Featured Blog Posts
ICE Issues Non-Enforcement Guidance to Its Lawyers: ‘Trust, but micromanage’, as criminal aliens — among others — get a pass
By Andrew Arthur
The independence of demoralized ICE lawyers has been further restrained, while the prospects of alien criminals — among others — have brightened significantly.
A United Nations of Mass Illegal Immigration: The U.S. migration crisis in plain view at the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border
By Todd Bensman
By all indications, the intercontinental trail connecting the world to the U.S. southern border is more congested than at any time in recent memory, with people from Bangladesh, Uzbekistan, Russia, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, and dozens of other countries.
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World Refugee Day Should Inspire Us to Reflect on a More Effective Refugee System, One That Fits the Twenty-First Century
By Nayla Rush
Most of the commentary on World Refugee Day praised the courage of people who have been forcibly displaced and called for greater global solidarity and action to support refugees. I, instead, looked to two Oxford professors, Alexander Betts and Paul Collier, and their assessment of a broken refugee system and their call to transform it.
Dying EB-5 Program Gets Negative Headline in $100 Million Dispute
By David North
The dying EB-5 program, the main part of which is due to expire at midnight tomorrow, was the subject of a thoroughly negative headline in yesterday's Law360. It read: “Fla. Judge Certifies Class In $100M EB-5 Fraud Suit”. My step-daughter happens to be a class action lawyer, and she tells me that when a judge rules that a group of litigants is regarded as a class, then the suit is likely to be decided in their favor.
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