Refugee/Migrant Crisis

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Florida prepares to build 2nd immigration detention centre to join ’Alligator Alcatraz’
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Kate Payne
Published Aug 05, 2025 • 2 minute read

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration is apparently preparing to build a second immigration detention centre, awarding at least one contract for what’s labeled in state records as the “North Detention Facility.”


The site would add to the capacity at the state’s first detention facility, built at an isolated airfield in the Florida Everglades and dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz.” Already, state officials have inked more than $245 million in contracts for that facility, which officially opened July 1.


Florida plans to build a second detention centre at a Florida National Guard training centre called Camp Blanding, about 43 kilometers southwest of downtown Jacksonville, though DeSantis has said the state is waiting for federal officials to ramp up deportations from the South Florida facility before building out the Camp Blanding site.

“We look forward to the increased cadence,” of deportations, DeSantis said last month, calling the state “ready, willing and able” to expand its operations.


Civil rights advocates and environmental groups have filed lawsuits against the Everglades facility, where detainees allege they’ve been forced to go without adequate food and medical care, and been barred from meeting with their attorneys, held without any charges and unable to get a federal immigration court to hear their cases.

President Donald Trump has touted the facility’s harshness and remoteness as fit for the “worst of the worst,” while Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has said the South Florida detention centre can serve as a model for other state-run holding facilities for immigrants.

Plans for the ‘North Detention Facility’
The Florida Division of Emergency Management, the state agency that built the Everglades facility, has awarded a $39,000 contract for a portable emergency response weather station and two lightning sirens for what’s been dubbed the “North Detention Facility,” according to records in the state’s public contract database. The equipment will help enable “real-time weather monitoring and safety alerting for staff.”


The contract comes as the state approaches the peak of hurricane season, and as heavy rains and extreme heat have pounded parts of Florida. Immigrant advocates and environmentalists have raised a host of concerns about the Everglades facility, a remote compound of heavy-duty tents and trailers that state workers and contractors assembled in a matter of days.

Last week, FDEM released a heavily redacted draft emergency evacuation plan for what the document called the “South Florida Detention Facility.” Entire sections related to detainee transportation, evacuation and relocation procedures were blacked out, under a Florida law that allows state agencies to make their emergency plans confidential. Despite multiple public records requests by The Associated Press, the department has not produced other evacuation plans, environmental impact studies or agency analyses for the facility.

Questioned by reporters on July 25, FDEM executive director Kevin Guthrie defended the emergency response agency’s plans for the makeshift facility, which he says is built to withstand a Category 2 hurricane, which packs winds of up to 110 mph.

“I promise you that the hurricane guys have got the hurricane stuff covered,” Guthrie said.
 

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Parole board denies Cuban dangerous offender's bid for release
Dangerous offender Guillermo Valle-Quintero, who emigrated from Cuba in 1997, cannot be deported unless granted full parole, according to parole board

Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Aug 06, 2025 • Last updated 11 hours ago • 2 minute read

Guillermo Valle-Quintero
Guillermo Valle-Quintero
OTTAWA — Canada’s parole board has denied early release for a dangerous offender who terrorized two women shortly after emigrating from Cuba to Canada.


Guillermo Valle-Quintero, currently serving an indeterminate sentence for inflicting years of terrifying abuse upon two women, was denied release at a Parole Board of Canada hearing last month. The board listed his “significant number of violent offences committed persistently against a former intimate partner” as the main factor for his denial.


“You also have a prior history of serious intimate partner violence, and your overall criminal history is lengthy, varied, and violent,” read the parole board’s decision, obtained by the Toronto Sun.

“Furthermore, you have a problematic and concerning supervision history, elevated actuarial risk scores, significant issues with self-control, ongoing institutional behaviour issues relating to self-management deficits, have made no discernible gains through program participation, and not engaged in the process of positive personal change, and have not presented a viable release plan.”


Valle-Quintero, 61, was born and raised in Cuba — where the decision notes he racked up a significant criminal record that included breaking-and-entering, theft and pimping out women.

In 1997, he married a Canadian tourist he met at a resort, and she sponsored his entry to Canada.

