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Governor Polis Launches Spanish Language Facebook and Twitter Pages

Governor Jared Polis today launched Spanish language Facebook and Twitter pages to help disseminate important information related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

El gobernador Jared Polis, anunció el día de hoy, el lanzamiento de páginas en Facebook y Twitter en español para ayudar a difundir información importante relacionada con la pandemia COVID-19.

DENVER -  Governor Jared Polis today launched Spanish language Facebook and Twitter pages to help disseminate important information related to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“Now, more than ever we need to be communicating with as many Coloradans as possible,” said Governor Jared Polis. “By launching these new social media pages, we hope that we can further connect with Spanish speaking Coloradans and ensure they are getting the latest information as it’s being released. We are all in this together and we will get through this together.”

Coloradans can visit the Facebook page at www.facebook.com/GovofCoEspanol/ and the Twitter page at twitter.com/GovofCoEspanol

El Gobernador Polis Lanza Páginas de Facebook y Twitter en Español 

DENVER - El gobernador Jared Polis, anunció el día de hoy, el lanzamiento de páginas en Facebook y Twitter en español para ayudar a difundir información importante relacionada con la pandemia COVID-19.

"Ahora, más que nunca, necesitamos comunicarnos con la mayor cantidad posible de habitantes de Colorado", dijo el gobernador Jared Polis. "Al lanzar estas nuevas páginas de redes sociales, esperamos poder conectarnos aún más con los habitantes de Colorado de habla hispana y asegurarnos de que obtengan la información más reciente a medida que se publica. Todos estamos juntos en esto y lo superaremos juntos ”.

Los habitantes de Colorado pueden visitar la página de Facebook en www.facebook.com/GovofCoEspanol/ y la página de Twitter en twitter.com/GovofCoEspanol.

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RMIAN is proud to be part of the Denver Immigrant Legal Services Fund (DILSF), which was created in 2018 to help vulnerable immigrants access fair legal representation and due process. Established by the City of Denver and managed by The Denver Foundation, the fund provides grants to nonprofit organizations that offer direct legal representation to low-income Denver residents who face potential deportation. The DILSF is part of the Vera Institute of Justice’s SAFE Network, a nationwide movement of communities dedicated to publicly funded, universal representation for immigrants facing detention and deportation.

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The Colorado Independent: ICE moves hundreds of detainees in and out of the Aurora ICE detention facility during the pandemic

Immigration and Customs Enforcement has moved 776 detainees into a privately-run detention center in Aurora in the approximate eight weeks since the first case of COVID-19 was reported in Colorado, according to reports from Rep. Jason Crow’s office. 

Over this same period of time, roughly an equal number of detainees were moved out — transferred, released or deported — a shuffling of immigrants and asylum-seekers that Crow argues is increasing the risk of exposure and transmission of the new coronavirus.

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Webinar: COVID-19 Detention Litigation Updates

RMIAN’s Laura Lunn will participate in a webinar organized by Detention Watch Network, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and the Advancement Project focusing on COVID-19 Detention Litigation Updates on May 12 at 4:00 pm EST / 1:00 pm PST. 

Learn about the impact of COVID-19 litigation for individuals and #FreeThemAll. We'll hear updates about the Fraihat case, various habeas litigation efforts, and the use of parole requests, with an opportunity for Q & A.

Date and time: Tuesday, May 12 at 4:00 pm EST/1:00 pm PST
Register now 

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Webinar: The War on Asylum and How You Can Help

Please join us for a webinar, “The War on Asylum and How You Can Help”

Tuesday, May 12, 11:30 am - 1:00 pm

Attorneys from RMIAN, the Colorado Asylum Center (CAC), and the International Rescue Committee (IRC) invite you to join us for a virtual webinar addressing critical changes to the U.S. asylum system and ways you can get involved locally to defend the right to asylum.

