Identical DHS and DOS media notes are here and here . Media coverage here , here , here , here , here and here . The intent is to curtail irregular migration through the Darién Gap . [I have...
Cyrus D. Mehta and Kaitlyn Box, July 1, 2024 "The conservative majority Supreme Court recently issued two decisions that will have a major impact on the administrative state by transferring power...
CISOMB, June 2024 "I am pleased to present the Office of the Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman’s (CIS Ombudsman) 2024 Annual Report to Congress. This Report, submitted annually...
Gaby Del Valle, The Verge, June 28, 2024 "Chevron deference has given the Department of Homeland Security and its component agencies broad latitude. For example, under Chevron , decisions made by...
Prof. Nancy Morawetz said this on today's ImmigrationProf Blog : "In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’ decision in Loper Bright , you might think that everyone would agree that courts...
"When Lucy Gutierrez of Kingman [AZ] wrote a letter to President Obama about the turmoil she felt over Arizona's most controversial immigration law, she had little hope that he would read it. Not only did Obama read the letter, but Gutierrez is now the subject of a book about everyday Americans who wrote to the president. The young Mexican-American woman tells the Kingman Daily Miner that she wrote the letter to Obama in 2010 after hearing that the President reads 10 letters from regular Americans each day. Though Gutierrez thought hers would get lost in the shuffle, she says she felt it was important to express her feelings about Arizona's law known as Senate Bill 1070. Her life story is now in "Ten Letters," a book by Washington Post reporter Eli Saslow about 10 people whose letters were read by Obama." - Fox Phoenix, Dec. 27, 2011.
Lucy Gutierrez didn't think President Barack Obama would read her letter, but she wrote it anyway. Within months, she found out the president did read her letter, and she had a reporter at her house following her around and asking questions about her life for a book titled "Ten Letters: The Stories Americans Tell Their President."