
Chinese Woman Detained in Arizona Border Station Dies by Suicide
The woman had been taken into custody in California after officers determined that she had overstayed a visitor visa, Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington said in a statement, citing the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency. She was transferred to a patrol station in Yuma, Ariz., the statement said.
Ms. Jayapal, a ranking member of the House subcommittee overseeing immigration, said initial reports from the agency had raised concerns about whether officers had properly conducted welfare checks on the woman. While welfare checks were logged, officials at the agency investigating the death could not verify whether the checks had actually happened, Ms. Jayapal said.
'There is no excuse for why agents cannot verify if some of the necessary welfare checks occurred — or why some of the documented welfare checks were incorrectly reported,' Ms. Jayapal said, adding that she was concerned about the conditions in facilities where immigrants are detained.
'Another preventable death only increases that concern,' she said.
The woman had been in the country on a B-1/B-2 visa, according to the statement, a temporary visa for people visiting the United States for tourism or business.
The Customs and Border Protection agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for the agency confirmed the death of a 52-year-old woman to The Tucson Sentinel, and said that the woman had become 'unresponsive in a cell' at the Yuma Border Patrol Station.
Border Patrol staff provided medical assistance to the woman, the spokesman said in a statement to The Sentinel, and emergency medical services transported her to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead. An office overseeing the agency's conduct was investigating the incident, the statement said, and the agency also reported the death to the Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General.
The exact circumstances around the woman's initial detainment were not immediately clear. Border Patrol officials for the Yuma sector, which includes parts of California and Arizona, said last week on social media that they had arrested two Chinese people, one of them a 52-year-old woman, in Needles, Calif., on March 26.
According to the post, agents searched a minivan during a vehicle stop and discovered that two Chinese nationals were 'illegally present in the U.S.' The agency had planned to charge the two people under a law that makes certain people ineligible to receive a visa or enter the country, including on the grounds of suspected money laundering or other criminal activity.
More than $220,000 in cash was also seized from the van, and the agency said it believed the cash was linked to illegal activity. But it was not immediately clear on Friday whether the woman arrested in Needles was the same woman who died while in custody.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Los Angeles Times
32 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Cuomo stays in N.Y. mayor's race as an independent after losing Democratic primary to Mamdani
NEW YORK — Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday he will campaign for mayor of New York City as an independent candidate, staying in a crowded field running against left-wing Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani. In a video, Cuomo, who last month suffered a bruising loss to Mamdani in the Democratic primary, announced he was making another run to combat the progressive Mamdani, who he said 'offers slick slogans but no real solutions.' 'The fight to save our city isn't over,' Cuomo said. 'Only 13% of New Yorkers voted in the June primary. The general election is in November and I am in it to win it.' Incumbent Mayor Eric Adams also is running as an independent in the general election, and Curtis Sliwa — founder of the 1970s-era Guardian Angels anti-crime patrol — is again on the Republican line. People opposed to Mamdani's agenda, which includes higher taxes on the wealthy, have called on donors and voters to unite behind a single candidate for the November election. They fear multiple candidates will splinter the anti-Mamdani vote, increasing the Democrat's chances to win. Mamdani's campaign responded to Cuomo's announcement by saying the ex-governor and mayor are cozying up to 'billionaires and Republicans' while the Democratic nominee remains focused on affordability issues. 'That's the choice this November,' campaign spokesperson Jeffrey Lerner said in a statement. Cuomo's decision to continue on in the race is the latest chapter in his comeback attempt, launched almost four years after he resigned as governor in 2021 following a barrage of sexual harassment allegations. He denied wrongdoing during the campaign, maintaining that the scandal was driven by politics. Cuomo was treated as the presumed front-runner for much of the Democratic primary, with the former governor boasting deep political experience, universal name recognition and a juggernaut fundraising operation. He limited media interviews, held few unscripted events and avoided mingling with voters. That strategy contrasted with Mamdani's energetic street-level campaign centered around affordability issues. The 33-year-old amassed a legion of young volunteers who blanketed the city to build support, while the candidate's savvy social media persona won him national acclaim. Lagging behind Mamdani in the vote count, Cuomo conceded the race last month on primary night. Final results released after the city ran through its ranked choice voting calculations showed Mamdani besting the former governor by 12 percentage points. Despite the Democratic primary loss, Cuomo had also qualified to run on an independent ballot line in November under a party he created called 'Fight and Deliver.' As he weighed