Stateless Palestinian woman released from ICE custody after 5 monthsNew Foto - Stateless Palestinian woman released from ICE custody after 5 months

Ward Sakeik -- a stateless Palestinian woman who wasdetained on her way back from her honeymoon-- has been released from ICE detention nearly five months after her arrest, her husband confirmed to ABC News. Sakeik, whose husband is a U.S. citizen, was arrested at the St. Thomas Airport in the U.S. Virgin Islands in February. "The Trump administration's brazenly unconstitutional attempt to deport this young woman in violation of a federal court order should shock the conscience of every American. Had we not intervened, she may very well be in a foreign country right now, separated from her family like so many others illegally deported to third countries," Eric Lee, Sakeik's attorney, said in a statement Wednesday. MORE: Newlywed bride's honeymoon ends with months of ICE detention and the prospect of deportation Asked by ABC News for comment egarding Sakeik's release, a Department of Homeland Security official said in an email, "Following her American husband and her filing the appropriate legal applications for her to remain in the country and become a legal permanent resident, she was released from ICE custody." The government had attempted to deport Sakeik twice -- the first time reportedly to Israel just hours before it launched its attack on Iran in June. Thesecond attempt to deport hercame despite a federal judge ordering that she remain in the northern district of Texas and not be removed from the U.S. The government and its attorneys told her husband, Taahir Shaikh, and Sakeik's lawyers that the attempt to deport her earlier this week was "an honest mistake," according to Shaikh. On Tuesday evening, Shaikh received a call from his wife asking him to pick her up from the Texas detention facility where she was being held. "I'm just completely confused. And she says, 'An ICE officer just came to me and said he's going to serve me papers for my release.' And I told her, 'I don't believe it,'" Shaikh told ABC News. "The ICE officer spoke directly with our legal team, and about four hours later, I was able to go pick her up directly from Prairieland Detention Center -- just me by myself, and at 9:30 at night, she ran directly into my arms," Shaikh said. Sakeik's family is from Gaza, but she is legally stateless and has lived in the U.S. since she was 8 years old. Her family had traveled to the U.S. on a tourist visa and applied for asylum, according to Shaikh. MORE: Government attempts to deport stateless Palestinian woman again despite court order Sakeik was issued a deportation order more than a decade ago after her asylum case was denied, but she was permitted to stay in the U.S. under what's known as an "order of supervision," in which she was given a work permit and regularly checks in with federal immigration authorities, according to her attorney and her husband. The first stage of Sakeik's green card application was approved while she was being detained, Shaikh said. "Now that we have that first part of the green card application already approved, all we need to do is work on reopening her immigration case, and once that order of deportation is lifted, she has a clear path to a green card," Shaikh said. After nearly five months in detention, an ICE officer told Sakeik that she would not be re-detained but there will be future commitments for her to show up either in immigration courts or immigration check ins, Shaikh said. "I'm not saying that that is justice served, because five months of detention for a woman who never committed a crime, there is no justice served by, you know, announcing her discretionary release, but it's a good step in the right direction," Shaikh said. Shaikh said his wife's release was a shock after the government had refused her release at every stage of her detention. "Whoever it was that made the call probably saw just how many mistakes the people on the ground were making with my wife, and they probably felt like they dug themselves way too deep to where they knew they couldn't afford to make another mistake. And before they allowed that mistake to happen, someone made a call to say, 'We're going to grant this release,'" Shaikh said. Shaikh also pointed to the media attention his wife's case had garnered. In statement about Sakeik's detention shared with ABC News previously, DHS said Sakeik was not detained as part of a targeted operation by ICE. "She chose to leave the country and was then flagged by [Customs and Border Patrol] trying to reenter the U.S.," Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said in an initial statement. When ABC News asked if the government's stance was that travel to the Virgin Islands, a U.S. territory, constitutes someone choosing to "leave the country," DHS provided an updated statement. "She chose to fly over international waters and outside the U.S. customs zone and was then flagged by CBP trying to reenter the continental U.S.," McLaughlin said in a second statement. "She overstayed her visa and has had a final order by an immigration judge for over a decade," McLaughlin said in the statement. "President Trump and Secretary Noem are committed to restoring integrity to the visa program and ensuring it is not abused to allow aliens a permanent one-way ticket to remain in the U.S." DHS did not acknowledge the judge's order barring Sakeik's removal from Texas or that she was previously under an order of supervision.