From immigration bans to family separation, from the Migrant Protection Protocols program to heightened restrictions surrounding COVID-19, the Trump Administration has waged a war on asylum seekers. If you have thought about using your legal training to fight back against these injustices, now is the time.

Click here to RSVP

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RMIAN Volunteer Interpreter & Translator Training this Thursday!

Become trained to volunteer as a RMIAN interpreter or translator this Thursday, April 30, 2020, from 5-6:15pm MST.

“I volunteer with RMIAN because I want migrants and asylum seekers to know they are not alone in their pursuit of their human rights. I love translating. It is a special privilege to help people tell their life stories as they go through a legal system that can seem so confusing and dehumanizing.” - RMIAN volunteer translator, Robert Weis

Become a RMIAN interpreter/translator volunteer by attending this Thursday's virtual training from 5-6:15pm MST! Email lklafehn@rmian.org to register.

View training details here.

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CLE Webinar: Fighting for Due Process in the Immigration System

RMIAN’s Laura Lunn will join a panel of experts for a full afternoon of learning and strategizing about how to best represent clients in detention and immigration court. Panels will cover the new asylum bar rules, advocating for your clients in detention, a special feature on the impact that COVID-19 has had in immigration courts and detention facilities, and more. Register and find more information here.

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Webinar: Public Charge Information

RMIAN’s Caleb Stewart along with the Center for Health Progress, and the Asian Pacifc American Bar Association will provide a webinar for the legal community on the recent changes to Public Charge. Lawyers who practice outside of immigration law have expressed interest in continued learning opportunities on the topic of Public Charge. CLE Credit available for those that attend live webinar. Open to other participants for general information purposes.

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ICE Releases 8 of 14 Petitioners 24 Hours After Advocates File Lawsuit To Order Release of Medically-Vulnerable People in ICE Custody

After the lawsuit filed by Arnold & Porter, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG), and RMIAN for the release of 14 medically-vulnerable people in civil immigration detention at the Aurora ICE Processing Center in Colorado yesterday, ICE officials released 8 of the 14 petitioners within 24 hours.

Denver — After the lawsuit filed by Arnold & Porter, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG), and the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) for the release of 14 medically-vulnerable people in civil immigration detention at the Aurora ICE Processing Center in Colorado yesterday, ICE officials released 8 of the 14 petitioners within 24 hours. 

The 8 people released from immigration detention are all people living with HIV. “RMIAN is elated to see the release of these eight resilient women” says Laura Lunn of the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network. “Yesterday, our clients were trapped in a cage that stripped them of any autonomy over their personal safety and wellbeing. Today, these women are finally able to protect themselves. It is astonishing the difference a day – and a federal lawsuit – makes.” 

RMIAN Social Service Project, along with many community organizations, including the American Friends Service Committee, Casa de Paz, the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, and Las Americas, are receiving the women upon release and providing food, housing, and travel assistance. Jordan Garcia, Colorado Program Director of the American Friends Service Committee, states, “COVID-19 unmasks how caging people threatens public health. As a society, we cannot treat anyone as expendable. Today we are relieved and heartened that these women were released into the hand of caring community, who can make sure that their needs are taken care of. We hope that more members of our community can be released in the coming days and weeks.”

“This is a great result for many of our clients, but our work is not done” said Tim Macdonald, pro bono counsel at Arnold & Porter. Co-counsel in the case will continue to fight for release of the 6 petitioners who remain detained, all of whom have medical vulnerabilities that make them especially susceptible to serious illness or death should they contract COVID-19. Adrienne Boyd, also of Arnold & Porter, urged, “There is no reason for ICE to continue to detain our remaining clients. Their lives are on the line and they should be released as soon as possible.”

