Families. Whichever family it was relevant to. It is a really strange thing because i didnt feel i have to go to the fbi didnt want to go to the fbi because i didnt think wed get to the families. When i went directly to the families, they many times all the time or happy to have the spirit of what are they going to do with the information once you get it. Now how do you operate on it whether someone is saying i know how to make contact with the kidnappers or whether it is information about where people are being held or anything like that. We passed it onto the families but there was always this empty feeling they would not be effectively worked on because of the failure of the government to assist. I think that is a success of the british philosophy in terms of having two diplomats totally delegated to helping hostage families understand what is going on. They dont pay ransom either. Their results are similar to ours up to this point. But at least families such as ours would have conf
Asylum-seekers and refugees wait for information from volunteer groups after being dropped off by Border Patrol at the Iris Avenue Transit Center in San
Immigrant Rights Legal Defense Program passed in April 2022, set aside $5 million in county funds to pay for legal representation for detained immigrants.
In October, San Diego County gave $3 million to the nonprofit SBCS to run the Migrant Welcome Center. A month later, other immigrant rights advocates are saying the nonprofit is not spending the money wisely. SBCS says it stands by its work.
The HOME Act would have limited cooperation between the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and Immigration and Customs Enforcement