Stateless Palestinian woman released from ICE custody after 5 months

Stateless Palestinian woman released from ICE custody after 5 months Ward Sakeik -- a stateless Palestinian woman who wasdetained on her way...
Kilmar Abrego Garcia alleges "psychological torture" at Salvadoran prison

Kilmar Abrego Garcia — the man whose mistaken deportation by the Trump administration has fueleda monthslong legal saga— alleged Wednesday that he faced "psychological torture" and "severe beatings" after he was sent to a supermax prison in El Salvador earlier this year. The new allegations emerged in alegal filingby attorneys for Abrego Garcia in Maryland federal court, seeking to amend his lawsuit against the Trump administration over his deportation. Abrego Garcia was flown back to the United States in early June — months after a Maryland judge ordered his return — andpromptly chargedwith human smuggling in Tennessee, but his attorneys say they're concerned he could be deported again. Abrego Garcia's lawyers havepreviously describedhis more than three-week stint at El Salvador'sTerrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, as "torture." But Wednesday's court filing offers new allegations of his "severe mistreatment," which Abrego Garcia says included "severe beatings, severe sleep deprivation, inadequate nutrition, and psychological torture." He says he lost 31 pounds during his time in prison. Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national, was part of a groupof more than250 Venezuelan and Salvadoran men who weredeportedfrom the U.S. to El Salvador and held in CECOT in mid-March. Shortly after his arrival at the Salvadoran mega-prison, an official there said, "Welcome to CECOT. Whoever enters here doesn't leave," the court filing alleges. The filing states prison staff then forced Abrego Garcia to strip and change into a uniform, kicked him to make him hurry up, shaved his head and marched him to a cell while hitting him with batons — leaving him with "visible bruises and lumps all over his body." Abrego Garcia says he was kept in a crowded, windowless cell with metal bunks and lights that remained on for 24 hours a day. In one case, Abrego Garcia and his cellmates were allegedly forced to kneel for nine hours, and were struck if they fell down. After more than three weeks, Abrego Garcia says he was transferred to a different area and was "photographed with mattresses and better food" in what he believed to be staged images. Abrego Garcia was eventually transferred to a different prison in early April, but he says he was still denied contact with his attorneys or family members. Early on during his time at CECOT, Abrego Garcia says prison staff sorted a group of inmates based on whether they had gang tattoos but acknowledged that wasn't the case for him, saying, "Your tattoos are fine." The Trump administration has alleged in the past that Abrego Garciahas tattooslinking him to the gang MS-13, which his lawyers have strongly denied. Separately, Wednesday's court filing says U.S. immigration agents falsely told Abrego Garcia after his March arrest that he would be allowed to see a judge. Prior to his removal to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia said he "repeatedly requested judicial review," but officials responded by "deliberately misleading" him, according to the court filing. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement: "This illegal alien is an MS-13 gang member, alleged human trafficker, and a domestic abuser. The media's sympathetic narrative about this criminal illegal gang member has completely fallen apart, yet they continue to peddle his sob story. We hear far too much about gang members and criminals' false sob stories and not enough about their victims." Abrego Garcia has denied membership in MS-13. His wifesought and received a temporary protective orderin 2021 after alleging domestic abuse, but the case was dismissed after she didn't appear at a hearing. She said earlier this year she "acted out of caution after a disagreement with Kilmar," and decided not to move forward with the process because they "were able to work through this situation privately as a family." CBS News has reached out to the White House for comment. Abrego Garcia's lawyers ask for his return to Maryland Wednesday's amended lawsuit asks U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis to declare the Trump administration's actions unconstitutional and order Abrego Garcia's immediate return to Maryland. The suit also asks Xinis to reinstate a 2019 order that allowed Abrego Garcia to remain out of custody as long as he checks in with Immigration and Customs Enforcement regularly. He is currently being held in pretrial detention in Tennessee. Xinishas not ruled onAgrego Garcia's lawyers' request to file the amended lawsuit, which would update an earlier suit that led Xinis and theSupreme Courtto order the government to "facilitate" his return to the U.S. That original lawsuit — filed in March — hinged partly on a 2019 court order barring Abrego Garcia from being deported to El Salvador. The government said he was sent there anyway due to an "administrative error." Meanwhile, the Trump administrationasked Xinis last monthto dismiss Abrego Garcia's lawsuit as moot, arguing he has already received the relief he requested because the government took "extraordinary steps" to return him to the U.S. The administration says Abrego Garcia — who entered the U.S. illegally in 2011 — has "no right to remain in the United States." A hearing in Xinis' courtroom isscheduled for Monday. Abrego Garcia is separatelyfacing criminal smuggling chargesin Tennessee, with federal prosecutors alleging he worked to transport undocumented migrants from Texas to other parts of the U.S. for years. Abrego Garcia has pleaded not guilty. A judge in NashvilleorderedAbrego Garcia to be released ahead of trial last month, but his attorneysaskedthat he remain in custody, citing fears the Trump administration could detain and deport him on immigration grounds as soon as he leaves jail. A Justice Department lawyersaidin Xinis' courtroom last week that once Abrego Garcia is released from detention, Immigration and Customs Enforcement intends to begin removal proceedings to send him to an unspecified "third country" other than El Salvador. The Justice Department maintains there are "no imminent plans" to deport him. A Tennessee magistrate judge ruled Monday that Abrego Garcia will stay in custody until at least mid-July. 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Kilmar Abrego Garcia alleges "psychological torture" at Salvadoran prison

