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View in browser JULY 11, 2019 “For the many families who came here as refugees fleeing violence, deportation is a death threat."
Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union Nationwide immigration raids that were postponed three weeks ago are now scheduled to begin Sunday, two senior Department of Homeland Security officials told NBC News.
The mass raids, to be conducted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, are set to target roughly 2,000 families in major cities across the United States — including Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York and San Francisco. A source said that those cities may change.
The Department of Homeland Security had also planned to hold deportation raids in New Orleans, but according to a statement issued Thursday night, they will not be holding "immigration enforcement initiatives" associated with evacuations or sheltering related to Tropical Storm Barry "except in the event of a serious public safety threat."
The New York Times reports that the raids will include collateral deportations, where "authorities might detain immigrants who happened to be on the scene even though they were not targets of the raids."
Many advocacy groups and some Democratic lawmakers have responded by sharing information, both in person and on social media, telling immigrants of their rights and what to expect should the raids be carried about.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi read from a “know your rights” flyer at her weekly press conference Thursday and said she was going to ask religious leaders to appeal to Trump to stop the raids.
People "do not need do let an ICE agent into their home unless there’s a judicial warrant," Lee Gelernt, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, said. "Rarely does ICE have a judicial warrant,” adding that ICE usually has its own administrative warrants.
As Ali Velshi pointed out on the 11th Hour tonight, it is a return to President Trump's 2016 campaign message of fear, a "steady and consistent theme for Donald Trump that clearly works with his base."
During a summit at the White House on Thursday, President Trump touted his massive online following and praised conspiracy theorists and far-right agitators.
NBC's Ben Collins said on All In Thursday that the summit felt like "commencement of the first meme war," and referred to it as an "awards ceremony" for people who spread disinformation online.
"Buckle up," Collins said. "We're about to do this all over again."
Attendees included right-wing personalities Ali Alexander, who had pushed the false conspiracy theory that the California-born Sen. Kamala Harris was not an “American black,” Jim Hoft, from the conspiracy website Gateway Pundit, and YouTube personality Tim Pool, who has pushed the false conspiracy theory that murdered DNC staffer Seth Rich leaked hacked emails to WikiLeaks.
“You communicate with our citizens without going through the fake news filter,” the president told those attendees. “The crap you think of is unbelievable.”
Trump defended several of his most well-known typos and spelling errors, arguing he’s “actually a good speller” but “the fingers aren’t as good as the brain."
Organizers printed and displayed giant versions of some of the president’s tweets for the event, including a reference to this head-scratcher from 2018: “Who can figure out the true meaning of "covfefe" ??? Enjoy!”
In Case You Missed It: With census fight and immigration raids, Trump returns to a message of fear It's a new fight with an old message. On the census citizenship question and with reports of new ICE raids across the country, Trump is returning to a message of fear. Franco Ordoñez, Michael Steele, and Joyce Vance discuss. (The Last Word)
Epstein wants out of jail. A lawyer for one of his accusers responds. Kimberly Lerner, the attorney representing one of the women who has come forward saying she was forcibly raped by Epstein at age 15, tells Lawrence O’Donnell that Epstein is a flight risk and should not be released on bail. Mimi Rocah also joins the discussion. (Last Word)
Harris: Trump in the business of intimidating the vulnerable Senator Kamala Harris, Democratic 2020 presidential candidate, talks with Rachel Maddow about how Donald Trump is using the census and deportation threats to instill fear in the immigrant community, behavior she describes as unbecoming of a president and weakens American democracy. (Rachel Maddow)
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Trump orders agencies to collect citizenship data it already collects (Last Word) New Orleans faces massive flooding as Tropical Storm Barry bares down (All In) Jeffrey Epstein’s lawyers say he’s ‘entitled’ to $77M bail package (Velshi & Ruhle) Miami Herald: new accusers come forward as Epstein asks to be released from jail (Last Word) Pelosi calls Dem tweets 'offensive' after Ocasio-Cortez calls her 'disrespectful' (MTP Daily) 'Everybody failed here': Will Acosta be held accountable? (Morning Joe) 'Diversity is our strength,' says Speaker Pelosi dismissing rumors of tensions within her caucus (Craig Melvin) Andrew Yang says giving everyone $1K a month will save the country (The Beat) Trump's closed-door social media summit is 'pretty spooky' (Hallie Jackson) Barbara Lee: Trump’s effort to add citizenship question to census ‘an attack on our democracy’ (Hardball) House Democrats subpoena some of the biggest names in the Mueller report (Deadline White House) Buttigieg unveils plan to address racial inequities as he struggles with black voters (Craig Melvin) Fmr. GOP governor blasts Trump, calls census move a ‘surrender’ (The Beat) What do House Democrats hope to gain with subpoenas of Trump officials? (MSNBC Live)
Quote of the Day - Christina Greer, on President Trump's expected ramp-up of ICE raids this weekend (Video)
Opinion OPINION. Jeffrey Epstein's new charges are a direct rebuke to Alex Acosta — no matter what Acosta says. The DOJ is taking a welcome stand against influence peddlers who have long attempted to use their status to undermine justice. But what about the prosecutors who enable them? By Glenn Kirschner, former assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia and MSNBC legal analyst.
OPINION. Opioid addiction requires safe injection sites, not ancient rhetoric from the war on drugs. Giving users a safe place doesn't promote drug use. It promotes access to social services, prevents death and keeps them out of public spaces. By Michelle Chen.
What to watch Friday We'll be watching for updates as Tropical Storm Barry heads towards the Gulf Coast, with potential landfall this weekend. Some worry that the Mississippi River could crest over the New Orleans levees for the first time in modern history.
If you're in harm's way, please be safe and take all necessary and possible precautions.
This newsletter was prepped for you by Stephanie Haberman.
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