‘He is not a criminal’: legal immigrants caught up in Trump raids

‘He is not a criminal’: legal immigrants caught up in Trump raids
The agency said on social media that it had conducted several raids in Aurora, a Denver suburb, on February 5. (AFP)
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Updated 14 March 2025

‘He is not a criminal’: legal immigrants caught up in Trump raids

‘He is not a criminal’: legal immigrants caught up in Trump raids
  • The agency said on social media that it had conducted several raids in Aurora, a Denver suburb, on February 5

DENVER: D Pablo Morales has nothing against Donald Trump, and when the US president promised mass deportations, he was not worried because as a legal migrant from Cuba, he thought they would only affect criminals.
But then immigration officers arrested his son, Luis — a rideshare driver who has never broken the law and was also in the US legally.
“He has all his papers, he has his social security number, his work authorization,” Morales told AFP, displaying the documents.
The two men were visiting friends in Denver when they were woken by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid.
When agents knocked on the door, they calmly presented their papers thinking they had nothing to fear — until Luis was handcuffed and sent to an administrative detention center.
He has yet to be released.
Luis filled out paperwork to apply for residency in 2023 but, the agents told his father, he did not have a hearing date for his application.
Immigration lawyers say the blame lies with the backlog in the US immigration system, where cases often drag on for years because of a shortage of judges.
Luis has lived in New York for almost four years and is married to an American citizen.
“He is not a criminal,” insists his father.
“He’s a hardworking boy like me; we came to this country... to work,” explains this former employee of a Las Vegas casino.
ICE did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the case when contacted by AFP.
The agency said on social media that it had conducted several raids in Aurora, a Denver suburb, on February 5.
“100+ members of the violent Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua were targeted for arrest and detention in Aurora, Colorado, today by ICE,” it posted.
According to a report by Fox News, around thirty people were arrested, of whom only one was a gang member.
“I don’t understand,” said Morales. “They were looking for Venezuelans who are part of a criminal gang.
“If he is Cuban and he shows them his papers, I don’t know why they are coming to take him away.”
Local media reported an asylum seeker was also among those rounded up in that particular raid.

Trump rode back into the White House on a wave of anti-immigrant sentiment sweeping America.
He pledged to carry out “the largest deportation operation in history.”
However, data shows ICE deported fewer people in February — Trump’s first full month in office — than it did under Joe Biden in the same month last year, according to a report by NBC.
But its actions have been very visible, with military jets used to ostentatiously deport handcuffed people to Latin American countries, or to detention at Guantanamo Bay.
Colorado knows it is in the crosshairs.
Its capital, Denver, is a sanctuary city, where Democratic authorities limit the cooperation of local law enforcement with federal immigration police.
And Aurora has been cast by Trump and conservative media as a symbol of an “occupied America,” because of a viral video showing armed men breaking into an apartment there.
City police point out that crime has fallen in Aurora over the last two years.
Last month’s raids were little more than “photo ops” says Laura Lunn, an immigration lawyer.
“I think that the focus on Aurora was a fabricated story to begin with. They’re trying to solve a problem that never existed,” says Lunn, a member of the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network.
“The rhetoric that the government is using — conflating immigration and criminals — is really damaging, because those two things are not the same.”
ICE says that while its agents are targeting criminals, they are content to make “collateral arrests.”
During the first month of the Trump presidency, the proportion of people without criminal records detained by ICE increased from six to 16 percent, according to the New York Times.
Lunn says no one is safe anymore, even immigrants who are just awaiting their day in court but who have everything in order.
She advises her worried clients to always have photocopies of their files.
“People are being detained today that I would never have guessed even a month ago that they would be detained,” she says.
“It’s really hard for us to predict who might be at risk.”


