

An ‘accident’. Riiiight.
Every one of those mf’ers who denied the father an appointment to have his fingerprints taken should be charged, convicted and jailed.


So ICE has 5 offices in Canada. How many RCMP offices are in the US? And yes, I looked, but there is exactly zero info out there on this.


The facility where she is being held, run by GEO Group, a multibillion-dollar private prison company, has been the subject of dozens of complaints from current and former female detainees who have claimed they were denied basic medical treatment, hygiene supplies, and edible food.
Others have said they’ve faced sexual abuse and harassment and were subject to forced labor. In December, a former guard pleaded guilty in federal court to sexually abusing a Nicaraguan detainee in mid-2025.
Jfc. :(


I’m embarrassed to say it took me far too long to realize this. I should’ve known better than to believe the rhetoric that Western nations constantly harped on.


Yup. I don’t see that.


“Bare due diligence would have shown that the agents were lying,” Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis said in a recent interview, shortly after he watched the video for the first time.
As agents have gotten away with their lies for over a year now they consider themselves untouchable.


It all looks good on my end. Could be the app I use corrects it in translation tho.


I’d like to see why Canada first okay’d her visa, then revoked it the day before she was to travel … because that kind of pull to do that comes from on high.


There were two more removed at the same time.
The AFP news agency reported that an official confirmed that Gen David Hodne and Maj Gen William Green Jr were also removed alongside George. Hodne led the army’s transformation and training command while Green was in charge of the army’s chaplain corps.


Good for you. :)


Unless you have facts to back your supposition may I suggest you stop spreading rumors.


Seems you’ll be waiting a long time for those facts to show up. :/


In every media source I’ve read about this the 40 pages are listed as having rap lyrics. Maybe that’s how the cops described it, or the prosecutors decided that’s what they’d label it to gain the death penalty.


Because his ‘confession’ was not gained by police. It was given while speaking to the press, and as far as I can tell (from reading multiple different media sources) it was not used during the trial as evidence.


A rhyme on paper is poetry.
Are you an expert on writing lyrics? Or poetry? Who decided that you have the last word on how lyrics can become part of a song or part of a poem?
Your arrogance is showing.


None.
Notably, the bill withhold funds from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and part of Customs and Border Protection (CBP).


I take it you missed the part of the title where it says the rap lyrics “helped” convict him … not ‘did’ convict him.


It’s in the summary above and the article.
During the sentencing phase of Broadnax’s capital trial, prosecutors presented the jury with 40 pages of the defendant’s notebooks found in a suitcase after his arrest. The state carefully selected rap lyrics infused with violent images of murder, robbery and drugs, to make the case that Broadnax should be sentenced to death. Its lawyers skirted over lyrics addressing peaceful narratives such as redemption and love. For the ultimate punishment to be secured under Texas law, jurors would have to be persuaded that the defendant posed a threat of “future dangerousness”.
By leaning heavily on rap lyrics and racist dog whistles, Texas prosecutors managed to drown out mitigating evidence that might have spared Broadnax’s life. His defense lawyers emphasised that Broadnax was just 19 when the murders took place. He had endured an abusive childhood at the hands of a grandmother who locked him up in his room without food and frequently beat him. And despite such a traumatic background, he had no previous criminal record other than a single conviction for non-violent marijuana possession.
The jury was clearly less swayed by such details than by the prosecutors’ lurid invocation of the rap lyrics. Jurors asked to see the notebooks twice during their deliberations. Then they sent Broadnax to death row.


This was one of the most difficult articles to parse.
Same with Ukraine.