Valle-Quintero began cheating on his wife roughly a month after arriving in Canada, described as “volatile relationship” and target of his abuse — leading to charges of attempted murder and forcible confinement after he attempted to strangle his paramour to death in 1998.


Court records indicate Valle-Quintero — one day after being released from jail for domestic assault — ambushed the victim in her car and tied her up, taped up her mouth and nose, covered her head in a plastic bag and shoved her in the trunk of her car.


She managed to escape, and Valle-Quintero was sentenced to 11 years.

Valle-Quintero’s second victim, a 47-year-old bar manager, kept records of his abuse “so that he wouldn’t get away with killing her,” court records say.

Valle-Quintero was declared a dangerous offender in 2015, and is currently serving an indeterminate sentence.

The parole decision indicated Valle-Quintero wished to return to Cuba, either through deportation or an international transfer.

Valle-Quintero would need to be granted full parole before deportation proceedings can take place, the decision said, and be lodged in a halfway house pending due process at the hands of the Canada Border Services Agency.

The parole board also didn’t rule out the possibility of him being granted immigration bail if that process were to go forward.
— With files from Sam Pazzano, Toronto Sun files

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume
 

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Supreme Court of Canada weighs appeal application from Via Rail terror case
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Jim Bronskill
Published Aug 06, 2025 • Last updated 23 hours ago • 2 minute read

Raed Jaser tried multiple arguments but Ontario's highest court rightly rejected them all

OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada is set to decide Thursday whether to hear the appeal of Raed Jaser, who was convicted of planning to commit murder for the benefit of a terrorist group.


It’s the latest chapter in a long-running legal saga that began 12 years ago with charges against Jaser and Chiheb Esseghaier for plotting attacks, including the planned sabotage of a Via Rail passenger train.


The Crown alleged that Jaser and Esseghaier had agreed to kill Canadian citizens to force Canada to remove its military troops from Afghanistan.

The Crown’s evidence consisted mainly of intercepted communications and the testimony of an undercover U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation agent assigned to befriend Esseghaier.

A jury could not reach a verdict for Jaser on the rail plot charge but found him guilty of three other terrorism-related offences: one count of conspiring to commit murder for the benefit of a terrorist group and two counts of participating in the activities of a terrorist group. Esseghaier was found guilty on all counts.


The two men appealed their convictions. Counsel for Jaser and a court-appointed lawyer for Esseghaier argued the jury at the trial was improperly constituted.

In August 2019, the Ontario Court of Appeal ordered a fresh trial for the men on the grounds that the jury was chosen incorrectly.

The Crown successfully argued in a subsequent Supreme Court hearing that the convictions should not be overturned on the basis of an error in the jury-selection process that did not deny the men fair trial rights.

With the jury issue settled, the top court remitted the case to the Ontario Court of Appeal to deal with the men’s outstanding challenges of their convictions.

While Esseghaier abandoned his appeal, Jaser persisted.


Last year, the Court of Appeal dismissed Jaser’s challenge of his conviction and life sentence, prompting him to seek a fresh hearing at the Supreme Court.

In a written submission to the top court to request a hearing, Jaser’s lawyers say there is disagreement across Canada about how to instruct juries in conspiracy cases — a problem they say the court should address.

“Jury instructions on the law of conspiracy are too complex,” the brief says. “The facts of the proposed appeal present this Court with an ideal opportunity to guide trial judges on simplifying and distilling their instructions.”

Jaser’s lawyers also raise questions about the application of the Canada Evidence Act concerning sensitive information and whether “entrapment-like conduct” should be taken into account upon sentencing.

In a response to the Supreme Court, the Crown says Jaser’s application should be dismissed.

“These issues are not novel and were properly rejected by the Court of Appeal,” the Crown’s submission says. “Although the facts giving rise to them are unique, they are specific to the circumstances of the applicant and do not raise any issue of public importance.”
 

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Supreme Court won’t hear appeal application arising from Via Rail terror case
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Jim Bronskill
Published Aug 07, 2025 • 1 minute read

Raed Jaser tried multiple arguments but Ontario's highest court rightly rejected them all
Chiheb Esseghaier, left, and Raed Jaser are pictured at Toronto’s University Ave. courthouse on Jan. 29, 2015. Photo by PAM DAVIES SKETCH /TORONTO SUN
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the appeal of Raed Jaser, who was convicted of planning to commit murder for the benefit of a terrorist group.