Swedish ‘Tinder Swindler’ victim ‘celebrates’ his arrest

Updated 19 sec ago

Swedish ‘Tinder Swindler’ victim ‘celebrates’ his arrest

Swedish ‘Tinder Swindler’ victim ‘celebrates’ his arrest
Leviev was arrested at Batumi airport “at Interpol’s request,” Georgian officials said Monday
“I celebrated a bit yesterday. I’m allowed to feel happy because this guy destroyed my life,” Pernilla Sjoholm told AFP

STOCKHOLM: A Swedish victim of Israeli fraudster Simon Leviev, made famous by Netflix show “The Tinder Swindler,” told AFP Tuesday she had “celebrated” his arrest in Georgia.
Leviev, 34, whose real name is Shimon Yehuda Hayut, rose to notoriety after investigative reports and media coverage exposed a pattern of romance fraud and financial crimes.
He was arrested at Batumi airport “at Interpol’s request,” Georgian officials said Monday.
“I celebrated a bit yesterday. I’m allowed to feel happy because this guy destroyed my life,” Pernilla Sjoholm told AFP in an interview in Stockholm.
Between 2017 and 2019, Leviev allegedly used the dating app Tinder to pose as a wealthy heir and trick women into advancing him large sums of money, which he never repaid.
His scheme became one of the most notorious examples of “catfishing” — creating a false online persona to lure victims into emotional and financial entanglements.
Sjoholm, now 38, said she met Leviev on Tinder in March 2018.
They rapidly became friends and within a few months he was defrauding her, she said.
In total, she handed over more than 600,000 kronor ($65,000) to him, which he never paid back.
His arrest “is a win,” Sjoholm said. “Thank you to the country that issued the international arrest warrant.”
Sjoholm added that she had bounced back from the dark chapter, describing a “very happy family life.”
“I was so devastated back in 2018, 2019. And to stand here today... and just be so happy... It’s incredible,” she said.
She has since become involved in the fight against financial fraud and advocates for better regulation of the use of artificial intelligence in deepfakes.
“We need to see (fraud) as more than just a money loss. We need to see it as the emotional abuse that these victims live through,” she said, calling for better protection of victims.
Sjoholm said she is ready to testify against Leviev in the event of a trial and has filed police complaints against him in Sweden and the Netherlands.

German ex-spy chief probed over high-profile child kidnap case

German ex-spy chief probed over high-profile child kidnap case
Updated 21 min 22 sec ago

German ex-spy chief probed over high-profile child kidnap case

German ex-spy chief probed over high-profile child kidnap case
  • Prosecutors charge that the two men were involved in an initial failed 2022 plot to kidnap the children from Denmark
  • As part of the probe into the case, 13 properties were searched Tuesday in several German states and in Switzerland, according to prosecutors

FRANKFURT: A former chief of German foreign intelligence is under investigation for alleged involvement in a plot to kidnap two of the children of a steakhouse chain heiress, prosecutors said Tuesday.
August Hanning, 79, and a retired police officer, who then headed a security firm, are accused of having accepted a commission from Christina Block, whose father founded the popular Block House restaurants.
Prosecutors charge that the two men were involved in an initial failed 2022 plot to kidnap the children from Denmark — which was followed by a successful abduction allegedly involving Israeli ex-security officers on New Year’s Eve 2023.
Hanning and the retired police officer were to be paid more than 100,000 euros ($118,000) in exchange for returning the children in 2022 from Block’s ex-husband, who had custody of the youngsters and was living with them in Denmark, prosecutors in Hamburg said.
The plot involved distracting the children’s escort, using force if necessary, so their mother could put the children into a car and drive them back to Hamburg, northern Germany, they said.
“The plan was only thwarted because the children’s father noticed suspicious individuals at his home in time and informed the Danish police,” according to a statement.
As part of the probe into the case, 13 properties were searched Tuesday in several German states and in Switzerland, according to prosecutors.
Hanning, who was head of the foreign intelligence agency BND from 1998 to 2005, has previously denied in media interviews any involvement in the attempted abduction of the children.
The children were later abducted, on New Year’s Eve 2023. Block, her TV presenter partner and an Israeli man are currently on trial accused of ordering the violent kidnapping.
The boy and girl — aged 10 and 13 at the time — were returned to their father after several days.
Hamburg prosecutors said Tuesday they were examining “whether and to what extent” Hanning and the retired police official, 64, might have been involved in the 2023 abduction.
Prosecutors said that the two men, Block and managers of an Israeli company are also suspected of seeking to discredit the children’s father with false accusations of child sex abuse.
In 2023 a hard drive acquired by the Israeli company containing child porn images was placed on the father’s property, they said.


