#PolicyDemand

2025-06-17

#ICE #PolicyDemand #Seattle

"3, Seattle should live up to its Sanctuary city status and ban the loopholes that allow SPD to cooperate with ICE as long SPD isn’t directly involved in investigation or apprehension of our undocumented neighbors. SPD should under no circumstances be allowed to cooperate with us kidnapping residents of Seattle. SPD directly assisted ICE Tuesday of last week which allowed ICE to take 8 of our neighbors."

theburnerseattle.com/post/the-

#PNW #FuckICE #ACAB #SancturaryCity

2025-06-17

#ICE #PolicyDemand #PNW

"2, like California we should ban all law enforcement from failing to identify themsleves in the majority of cases. We demand all law enforcement(including ICE) display name and badge number visibly at all times."

#Seattle #ICE #FuckICE #ChingaLaMigra #PNW #WA #CityHall #CityCouncil #SeaPol #USPol #Immigration #acab

2025-06-17

#PolicyDemand

Speaking to Seattle immigrants and advocates who plan to give public comment at city hall told me they want these policy demands debated, first:

"1, Like Boston’s mayor the city should submit continuous freedom of information act requests so everyone of our neighbors that are taken is accounted for and we know what they are being charged with."

wbur.org/news/2025/06/13/bosto

#FuckICE #USPol #SeaPol #CityCouncil #Policy #Seattle #ICE #PNW #Boston #Mayor

Boston's Morning Newsletter
Boston plans to file first FOIAs for ICE raid information by Friday
June 13, 2025
Nik DeCosta-KlipaFOIA Friday? Boston's first formal requests for more information about federal immigration enforcement activities should be filed before the weekend hits. Earlier this week, Mayor Michelle Wu signed an executive order directing the city to regularly submit Freedom of Information Act requests to peel back some of the secrecy around local Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids. And as WBUR's Eve Zuckoff reports, Wu said yesterday the first requests would be submitted by the end of today.

What info does the city want? The three main points are "who has been arrested, why, and where they're being detained," according to Wu. It comes after ICE announced nearly 1,500 arrests in Massachusetts last month, but declined to release the majority of their names or alleged crimes. "We have not received any of that information from asking through other channels previously," Wu said yesterday.
ICE's response: Todd Lyons, the agency acting director, told the Boston Herald that ICE plans to comply with the FOIAs and thinks it will make a point about Boston's law limiting the extent to which local police can assist ICE. “ICE welcomes the requests for transparency because this will only help ICE and DHS show how the mayor’s lack of cooperation hurts her neighborhoods," Lyons told the Herald.

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