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KESQ News Center 3: “Detainees inside I.C.E. facility investigated by Homeland Security speak out”

  

Detainees inside I.C.E. facility investigated by Homeland Security speak out

“It is unfortunate that there is a corporation making a profit out of the suffering of people,” said Hilda Cruz, a human rights activist & faith organizer with Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity. … Protesters frequently gather outside the facility, demanding answers and calling for changes. … “I think it would be a very different landscape if we were able to get lawyers for every single person inside there,” said Cecilia Vasquez, a Ph.D. candidate & volunteer visitor with Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity. 

Read the full transcript here.

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Media

May 12: New York Times opinion by Rev. Deborah Lee on Honduras

To the Editor:

‘Either They Kill Us or We Kill Them’” (front page, May 5) tells the micro story of gangs and violence in a Honduran neighborhood.

I just returned from Honduras with 75 religious leaders, looking at the systemic economic and state violence that enables the gangs to thrive. The corruption and collusion between state actors and organized crime are stunning.

Tony Hernandez, a former Honduran congressman and brother of the president of Honduras, stands trial for large-scale drug trafficking and weapons charges in New York after being arrested by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

The latest report from the High Commissioner for Human Rights says organized crime has infiltrated Honduran government agencies and the broader political arena. This is why 53 members of the United States Congress are co-sponsors of H.R. 1945, the Berta Caceres Human Rights in Honduras Act.

It would suspend United States security assistance to Honduras until human rights violations by Honduran security forces cease and their perpetrators are brought to justice.

(Rev.) Deborah Lee
Oakland, Calif.
The writer is executive director of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity.

Read the letter on the New York Times website.

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Updates

First Thursday Report: Accountability Is Key!

A spirited group of activists and faith leaders gathered last Thursday, May 2, at Lincoln Congregational church for the second of Justice Not Jails’s monthly community forums on the theme, “Faith and Race: Carry It On!”

The ACLU’s Jessica Farris was Thursday’s main presenter, outlining the many violations of trust committed by LA County’s new sheriff, Alex Villanueva. Jess also detailed the important prosecutorial accountability project that she is coordinating: a focused effort to contrast our vision of what we really need in an enlightened LA County district attorney to what we have been getting from the incumbent. The current DA, Jackie Lacey, has opposed all major criminal justice reform measures in California (e.g., Prop 47, Prop 57, Prop 64, and SB 1437, which redefined felony murder). Additionally, during the seven years she has been in office, DA Lacey has brought charges against just one cop in a questionable use of force case despite some 400 cases she might have prosecuted.

The question & answer session that followed the presentation was lively and informative. To learn how you can be part of the ACLU-led effort to achieve accountability and change the framing of the DA’s job, please email Jessica Farris: jfarris@aclusocal.org.

Rev. Larry Foy, the Justice Not Jails coordinator and the host for “Carry It On!” opened Thursday’s gathering with a meditation drawn from Dr. King’s call for unity in the freedom struggle and centered on the need for all of us to commit ourselves to a “dangerous unselfishness” in the pursuit of justice.

Rev. Peter Laarman

Photo fo Jessica Farris, Rev. Peter Laarman, Sharon Kyle, and Rev. Larry Foy
Jessica Farris, Rev. Peter Laarman, Sharon Kyle, and Rev. Larry Foy