Denmark leads an exercise in Greenland, with Russia in mind at a time of tensions with the US

Denmark leads an exercise in Greenland, with Russia in mind at a time of tensions with the US
Updated 30 min 30 sec ago

Denmark leads an exercise in Greenland, with Russia in mind at a time of tensions with the US

Denmark leads an exercise in Greenland, with Russia in mind at a time of tensions with the US
  • The chief of Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command pointed to wariness toward Russia as a “regional superpower” in the far north
  • Denmark is moving to strengthen its military presence around Greenland and in the wider North Atlantic

NUUK, Greenland: Denmark is leading a military exercise with hundreds of troops from several European NATO members in Greenland, a maneuver that coincides with months of tensions over the Trump administration’s desire for US jurisdiction over the vast Arctic territory.
The Arctic Light 2025 exercise, which follows maneuvers with identical or similar titles in previous years, involves more than 550 service members from Denmark and NATO allies France, Germany, Sweden and Norway, according to the Danish military.
The chief of Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command pointed to wariness toward Russia as a “regional superpower” in the far north and highlighted what he called “a very good relationship with the US military.”
On Monday, Danish forces trained boarding ships with special forces as military observers from the United States, Britain, Canada, Sweden and Germany looked on. Troops descended from helicopters on ropes and and climbed up from speedboats in temperatures barely above freezing.
The guests from allied nations aboard the Danish frigate Niels Juel saw Danish F-16 fighter jets fly by, as well as live-fire exercises.
The stated aim of the exercise is to strengthen the operational readiness of the Danish armed forces and Greenland, a strategically located island that is a semiautonomous territory of Denmark. The military says its personnel is training along with allies to reinforce “their joint response capabilities against destabilizing threats to Greenland, the Kingdom of Denmark, and NATO in the North Atlantic and Arctic regions.”
Stronger Danish military presence
Denmark is moving to strengthen its military presence around Greenland and in the wider North Atlantic. In late January, the government announced a roughly 14.6 billion-kroner ($2.3 billion) agreement with parties including the governments of Greenland and the Faeroe Islands to “improve capabilities for surveillance and maintaining sovereignty in the region.”
Those will include three new Arctic naval vessels, two additional long-range surveillance drones and satellite capacity.
In the Arctic Light exercise, which started Sept. 9 and ends Friday, Denmark is deploying the frigate, two helicopters, two F-16s and personnel from all three branches of the armed forces, including special forces. France is sending a naval ship, a tanker aircraft and mountain infantry equipped with drones.
Good ties with US military
The Danish military didn’t mention the current tensions with Washington in announcing the exercise, and the chief of Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command pointed to good relations with the American military.
“We have worked together with the US for decades, both in exercises and also operations in Afghanistan, Iraq and so on,” Maj. Gen. Søren Andersen said on Monday. That will continue this week, because Denmark will be taking its fighter jets to the United States’ Pituffik Space Base in northwestern Greenland, he added.
“So, we will land up there, and I think the pilots will have a cup of coffee with the base commander there,” Andersen said.
Wariness toward Russia in the Arctic
This year’s Arctic Light is taking place against a backdrop of growing wariness toward Russia in the region.
“I think it’s fair to say that Russia has built up in the Arctic for the last 20 years, and Russia is a regional superpower in the Arctic,” Andersen said.
When the war in Ukraine ends, “I think most of us working in this business ... think that Russia will start building up again other places and use their resources not in Ukraine, but other places in the world,” he said.
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that he seeks US jurisdiction over Greenland. He hasn’t ruled out military force to take control of the mineral-rich territory.
Denmark and Greenland have said the island is not for sale and condemned reports of the US gathering intelligence there. Last month, Denmark’s foreign minister summoned the top US diplomat in Copenhagen for talks after the main national broadcaster reported that at least three people with connections to Trump had been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland.


