Lánzate 2024

Lánzate 2024

Come to the political and cultural festival for Latinx changemakers who are building a future rooted in justice, liberation, and el Buenvivir.

Shackle Sessions, Not the People #FueraSessions #SessionsOUT

Washington, D.C. – A statue of Attorney General Jeff Sessions was be unveiled in front of the U.S. Supreme Court today by Latinx and immigrant rights organizers, calling attention to the defense of the Department of Justice in favor of chaining and shackling all people appearing before a federal judge.

In the case, United States vs. Sanchez Gomez, being heard on Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will determine whether to reverse the Ninth Circuit’s decision holding that shackling and chaining a defendant whenever they appear before a judge in a federal court violates their constitutional rights. The U.S. Department of Justice will argue in favor of reversing that decision, allowing for the use of chains and shackles.

“We want people to see what chains and shackles look like and highlight the impact that the Attorney General’s actions have on our communities,” stated Jacinta Gonzalez, one of the organizer’s of today’s event and National Field Director at Mijente. “Since Sessions was sworn into office he has used his power as Attorney General to criminalize and incarcerate more people of color. His policies have increased prosecutions of immigrants, revived the use of drug prosecutions for incarceration of communities of color, and empowered local police departments to violate civil rights. Today in front of the Supreme Court, Sessions is arguing that as we defend ourselves from all of this criminalization and attacks, he wants us shackled and chained in front of the judge. Therefore we will be responding by saying that Sessions should be the one shackled.”

The decision of the Supreme Court would impact any defendant who is presenting themselves in front of a federal judge, including immigrants and U.S. citizens facing federal charges. The U.S. Department of Justice will argue for the shackling and against a previous conclusion of by the 9th Circuit Court that this practice violates people’s constitutional rights in June 2017.

The court case is also relevant specifically to immigrant rights, which is why the case has attracted the attention of Sheriffs around the country, who submitted a statement arguing that assuring constitutional limits to the practice of shackling and chaining immigrants would make mass criminalization and deportation less efficient. The Sheriffs and the Senator wrote wrote to the court regarding one such border criminalization program known as Operation Streamline, stating that “it requires processing so many illegal entrants that it would be very difficult to continue efficiently.”

In September of last year, a statue of Jeff Sessions was built and toppled by Mijente activists in response to his attacks on immigrants, calling him a monument to the Confederacy. Just last week Mijente and Color of Change launched a video naming the harms that Sessions has caused to communities of color marking his first anniversary as Attorney General, urging for him to be “the next to fall.”

City of Chicago Under Review by OIG for Use of Gang Database

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The investigation comes after more than a year of campaigning for Chicago to be a real ‘Sanctuary’ for its residents by, amongst other demands, eliminating the Gang Database.

Chicago, IL – Today Inspector General Joseph M. Ferguson announced that the City of Chicago Office of Inspector General will begin a review into the City of Chicago’s Gang Database. The review comes after a year-long campaign exposing the impact of the Gang Database on U.S.-born and immigrant communities of color.

The campaign included the case of Wilmer Catalan-Ramirez, an immigrant facing deportation because of his erroneous inclusion in the database, and the comprehensive report, Tracked & Targeted: Early Findings on Chicago’s Gang Database, detailing how the Chicago Police Department makes use of the city’s database to police and profile high numbers of black and brown Chicagoans.

“The decision of the Office of Inspector General to review the City of Chicago for the use of the Gang Database confirms what our communities have been saying for months: That the Chicago Police Department has a dangerous tool they use to criminalize communities of color,” said Janae Bonsu, Black Youth Project 100 (BYP100) and principal author of the Report. “These practices have devastating effects on our communities, from decreasing job opportunities, to increasing risk of deportation. The database needs to be eliminated and we will continue to work to make sure that the City has policies that prioritize the safety of our communities instead of policing and incarceration,” she concluded.

The coalition of organizations calls on the Mayor of Chicago and the City Council to take action to protect its residents and put a moratorium on the sharing of information in the Gang Database with other agencies and stop adding names to the list, while the Office of the Inspector General’s investigation takes place.

“We welcome the review from the OIG. At the same time, our communities are in crisis and the City of Chicago has a responsibility to do what it can to keep us safe. Every day the Trump administration is sending immigration agents to target our families and neighbors. The Gang Database is literally a list that ICE uses to justify these attacks, and the City of Chicago has a responsibility to take action now,” stated Rosi Carrasco, member of Organized Communities Against Deportation, and undocumented organizer against the gang database.

