SUMMER 49ER California State University, Long Beach
Vol. LXVII, Issue 121
www.daily49er.com
Thursday, July 7, 2016
SHOTS FIRED
U.S. court sets new precedent for migrant families By Cindy Carcamo Los Angeles Times
Alton Sterling was the 505th person shot and killed by police in the United States in 2016. COVERAGE INSIDE: Sterling shooting sparks social media outrage - Page 2 Should the public watch the Sterling video? - Page 6 NUMBER OF PEOPLE SHOT AND KILLED BY POLICE IN EACH STATE:
12 9 The most people were shot and killed by police in California with 63 fatalities. Of those fatalities, 20 are from Los Angeles County.
63
3 3
6
2 4
22
18 14
1 11 8 1 6 10 2 11 4 6 3 12 4 3 4 15 7 11 1 3 13 9 14 3 7 4 17 11 7 9 7 16 7 15 10 45 33
4 Unknown
4
Other
20
RACE OF THOSE SHOT AND KILLED:
Hispanic
Source: “Fatal Force ,” a Washington Post database compiling every fatal shooting in the United States by a Police officer since 2015. Data from this infographic is from 2016.
49
White
79
235 Black
122
M ap of United States from A dobe Stock
News 2
President Barack Obama’s immigration policy was dealt another blow Wednesday when the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court’s opinion that child migrants who are accompanied by a parent and currently in family detention should be quickly released. It left the fate of the parents up in the air, however. The case centers on a 1997 legal settlement _ known as the Flores agreement _ that set legal requirements for the housing of children seeking asylum or in the country illegally. In July 2015, U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles found the government had violated key provisions of the court settlement that put restrictions on the detention of migrant children. Department of Homeland Security officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Federal attorneys had argued that the Flores settlement only applied to unaccompanied migrant minors and not children accompanied by parents or other adult family members. Plaintiffs argued the settlement applied to all children. The 9th Circuit of Appeals panel sided with the plaintiffs. “This decision makes it clear that the Obama administration can no longer detain accompanied children for long periods of time in unlicensed, lockeddown facilities,” said Peter Schey, one of the lead plaintiff attorneys and president of the Los Angeles-based nonprofit Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law. Schey and Carlos Holguin launched the lawsuit against federal officials and have served as court-appointed lawyers for all immigrant children in federal custody since the 1997 settlement “I think that this decision greatly strengthens the rights of accompanied children and will hopefully encourage the Obama administration to reconsider its entire family detention policy,” Schey said. The appeals court opinion, however, dismissed Gee’s opinion that the accompanying parents or adults of the children may have the right to be released, stating that the Flores settlement only focuses on children. The opinion leaves questions about
see MIGRANTS, page 2
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