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Florida passed one of the toughest immigration laws in the country nearly a year ago. Many are thinking about leaving the state and those who stayed behind say it's made life terrifying.
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The number of people coming from South and Central American is rising and they will eventually arrive at the U.S. Southern border, analysts say.
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An indigenous Guatemalan teen accused in the death of a St. Johns County police sergeant has been cleared of any wrongdoing. Prosecutors announced they were dropping an aggravated manslaughter case against Virgilio Aguilar-Mendez.
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The investigative reporter was recognized for his work on the “compelling and informative” podcast Detention by Design, which traces the beginnings of immigrant detention in the U.S. to the arrivals of Cubans and Haitians by boat in Florida in the 1970s and 1980s.
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For Aura Garduño, obtaining her U.S. citizenship after 18 years of living in Florida allows her a newfound sense of security, plus the opportunity to create more permanent roots and be her authentic, colorful self.
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A high-profile spate of Venezuelan migrant crime, from New York to Chile, has the exile community wrestling with its own 'Mariel boatlift' divide. But the 'crisis' looks overblown.
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The state leads the nation with more than 481,000 immigration court cases, as a record number of people cross into the United States. A Tampa immigration lawyer talks about the backlog.
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For the second week in a row, U.S.-run flights to Venezuela carrying migrants have not departed as planned — a move that seems to be initiated by Venezuela.
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Gay and trans migrants often faced violence in their home countries. Many face similar persecution from their countrymen in the U.S.
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Amid national outcry, the Guatemala Maya Center in Lake Worth Beach continues its effort to help release an indigenous Guatemalan teen farmer who is charged in the death of a St. Johns County police officer who died of a heart attack shortly after a physical struggle to detain the farmer.
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Recently, on a flight from San Diego to New York, reporter Jasmine Garsd sat next to a young man from Ecuador, who told her the story of his journey to the U.S.
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The Biden administration has allowed more than one million people without visas to live and work in the United States temporarily into the U.S. over the past three years under an authority called humanitarian parole, including Cubans, Venezuelans and Haitians. Now the program is at the heart of a battle in Congress.