According to an analysis of the Strategic Subject List, early 65,000 people in the Chicago area are gang affiliated.  74.5% of people listed as “gang affiliated” are Black, 21.4% are Latinx, 60.7% are less than 30 years old, and 96.9% are male. The campaign to end the Chicago Gang Database, has worked for the last year to research and expose the database, including releasing the Tracked & Targeted: Early Findings on Chicago’s Gang Database, report, and advocating with the City of Chicago to end the practice of tagging individuals as potential gang members.

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Sign the petition demanding that Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the Chicago City Council
Eliminate the Gang Database!  

We Do It For Our Gente: Release Ale Now

Since we began building Mijente, we’ve come to understand the meaning of political home as not just a concept but also a practice. In some ways, political home means having a place where you can go to train up, build, learn, belong and feel whole. It also means being part of an organization that will have your back, fight tireless for you and for all of our communities. Political home means that we give it our all in order to protect and defend.

At this very moment, political home means we need to fight for one of our own. Alejandra Pablos is a Mijente member who has been in ICE custody at the Eloy Detention Center in Arizona since March 7th, when she was detained during an ICE check-in. She is a nationally known immigrant and reproductive rights organizer who has been a fearless in her work. Ale is also one of the first 20 people who became a Mijente member. She threw down when we took on Arpaio, she showed up to the very first Mijente meet up in DC, she came to Lánzate. Ale has shown us what the possibilities are when we create space for each other to live, laugh, fight, feel joy and build our power.

Fellow Mijente members share some of their thoughts on Alejandra, her leadership and the reasons why we fight for her. Check out their quotes below. We call on all Mijente members to join the fight to #ReleaseAle.

If there is someone out there who is constantly thinking, and fighting for liberation it is Ale. Ale doesn’t only put her mouth where her mind is, but her body as well. Ale will do anything to protect and fight with those who are oppressed by capitalism, white supremacy, and racism. She doesn’t let you get comfortable, that’s for sure. Ale is constantly challenging folks to do something each day.

Jessica, Tucson, AZ

Ale is someone who sees your strength, your pain & your fight and pushes you to see your whole self in order to continue fighting in our own lives and the movement. She teaches me to live in my truth without fear and insecurities. I will fight until Ale is FREE!

Maria Alejandra, Washington, D.C.

Alejandra has been and always will be a friend and a luchadora, inspiring me with her energetic passion, selflessness, and larger-than-life personality. She is critical to our lucha in Virginia and to this movement as a whole because of her unrelenting and unapologetic thirst for justice and liberation for all of us.

Yolanda, Annandale, VA

Undocumented Activist Targeted by ICE Asks Immigration Judge to Throw Out Case Based on First Amendment

Maru Mora-Villalpando, a Washington-based organizer facing her first immigration court date, files Motion to Terminate her deportation proceedings, citing First Amendment violations. Read the filing below.

Seattle, WA – Maru Mora-Villalpando, who was sent a notice to appear for a deportation hearing in December 2017 due to her “anti-ICE” organizing against immigration detention and deportations, faces her first deportation hearing this Thursday morning at the Seattle Immigration Court. Mora-Villalpando has asked the immigration judge to throw out the deportation case against her, in a court filing, which cites Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s unlawful targeting of her protected first amendment activity.  

“I have accompanied many people to their check-ins and court dates with ICE. On Thursday, I will face ICE myself for the first time,” stated Mora-Villalpando. “ICE is going after me and my family because they want to silence my work, which has exposed their cruel, inhumane detention and deportation policies. I will continue this fight because I am one of millions facing ICE’s abuses, and they must be stopped,” she concluded.  

Mora-Villalpando leads Northwest Detention Center Resistance, an organization that was co-founded when immigrants held at the Northwest Detention Center began a series of hunger strikes in 2014 protesting their inhumane treatment. The group’s effective organizing has brought to light the abuses faced by immigrants in the now-infamous Tacoma facility. The Motion to Terminate filed with the Seattle Immigration Court alleges that Mora-Villalpando is being singled out for deportation by ICE precisely because of her years of political activity against the agency. The Immigration Judge has the authority to terminate Mora-Villalpando deportation proceedings due to this unlawful targeting of her political speech.