Kilmar Abrego Garcia alleges "psychological torture" at Salvadoran prison Kilmar Abrego Garcia — the man whose mistaken deportatio...
Kilmar Abrego Garcia was beaten, tortured in El Salvador prison, court filing saysNew Foto - Kilmar Abrego Garcia was beaten, tortured in El Salvador prison, court filing says

Kilmar Abrego Garciahas experienced "severe beatings" and "psychological torture" in a supermax prison in El Salvador after he was deported by the Trump administration, according to a new court filing. The filing in federal court on Wednesday, July 2, also says that Abrego Garcia experienced "severe sleep deprivation" and nutrition so inadequate that he lost 31 pounds while he was at the Terrorism Confinement Center, also known as CECOT, in Tecoluca, El Salvador. Abrego Garcia, a native of El Salvador living with legal permission in Beltsville, Maryland, was mistakenlydeported and taken to CECOTin March. The new details from Abrego Garcia's treatment at CECOT come as part of a lawsuit filed by his wife against the Trump administration, which is seeking to have the matter thrown out because he has since been returned to the United States. An indictment accuses Abrego Garcia of conspiring to bring immigrants into the United States illegally from various Central and South American countries. He has pleadednot guilty. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kilmar Abrego Garcia was tortured in El Salvador prison: Lawyers

Kilmar Abrego Garcia was beaten, tortured in El Salvador prison, court filing says

Kilmar Abrego Garcia was beaten, tortured in El Salvador prison, court filing says Kilmar Abrego Garciahas experienced "severe beatings...
CIA review criticizes procedures but not conclusions of intelligence report on 2016 Russia election interferenceNew Foto - CIA review criticizes procedures but not conclusions of intelligence report on 2016 Russia election interference

WASHINGTON — CIA officials failed in some cases to follow standard procedures inan intelligence analysis of Russian interference effortsin the 2016 election, according to an internal review declassified Wednesday. Intelligence officers were given an unusually short timeline for the analysis, there was "excessive involvement" by senior leaders, and staff members were given uneven access to crucial intelligence about Russia, the "lessons-learned" review said. But the review did not refute the findings of the 2017 intelligence assessment that Russia waged an information warfare campaign designed to undermine Americans' confidence in the electoral process, damage Hillary Clinton and boostDonald Trump's prospects in the 2016 election. "While the overall assessment was deemed defensible, the identified procedural anomalies and tradecraft issues highlight critical lessons for handling controversial or politically charged topics,"the reviewsaid. Follow live politics coverage here Trump and his allies have long rejected intelligence and other reporting indicating that Russia employed false information and propaganda to try to influence the 2016 election and tip the scales in his favor. They have accused intelligence and law enforcement officials of plotting to tie Trump to Russia and cast doubt on the legitimacy of his victory in 2016. A special counsel appointed during the first Trump administration looked extensively into how the CIA crafted its assessment but filed no criminal charges and reported no clear evidence that political bias tainted the process. A bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee investigation in 2020concurred with the 2017 intelligence assessmentand found no reason to dispute its conclusions. In Trump's second presidential term, his deputies have vowed to bring more transparency to the intelligence community and prevent any attempt to politicize its work. CIA Director John Ratcliffe ordered the internal review this year and declassified it Wednesday, according to the CIA. The intelligence assessment of the 2016 vote, which President Barack Obama requested after the November election, found that Russia sought to undermine public faith in the democratic process and denigrate Clinton and that Moscow "aspired" to help Trump win the election. Two senior leaders of a CIA mission center focusing on Russia objected to including the conclusion that Russia aimed to help secure Trump's victory, according to the internal review. They argued that the view was supported mainly by a single intelligence report while other judgments were backed up by more information. The review said the assessment was conducted on an unusually short timeline. Instead of having months to prepare a complex and politically sensitive analysis, the authors had "less than a week to draft the assessment" and "less than two days to formally coordinate it" with other intelligence officers. Multiple intelligence officers "said they felt 'jammed' by the compressed timeline," according to the review. The review said top CIA officials were heavily involved in the assessment effort, which "was highly unusual in both scope and intensity." As a result, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research were "entirely shut out" of the analysis, which was a "significant deviation" from standard practice in the intelligence community, according to the review. Authors of the 2016 assessment and other CIA officers also "strongly opposed" including a reference in the analysis to the so-called Trump dossier compiled by former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele. The dossier included unverified allegations about Trump's colluding with Russia. In the end, a summary of the dossier was included in an annex, with a disclaimer that it was not used "to reach the analytic conclusions" in the assessment. The review also found reasons to praise the 2016 assessment, saying that much of the team's work showed "robust" tradecraft with extensive sourcing and that there was no sign of systemic problems. ​​John Brennan, who was CIA director at the time of the assessment, told NBC News on Wednesday he was aware of the review but had not had a chance to read it yet.