whether to stay on as an independent, Cuomo began losing support from traditional allies. Key labor unions backed Mamdani, and the Rev. Al Sharpton, an influential Black leader, urged Cuomo to step aside. Some deep-pocketed contributors have meanwhile aligned behind Adams, who is running as an independent. Although he's still a Democrat, Adams pulled out of the primary shortly after a federal judge dismissed a corruption case against him at the request of President Trump's Justice Department, arguing that the case had sidelined him from campaigning. Cuomo, 67, served as governor for over a decade and modeled himself as a socially progressive Democrat who got things done. He pushed through legislation that legalized gay marriage and tackled massive infrastructure projects, such as a three-mile bridge over the Hudson River that he named after his father. Cuomo's national profile peaked in the early days of the nation's COVID-19 outbreak during his televised daily briefings. The governor leavened stern warnings for people to wear masks with heartfelt expressions of concern for his elderly mother or brotherly banter with Chris Cuomo, a TV journalist. His reputation was soon tainted when it emerged that the state's official count of nursing home deaths had excluded many victims who had been transferred to hospitals before they succumbed. Cuomo resigned shortly after New York's attorney general released the results of an investigation that found he had sexually harassed at least 11 women.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Northern California county warns of ‘thick, poisonous smoke,' declares emergency
Siskiyou County officials are asking for state and federal help in addressing the illegal use of toxic pesticides at unlawful cannabis grow operations in the region. In recent years, cannabis cultivators in the county have increasingly used such pesticides often saturated with insecticides, fungicides and herbicides that pose severe health damages to humans upon contact, according to a Siskiyou County Sheriff's Office news release on Monday. These pesticides pose several environmental harms by contaminating local ecosystems through the soil, water and air, according to the sheriff's office. And their uncontrolled use poses a significant risk to law enforcement and fire personnel, many of whom lack appropriate safety protocols to deal with these situations. 'We are battling something far bigger than just an illegally grown plant. This is about environmental destruction, human trafficking, banned chemical fumigants, and transnational organized crime networks operating with impunity across rural America,' said Siskiyou County Sheriff Jeremiah LaRue in the press release. 'If we don't act boldly and get support from the State and Federal partners, the long-term consequences to public health and California's ecosystems will be irreversible.' Environmental officials have previously flagged Siskiyou County as a hot spot for the use of the Chinese-labeled pesticide fumigant — that are routinely discovered at cannabis grow operations there — compared to other Californian counties, according to the California Environmental Protection Agency. On July 1, the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors voted 5-0 to declare a state of emergency to address the illegal use of toxic pesticides in the county. County officials warned that if burned, the pesticides 'create thick, poisonous smoke that presents serious risks to public health, the environment, waterways, and first responder safety.' The proclamation directed the county to form a multi-agency emergency response task force and pursue state and federal assistance to address the pesticide issue. It also urged the launch of public education campaigns working with agencies like the Drug Enforcement Administration, CalEPA and United States Environmental Protection Agency. The resolution finally called on Gov. Gavin Newsom to proclaim the county to be in a state of emergency.


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Mamdani fundraises off Cuomo's launch video
New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani fundraised off a new campaign video from former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo as the two are set to battle in the general election later this year. 'Only 13 percent of New Yorkers voted in the June primary. The general election is in November, and I am in it to win it. My opponent, Mr. Mamdani, offers slick slogans, but no real solutions,' Cuomo said in a campaign video, which was posted Monday on the social platform X. In response to the earlier campaign video Cuomo posted on X, Mamdani posted a link to donate money to his campaign. Mamdani's response had earned 95,000 likes by later Monday night, with Cuomo's original video at 2,900 likes. Mamdani's recent win in the Democratic primary shocked the political world, with a mostly previously unknown democratic socialist taking down Cuomo, a notable political heavyweight. Cuomo has formally announced he is running as an independent in the Big Apple's mayoral race later this year. Cuomo joins Mamdani, Mayor Eric Adams, who is also running as an independent, and Republican Curtis Sliwa in the general election race. Former Obama staffer Dan Pfeiffer, also a co-host of the 'Pod Save America' podcast, slammed Cuomo's Monday ad by saying there was 'no charisma' in it. 'This is one of the least compelling campaign videos that I have ever seen. No message. No charisma. No compelling visuals,' Pfeiffer said in a post on X in response to the Cuomo video. 'Just a visibly annoyed man wearing an ill-fitting shirt saying things he clearly doesn't believe,' he added. When reached for comment about Pfeiffer's remarks earlier Monday, Cuomo spokesperson Rich Azzopardi told The Hill that 'If we upset the pod guys, we must be on the right track.'