Immigrant rights organizers point to the attack on Mora-Villalpando as a sign that ICE has gone beyond seeking to enforce the immigration laws. Tania Unzueta of Mijente, a national Latinx organization observed, “By purposely targeting people such as Maru who are organizing against the Trump administration’s racially-motivated deportation agenda, ICE has officially made the leap into a political repression agency.”

Elizabeth Simpson, a member of Mora-Villalpando’s legal team and attorney with the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild,  added, “We expect government officials to discharge their duties in a fair and non-discriminatory way. By targeting Maru because of her political activism, ICE is directly contravening that trust, and threatening our fundamental right to free speech and assembly.”  Devin Theriot-Orr, also a member of the legal team, stated, “ICE’s actions in Maru’s case are a transparent attempt to stifle dissent by targeting specific political viewpoints for retaliatory action.”

Mora-Villalpando has lived in the U.S. for over 25 years. She lives with her daughter, Josefina, a college student and U.S. citizen, near Seattle, Washington. In addition to working with NWDC Resistance she is a founding member of the national Latinx organization, Mijente.

Mijente is a digital and grassroots hub for Latinx and Chicanx movement building and organizing that seeks to increase the profile of policy issues that matter to our communities and increase the participation of Latinx and Chicanx people in the broader movements for racial, economic, climate and gender justice.

NWDC Resistance is a volunteer community group that emerged to fight deportations in 2014 at the now-infamous Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, WA. NWDC Resistance supports people detained who organized hunger strikes asking for a halt to all deportations and better treatment and conditions.

The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild is a national non-profit organization that provides technical assistance and support to community-based immigrant organizations, legal practitioners, and all advocates seeking and working to advance the rights of noncitizens. For 47 years, NIPNLG has promoted justice and equality of treatment in all areas of immigration law, the criminal justice system, and policies related to immigration.

10 Ways to Fight for Ale #ReleaseAle #AlevsICE

One day before International Women’s Day, nationally renowned immigrant rights and reproductive rights organizer and long-time Mijente member Alejandra Pablos was detained by ICE. She is the latest immigrant rights advocate facing deportation and is currently being held without bond at Eloy Detention Center in southern Arizona.  

Since her detainment last Wednesday, Ale has received an immense outpouring of support, a testament to how much Ale’s spirit and activism has impacted our community, our movement, and our personal journeys. Her detainment is devastating, but we need to channel her spirit to do as she requested: Fight for her on the outside as she is fighting inside.

This weekend, Mijente was able to visit  Ale and she gave us 10 ways you can plug into the #ReleaseAle #AlevsICE campaign:

10 Ways to FIGHT for Ale

1. Sign & Share Petition. With your support, Mijente has collected over 20,000 signatures on our petition demanding that ICE release Ale on bond–and we know we can get thousands more! If you haven’t already, sign and share the petition on your social media pages and groups.

2. Donate to Ale’s Defense Fund. Ale faces an uphill battle to fight her deportation. Your financial support will provide the resources she needs to fight her case.

3. Organizational Letter of Support to Judge. Use this template to have your organization write a letter to the judge expressing your support for Ale.  

4. Personal Letter of Support to Judge. Use the second page of this template to send your own personal letter to the judge detailing your support for Ale.  

5. Send a care package to Ale. See link for specific requirements regarding packages and send your package to:
Miriam Alejandra Pablos Espriu A#xxx-xx2-577
ELOY DETENTION CENTER
1705 EAST HANNA RD.
ELOY, AZ 85131

6. Host a letter-writing party. Letter-writing parties are already under way. Gather in community at your home, local cafe, or library.

7. Send your favorite paperback. Mijente visited Ale at Eloy and she requested paperback books be sent to her directly from an online bookstore. Send to:
Miriam Alejandra Pablos Espriu A#xxx-xx2-577
ELOY DETENTION CENTER
1705 EAST HANNA RD.
ELOY, AZ 85131

8. Show up for her bond hearing in Arizona. The bond hearing will be the strongest place to show the judge how much Ale is loved and supported, so we want to show up. Once the hearing date is set, we’ll share the date widely and ask for your in-person support.

9. Create art. Art is resistance. Join the artists who have created beautiful art in support of the #ReleaseAle campaign.


10. Keep Ale’s story alive. Share Ale’s story every week on your social media channels to keep her name and story active online. Follow @Mijente to stay on top of the latest news about Ale’s case and share details of her case. Include the campaign hashtags #AleVSICE and #ReleaseAle in your posts.