The lawsuit fits into a broader movement of litigation around the country asking federal judges to order release of vulnerable people detained in ICE custody in response to ICE inaction in the midst of the COVID pandemic. Sirine Shebaya, of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, explains, “We are thrilled that our 8 clients have been released after the filing of this lawsuit. But it should not have taken emergency litigation to achieve this outcome. Their quick release shows that ICE is fully capable of releasing people, and is aware of the special vulnerabilities affecting many of those it is currently detaining, but is not taking the actions it should unless compelled to do so. That is the same pattern we are seeing across the country—a refusal to acknowledge the extreme emergency and the immediate need to release persons who are detained so they can safely self-isolate during this difficult time.”

Co-counsel’s emergency filing urges the court to take up the case on an expedited basis, in light of the grave harm that could befall the people detained at any moment. 

The lawsuit cites the severe risk the COVID-19 pandemic poses to the health and safety of the petitioners, who all have serious medical vulnerabilities. The ICE detention facility in Aurora, Colorado has failed to put in place CDC-recommended preventive measures, and is unable to provide adequate medical care in the event of an outbreak at the facility. 

Detained people do not have personal protective equipment or cleaning supplies other than a generic bath bar and spray solution. Five staff members who work in the facility have tested positive for the virus, and several dorm units in the facility were placed under quarantine. Given the presence of the virus among the facility staff, attorneys say it is reasonable to suspect that detained individuals have already been exposed and that serious illness or death is inevitable for many immigrants and asylum seekers confined in the facility. 

The clients included in this group all experience serious health issues, including respiratory illness, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart conditions, cancer, asthma, and otherwise severely compromised immune systems. One petitioner has a history of cancer, is living with only one lung, and has chronic asthma, yet she is unable to control her contact with the outside world given that she is currently detained. Attorneys say coronavirus quarantines have exacerbated the already dire conditions in the ICE facility.

Co-counsel in the case are Timothy Macdonald, Adrienne Boyd, Katie Custer, and Sarah Grey of Arnold & Porter, Sirine Shebaya, Khaled Alrabe, and Amber Qureshi of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and Laura Lunn of the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network. 

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With nearly 1,000 lawyers practicing in 14 offices around the globe, Arnold & Porter serves clients across 40 distinct practice areas. The firm offers 100 years of renowned regulatory expertise, sophisticated litigation and transactional practices, and leading multidisciplinary offerings in the life sciences and financial services industries. 

The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG) 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. NIPNLG utilizes impact litigation, advocacy, and public education to pursue its mission. Follow NIPNLG on social media: National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild on Facebook, @NIPNLG on Twitter.

The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) is a nonprofit organization that provides critical immigration legal services to individuals in immigration detention, as well as to children and families throughout Colorado. Follow RMIAN on social media: The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network on Facebook, @RMIAN_org on Twitter. 

The case is Codner v. Choate and was filed in federal district court in Denver on April 14, 2020.

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Westword: ICE Releases Eight Detainees From Aurora Day After Lawsuit Filed

Today, April 15, eight detainees who were plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed on April 14 against ICE and GEO Group were released from the ICE facility in Aurora. “RMIAN is elated to see the release of these eight resilient women,” says Laura Lunn of the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, one of the lawyers who filed the case, in a statement about the release. “Yesterday, our clients were trapped in a cage that stripped them of any autonomy over their personal safety and well being. Today, these women are finally able to protect themselves. It is astonishing the difference a day — and a federal lawsuit — makes.”

All eight of the women released are HIV-positive, making them particularly vulnerable to contracting a serious case of COVID-19.

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Denver Post: Immigration advocates petition for release of 14 people from Aurora ICE detention facility

A group of immigration attorneys on Tuesday filed a petition asking that 14 medically vulnerable people be released from the Aurora ICE detention facility.

All of the people listed on the petition are especially susceptible to the novel coronavirus and would be at risk of serious illness or death if they contracted COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus, according to a news release from the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network. Several of the petitioners are transgender women living with HIV.