It’s the latest development in a legal saga that began 12 years ago with charges against Jaser and Chiheb Esseghaier for plotting attacks, including the planned sabotage of a Via Rail passenger train.


The Crown alleged that Jaser and Esseghaier had agreed to kill Canadian citizens to force Canada to remove its military from Afghanistan.

The Crown’s evidence consisted mainly of intercepted communications and the testimony of an undercover U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation agent assigned to befriend Esseghaier.

A jury could not reach a verdict for Jaser concerning the rail plot charge, but found him guilty of three other terrorism-related offences.

The Supreme Court, following its usual practice, did not provide reasons for refusing to review Jaser’s case.
 

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Illlegal immigrant who raped and murdered Rachel Morin caged for life
U.S. President Donald Trump frequently shone the spotlight on Martinez-Hernandez as justification for a border crackdown


Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Aug 13, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

RACHEL MORIN: Murdered. INSTAGRAM
Maryland mom Rachel Moring was murdered while running. INSTAGRAM
Cold-blooded killer Victor Martinez-Hernandez will never again see the light of day.


The 24-year-old illegal immigrant from El Salvador has been sentenced to life in prison without parole for raping and killing mother-of-five Rachel Morin in Maryland.


Martinez-Hernandez became the poster boy for an American immigration system that had spiralled out of control with countless illegal immigrants being arrested for crimes like murder, sex and drug trafficking, and rape.

U.S. President Donald Trump frequently shone the spotlight on Martinez-Hernandez as justification for a border crackdown. Martinez-Hernandez was convicted earlier this year of the rape and murder of Morin, 37, on a hiking trail in Bel Air, Maryland, in August 2023.

Accused killer Victor Antonio Martinez-Hernandez, left, composite, centre and victim Rachel Morin. FBI
Accused killer Victor Antonio Martinez-Hernandez, left, composite. FBI
The killer first assaulted Morin, then battered her head with rocks before strangling her. He then hid her body in a drainage culvert.


DNA linked the killer to a home invasion the same year in Los Angeles. A little digging by cops revealed that Martinez-Hernandez was wanted in his native El Salvador for the murder of another woman.

In a victim impact statement written by Morin’s oldest daughter and read by the prosecutor, she outlined how the illegal immigrant had shattered her family forever.

She wrote: “Every milestone in my life is a reminder of what Victor Martinez-Hernandez has taken from me.”

Cops suspect the mystery man who murdered Rachel Morin is a serial killer. FACEBOOK
Rachel Morin. FACEBOOK
The killer showed little emotion as his bleak future was unveiled in court.

Judge Yolanda Curtin sentenced him to life for the first-degree murder conviction, life for the rape charge, and an additional 40 years for a third-degree sex offence and kidnapping charges. He will serve his sentence in a Maryland prison.


“Arguably, Harford County has never seen a case or a defendant more deserving of every single day of the maximum sentences this court imposed,” prosecutor Alison Healey said outside the courthouse.

Martinez-Hernandez evaded the U.S. Marshals during a 10-month manhunt until he was arrested in June 2024 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

mystery man who murdered Rachel Morin is a serial killer. FACEBOOK
Rachel Morin. FACEBOOK
According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Martinez-Hernandez illegally entered the U.S. and was sent back across the Mexico border three times in 2023. But on his fourth entry, he caught up with Morin and murdered her.

During the 2024 presidential election campaign, Trump zeroed in on the killer and others of his ilk in a pledge to shut the U.S.-Mexico border. His policies earned the support of Morin’s family.

Her brother, Michael Morin, addressed the Republican National Convention last summer in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

“Open borders are often portrayed as compassionate and virtuous, but there is nothing compassionate about allowing violent criminals into our country and robbing children of their mother,” he said.

