton, Pa. The Issue: The University of Pennsylvania strips transgender swimmer Lia Thomas' past titles. It is completely acceptable for Lia Thomas to be stripped of her titles in female events ('Penn yanks trans titles,' July 2). However, there should be a separate category for transgender women with its own awards and records. If a transgender woman finishes in the top three in an event, she should be entitled to a medal, but it should be in addition to the medals awarded to the top three cisgender women. Everyone should be allowed to compete, but they should not have complete freedom as to which category they compete in. Bruce Couchman Toronto, Canada The actions undertaken by the University of Pennsylvania to nullify its transgender swimmer's titles is nothing less than a tacit expression of what has been known all along: This was a biological man competing against young women in grievously unfair athletic competitions. Anthony Parks Garden City Want to weigh in on today's stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) to letters@ Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy, and style.

Miami Herald
42 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Influencers urged to steer clear of hot topics during US immigration crackdown
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The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Trump's treatment of immigrants is harmful, immoral, un-American
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Critics point out that masks and plain clothes increase the likelihood that suspects will mistake law enforcement officers for criminals and make it more difficult to hold agents accountable for using excessive force. 'What other definition of secret police is there,' Boston Mayor Michelle Wu asked, 'when people are getting snatched off the streets by masked individuals, not being told where they're going, disappeared until somehow someone finds some information?' Although Americans continue to support secure borders, a recent poll revealed that 57 percent of them do not approve of Trump's handling of immigration and ICE tactics. Perhaps for this reason, Trump has tried to have it both ways on immigration. During his 2024 campaign, he promised to arrest 'the worst first.' Last month, Trump declared, 'all of them [i.e. '21 million Illegal Aliens'] have to go home, as do countless other Illegals and Criminals, who will turn us into a bankrupt Third World Nation.' 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Tony Gonzalez (R-Texas) and five other congressional Republicans have called on the administration to prioritize enforcement: 'Every minute that we spend pursuing an individual with a clean record is a minute less that we dedicate to apprehending terrorists or cartel operatives.' How low do poll numbers have to sink, and how many more employers will have to pressure the White House, before the president decides his approach to immigration is bad policy and bad politics? Glenn C. Altschuler is the Thomas and Dorothy Litwin Emeritus Professor of American Studies at Cornell University.