Russia shows off conventional and nuclear military might in drills — and raises tensions with NATO

Russia shows off conventional and nuclear military might in drills — and raises tensions with NATO
Updated 16 September 2025

Russia shows off conventional and nuclear military might in drills — and raises tensions with NATO

Russia shows off conventional and nuclear military might in drills — and raises tensions with NATO
  • Rutte referenced Moscow’s hypersonic missiles, noting that they shatter the notion that Spain or Britain are any safer than Russia’s neighbors of Estonia or Lithuania
  • The Zapad 2025 exercise comes as Russia’s 3½-year-old war in Ukraine has dragged on despite President Donald Trump’s push for a peace deal and his Aug. 15 meeting with Putin in Alaska

WARSAW: A swarm of Russian drones flies into Poland in what officials there regard as a deliberate provocation.
NATO responds by bolstering the alliance’s air defenses on its eastern flank.
Moscow showcases its conventional and nuclear military might in long-planned exercises with Belarus, as it warns the West against sending foreign troops into Ukraine.
These events — all taking place in the month since the US-Russia summit meeting in Alaska failed to bring peace to Ukraine — have only heightened tensions in eastern Europe.
When Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it came days after joint maneuvers with Belarus. The latest sweeping drills, dubbed “Zapad 2025” — or “West 2025” — have worried NATO members Poland, Latvia and Lithuania that border Belarus to the west.
The maneuvers, which wrap up Tuesday, have included nuclear-capable bomber and warships, thousands of troops and hundreds of combat vehicles simulating a joint response to an enemy attack -– including what officials said was planning for nuclear weapons use and options involving Russia’s new intermediate range ballistic missile, the Oreshnik.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte referenced Moscow’s hypersonic missiles, noting that they shatter the notion that Spain or Britain are any safer than Russia’s neighbors of Estonia or Lithuania.
“Let’s agree that within this alliance of 32 countries, we all live on the eastern flank,” he said in Brussels.
The anniversary of Russia’s nuclear weapons policy
One year ago this month, Putin outlined a revision of Moscow’s nuclear doctrine, noting that any nation’s conventional attack on Russia that is supported by a nuclear power will be considered a joint attack on his country. That threat was clearly aimed at discouraging the West from allowing Ukraine to strike Russia with longer-range weapons and appears to significantly lower the threshold for the possible use of Russia’s nuclear arsenal.
That doctrine also places Belarus under the Russian nuclear umbrella. Russia, which says it has deployed battlefield nuclear weapons to Belarus, plans to station Oreshnik missiles there as well later this year.
The Zapad 2025 exercise comes as Russia’s 3½-year-old war in Ukraine has dragged on despite President Donald Trump’s push for a peace deal and his Aug. 15 meeting with Putin in Alaska.
On Sept. 10, two days before the maneuvers started, about 20 Russian drones flew into Poland’s airspace. While Moscow denied targeting Poland and officials in Belarus alleged that the drones veered off course after being jammed by Ukraine, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said it was a “provocation” that “brings us all closer to open conflict, closer than ever since World War II.”
Rutte branded Moscow’s action as “reckless” as he announced a new “Eastern Sentry” initiative to bolster the alliance’s air defenses in the area. He also noted that in addition to Poland, “drones violate our airspace in Romania, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.”
Putin’s Oreshnik threat
When Russia first used the Oreshnik against Ukraine in November 2024, Putin warned the West it could use it next against allies of Kyiv that allowed it to strike inside Russia with their longer-range missiles.
Putin has bragged that Oreshnik’s multiple warheads plunge at speeds of up to Mach 10 and can’t be intercepted, and that several of them used in a conventional strike could be as devastating as a nuclear attack. Russian state media boasted that it would take the missile only 11 minutes to reach an air base in Poland and 17 minutes to reach NATO headquarters in Brussels. There’s no way to know whether it’s carrying a nuclear or a conventional warhead before it hits the target.
Russia has begun Oreshnik production, Putin said last month, reaffirming plans to deploy it to Belarus later this year.
Belarus’ deputy defense minister, Pavel Muraveiko, said Tuesday that the drills involved planning for the use of tactical nuclear weapons and the deployment of the Oreshnik. He didn’t give any further details.
Unlike nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles that can obliterate entire cities, less-powerful tactical weapons have a short range for use against troops on the battlefield.
Russia’s Defense Ministry released videos of nuclear-capable bombers on training missions as part of the drills that spread from Belarus — which borders NATO members Poland, Latvia and Lithuania — to the Arctic, where its naval assets practiced launches of nuclear-capable missiles, including the hypersonic Zircon missile.
Rebuilding the Soviet-era ‘nuclear fortress’
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko said in December that his country has several dozen Russian tactical nuclear weapons.
The revamped Russian nuclear doctrine says Moscow could use nuclear weapons “in the event of aggression” against Russia and Belarus with conventional weapons that threaten “their sovereignty and/or territorial integrity.”
Russian and Belarusian officials have made contradictory statements about who controls the weapons. When their deployment was first announced, Lukashenko said Belarus will be in charge, but the Russian military emphasized that it will retain control.
While signing a security pact with Lukashenko in December, Putin said that even with Russia controlling the Oreshniks, Moscow would allow Minsk to select the targets. He noted that if the missiles are used against targets closer to Belarus, they could carry a significantly heavier payload.
Deploying tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus would allow Russian aircraft and missiles to reach potential targets in Ukraine more easily and quickly if Moscow decides to use them. It also extends Russia’s capability to target several NATO allies in eastern and central Europe.
“The weapons’ deployment closer to the borders with the West sends a signal even if there are no plans to use it,” said Andrey Baklitskiy, senior researcher at the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research.
Alexander Alesin, a Minsk-based military analyst, said the deployment of Russian tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus has turned it into a “balcony looming over the West” that threatens the Baltics and Poland, as well as Ukraine.
The planned Oreshnik deployment will threaten all of Europe in a return to a Cold War-era scenario when Belarus was a forward base for Soviet nuclear weapons aimed at Europe, he said.
In the Cold War, Belarus hosted more than a half of the Soviet arsenal of intermediate-range missiles under the cover of its deep forests. Such land-based weapons that can reach between 500 to 5,500 kilometers (310 to 3,400 miles) were banned under the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty that was terminated in 2019.
“Belarus served as a nuclear fortress during the Soviet times,” Alesin said.
The USSR built about 100 heavily reinforced storage sites for nuclear weapons in Belarus, some of which have been revamped for holding Russian nuclear weapons, he said.
“If they restored several dozen storage sites and are actually keeping nuclear warheads in just two or three, the potential enemy will have to guess where they are,” Alesin added.