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

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DeSantis plans second immigration detention facility in north Florida dubbed ’Deportation Depot’
The new facility is expected to hold 1,300 immigration detention beds, though that capacity could be expanded to 2,000

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Kate Payne
Published Aug 14, 2025 • Last updated 19 hours ago • 4 minute read

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference about a recent immigration enforcement operation, at the South Florida office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Enforcement and Removal Operations, May 1, 2025, in Miramar, Fla.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference about a recent immigration enforcement operation, at the South Florida office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Enforcement and Removal Operations, May 1, 2025, in Miramar, Fla.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration is preparing to open a second immigration detention facility dubbed “Deportation Depot” at a state prison in north Florida, as a federal judge decides the fate of the state’s holding center for immigrants at an isolated airstrip in the Florida Everglades known as “Alligator Alcatraz.”


DeSantis announced Thursday that the new facility is to be housed at the Baker Correctional Institution, a state prison about 43 miles (69 kilometers) west of downtown Jacksonville. It is expected to hold 1,300 immigration detention beds, though that capacity could be expanded to 2,000, state officials said.


After opening the Everglades facility last month, DeSantis justified building the second detention center by saying President Donald Trump’s administration needs the additional capacity to hold and deport more immigrants.

“There is a demand for this,” DeSantis said. “I’m confident that it will be filled.”

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has trumpeted Republican governors’ efforts to expand their immigration detention capacity, calling Florida’s partnership a model for other state-run holding facilities.


DeSantis touted the relative ease and economy of setting up the north facility at a pre-existing prison, estimating the build-out cost to be $6 million. That’s compared to the hundreds of millions of dollars the state has committed to construct the vast network of tents and trailers at the south facility in the rugged and remote Florida swamp.

“This part of the facility is not being used right now for the state prisoners. It just gives us an ability to go in, stand it up quickly, stand it up cheaply,” DeSantis said of the state prison, calling the site “ready-made.”

It could take two to three weeks to get the facility operational, according to Kevin Guthrie, the director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, the agency in charge of building the immigration facilities.


The state had announced plans to “temporarily” close the prison in 2021, due to persistent staffing shortages.

“A building that’s been dormant now for a couple of years is going to have some unforeseen challenges,” Guthrie said when estimating the construction timeline.

Among the renovations needed: air conditioning, which is not required under Florida’s standards for its prisons, despite the state’s sweltering climate.

Staffing at the site will be handled by the Florida National Guard and state contractors “as needed,” DeSantis said. The state’s National Guard had been called on to help run the state’s prisons for more than two years due to chronic staff shortages, before being mobilized to support the state’s immigration enforcement efforts.


DeSantis had previously floated plans to open a second detention facility at a nearby Florida National Guard training facility known as Camp Blanding, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) southwest of Jacksonville. The longstanding military installation was a major U.S. Army training facility during World War II and serves as a “continuity of government” site for Florida’s executive branch, according to the facility’s website.

But announcing the plans Thursday, DeSantis said the Baker facility was a better fit because of its available capacity and proximity to a regional airport.

“Blanding does have air capacity, but probably not a big enough runway to handle large planes,” DeSantis said.

DeSantis pledged that detainees at the new facility will have “the same services” that are available at the state’s first detention center.


Attorneys for detainees at the Everglades facility have called the conditions there deplorable, writing in a court filing that some detainees are showing symptoms of COVID-19 without being separated from the general population. Rainwater floods their tents and officers go cell-to-cell pressuring detainees to sign voluntary removal orders before they’re allowed to consult their attorneys.

“Recent conditions at Alligator Alcatraz have fueled a sense of desperation among detainees,” the attorneys said in the court filing.

Conditions at the hastily built detention center were outlined in a filing made Wednesday ahead of a hearing Monday over the legal rights of the detainees. Civil rights attorneys want U.S. District Judge Rodolfo Ruiz to ensure that detainees at the facility have confidential access to their lawyers, which the lawyers say they haven’t had.


The state of Florida disputed that detainees’ attorneys have been unable to meet with their clients. Since July 15, when videoconferencing started at the facility, the state has granted every request for a detainee to meet with an attorney, and in-person meetings started July 28, state officials said. The first detainees arrived at the beginning of July.

Attorneys for detainees also wanted the judge to identify an immigration court that has jurisdiction over the detention center so that petitions can be filed for the detainees’ bond or release. The civil rights attorneys say they’ve been told regularly that federal immigration courts in Florida don’t have jurisdiction over the detainees held in the Everglades.