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Headquartered in Texas and with national reach, RAICES, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization formally known as the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, promotes migrant justice by providing legal services, social services case management, and rights advocacy for immigrant, refugee, and asylum-seeking people and families.
The site is located approximately 100 miles north of the Rio Grande and 70 miles southwest of San Antonio, southwest of Dilley, Texas, in Frio County. [2] The address is 1925 W. Highway 85 , Dilley, Texas, United States, zip code 78017.
Immigration office Secure DHS/ ICE: ICE 43 (2007) Baptist Children's Center (BCFS San Antonio) In use (2008) San Antonio, Texas: Other - shelter Semi-secure Baptist Child and Family Services: 28 (2008) Barnstable County: In use (2008) Barnstable, Massachusetts: Prison Secure DHS/ ICE 16 (2008) (for immigration detainees) 33 (2007) No legal ...
Global Refuge, formerly known as Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, [2] is a non-profit organization that supports refugees and migrants entering the United States. It is one of nine refugee resettlement agencies working with the Office of Refugee Resettlement [3] and one of two that serves unaccompanied refugee minors. [4]
It's time for our leaders, in Texas and across the nation, to recognize that the status quo is unsustainable. The Dignity Act offers a path forward.
Hundreds of migrants waited in long lines outside an immigration office in southern Mexico on Monday, hoping to secure safe passage north and enter the U.S. legally before President-elect Donald ...
The checkpoints are described as "the third layer in the Border Patrol's three-layer strategy", following "line watch" and "roving patrol" operations near the border. According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, [2] Border Patrol agents at checkpoints have legal authority that agents do not have when patrolling areas away from the ...
An INM office in Northern Mexico, just south of El Paso, Texas. Since 1999, the INM approved the increase from 16 to 32 regional offices, one for every state of Mexico and the Federal District . It also has 45 migration stations concentrated on border states (land), Mexico City (air) and the Gulf of Mexico (sea).