Suspects accused of flying drone over Polish presidential palace are Belarusian and Ukrainian

Suspects accused of flying drone over Polish presidential palace are Belarusian and Ukrainian
Updated 16 September 2025

Suspects accused of flying drone over Polish presidential palace are Belarusian and Ukrainian

Suspects accused of flying drone over Polish presidential palace are Belarusian and Ukrainian
  • The two suspects are “a young Belarusian woman” and a Ukrainian man “in his early 20s,” Dobrzynski said
  • “We deny rumors that this is a massive espionage action”

BERLIN: Polish authorities said the two people detained on suspicion of flying a drone over state buildings on Monday night were Belarusian and Ukrainian citizens.
The drone, which was spotted flying over the Belvedere presidential palace in the capital, Warsaw, was neutralized by the State Protection Services.
The two suspects are “a young Belarusian woman” and a Ukrainian man “in his early 20s,” Jacek Dobrzynski, a spokesman for the minister coordinating special services, said in a press briefing on Tuesday morning.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk had initially written on social media on Monday night that “two Belarusian citizens” were detained. It was not immediately clear why the initial information was incorrect, but the State Protection Services said that police interrogated the suspects overnight.
“We deny rumors that this is a massive espionage action,” Dobrzynski said, adding that it was too early to confirm any further details.
The country is on high alert after multiple Russian drones crossed into the country last week in what European officials described as a deliberate provocation. NATO sent fighter jets to shoot down the drones.