CIA review criticizes procedures but not conclusions of intelligence report on 2016 Russia election interference

CIA review criticizes procedures but not conclusions of intelligence report on 2016 Russia election interference WASHINGTON — CIA officials ...
DHS and FBI warn about potential lone wolf attacks ahead of July 4 celebrationsNew Foto - DHS and FBI warn about potential lone wolf attacks ahead of July 4 celebrations

Attacks perpetrated by lone actors are the biggest terrorism threat to July 4th festivities in New York City and elsewhere, federal authorities said in a threat assessment obtained by CNN. The FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and other law enforcement agencies issued a joint bulletin in late June saying "the most significant terrorism threat facing the Macy's 4th of July Fireworks stems from lone offenders and small groups of individuals seeking to commit acts of violence." "These individuals are often motivated by a broad range of racial, ethnic, political, religious, anti-government, societal, or personal grievances," the assessment continued. But the threat is not limited to New York City. The bulletin said other large gatherings could be targeted. "Special events with high attendance and media coverage … remain attractive targets" for domestic and foreign terrorists and violent extremists who may want to "cause mass casualties or draw attention to their causes," the bulletin said. The agencies said they had not received any reports of specific threats at the massive fireworks show or related events. However, "high-profile, large events can draw interest from malicious actors looking for targets of opportunity to perpetrate criminal schemes," the bulletin said. It's not uncommon for authorities to issue threat assessments before major events. But several recent, high-profile attacks have spurred additional concern heading into July 4. "We are concerned about the potential threat of copycat attacks inspired by the 2025 New Year's Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans and continued FTO (foreign terrorist organization) messaging calling for attacks against Western targets," the bulletin said. On January 1, a driver intentionally rammed a6,000-pound truck into a crowdof revelers in New Orleans' bustling French Quarter,killing 14 people. The assailant, a Texas-born Army veteran who served in Afghanistan, was killed in a shootout with police. Investigators later discovered he had recorded several videos before the attack that mentionedhis divorce and claimed he had joined ISIS. Just one month before that massacre, the FBI and DHS warned about the threat of violence from lone offenders and thepotential use of vehicle ramming, according to two internal memos obtained by CNN. Tensions over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza have been linked to a spate of recent violence in the United States, and authorities say similar attacks could erupt on July 4. "Most attackers motivated at least in part by the Israel-HAMAS conflict have selected targets with a symbolic link to Israel, houses of worship, or locations associated with houses of worship. Individuals with grievances linked to the conflict could also perceive large gatherings, such as Independence Day celebrations, as opportunistic targets symbolic of the West in general," the threat assessment said. The DHS and FBI cited last month's firebomb attack in Boulder, Colorado, that targeted a group of demonstrators supporting Israelis who were held hostage by Hamas. Dozens of people were injured, andan 82-year-old woman died. The attack marked "the most recent act of terrorist violence in the Homeland motivated by the Israel-HAMAS conflict," the joint bulletin said. "This attack came shortly after the (May 21) attackkilling two Israeli embassy staffin Washington, DC." Drones have also raised the specter of possible violence at large holiday events, the threat assessment said. "Unauthorized unmanned aircraft system (UAS) activities may pose a hazard to participants and attendees, delay events, and disrupt law enforcement operations," the FBI and DHS said. "Although we have no credible, specific reporting regarding illicit plans to use UAS to target the Macy's 4th of July Fireworks, we assess that unauthorized UAS operations have the potential to increase public safety risks." While most drones are flown legally by hobbyists, they "have also been used to facilitate terrorist and other criminal acts," the threat assessment said. "Various state and nonstate actors have increased their use and modification of short-range UAS to conduct surveillance of adversary positions, drop small munitions on targets, and detonate explosive-laden UAS on impact to targets in conflict zones abroad," the bulletin said. "Malicious use of UAS poses a potential risk to spectators, volunteers, security personnel, and first responders in and around the event." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

DHS and FBI warn about potential lone wolf attacks ahead of July 4 celebrations

DHS and FBI warn about potential lone wolf attacks ahead of July 4 celebrations Attacks perpetrated by lone actors are the biggest terrorism...

 

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