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Law Week Colorado: Immigrant Groups Sue for Detainees’ Release

Several immigrant organizations announced today they are suing for the release of 14 detainees being held at the Aurora U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Processing Center citing the risk of the COVID-19 pandemic as severe to their safety and health.

The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild and Arnold & Porter said in a joint press release that several petitioners are transgender women with HIV. All 14 individuals have “serious medical vulnerabilities,” which make them susceptible to serious illness or death in the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Denverite: Immigration attorneys sue for the release of “14 medically-vulnerable people” detained in Aurora

On Tuesday, the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN), law firm Arnold & Porter and the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG) filed suit in Denver district court, demanding operators of the Aurora Contract Detention Facility release “14 medically-vulnerable people currently held in civil immigration detention” from the immigration prison. The filers fear what may happen if detainees contract COVID-19.

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Law360: ICE Detainees In Colo. Want Release From Virus 'Hotbed'

In a new lawsuit, attorneys asked U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to release 14 immigrants, many of whom are HIV positive, from detention at the Aurora, Colorado, facility, warning that these facilities are a “hotbed for spread of the virus” and that only release will shield these high-risk individuals from contracting the disease.

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Palabra: Direct Exposure

RMIAN’s Ashley Harrington describes the plight of one client’s brother, an unaccompanied minor who’d been released from government custody after requesting asylum, and other stories of hardship among immigrants amid COVID-19.

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Medically-Vulnerable Immigrants Detained by ICE in Aurora, Colorado Seek Immediate Release Amidst Coronavirus Pandemic

Today, Arnold & Porter, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG), and the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) sued for the release of 14 medically-vulnerable people currently held in civil immigration detention at the Aurora ICE Processing Center in Colorado, citing the severe risk the COVID-19 pandemic poses to their health and safety. Several of the petitioners are transgender women living with HIV, and all the petitioners have serious medical vulnerabilities that make them especially susceptible to serious illness or death should they contract COVID-19. The ICE detention facility in Aurora, Colorado has failed to put in place CDC-recommended preventive measures, and is unable to provide adequate medical care in the event of an outbreak at the facility.

Medically-Vulnerable Immigrants Detained by ICE in Aurora, Colorado Seek Immediate Release Amidst Coronavirus Pandemic

Detained Individuals File Urgent Petition for Release from Detention Center where Several Staff Have Tested Positive for COVID-19

For Immediate Release

April 14, 2020

Contact:
Adrienne Boyd,
Arnold & Porter, Adrienne.Boyd@arnoldporter.com, 303-863-2393
Sirine Shebaya, National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, sshebaya@nipnlg.org, 202-656-4788
Laura Lunn, Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, llunn@rmian.org, 406-426-1364

Denver — Today, Arnold & Porter, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG), and the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) sued for the release of 14 medically-vulnerable people currently held in civil immigration detention at the Aurora ICE Processing Center in Colorado, citing the severe risk the COVID-19 pandemic poses to their health and safety. Several of the petitioners are transgender women living with HIV, and all the petitioners have serious medical vulnerabilities that make them especially susceptible to serious illness or death should they contract COVID-19. The ICE detention facility in Aurora, Colorado has failed to put in place CDC-recommended preventive measures, and is unable to provide adequate medical care in the event of an outbreak at the facility. 

The complaint and accompanying emergency motion for release filed today caution that the inevitability of a coronavirus outbreak in this facility renders the continued detention of these individuals a potential death sentence for immigrants detained at the facility.

Download the complaint.

Download the Motion for Temporary Restraining Order Memo

“When people around the world are social distancing, RMIAN’s clients in immigration detention describe conditions where they can reach out and touch the person laying in the bed next to them. The individuals in this case have underlying medical conditions that mean that exposure and infection to COVID-19 may be a death sentence for them,” said Laura Lunn, Managing Attorney of the Detention Program at the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network. “They have no way of creating a shield between themselves and the hundreds of other people at the Aurora facility.” 

According to an expert declaration filed by Dr. Carlos Franco-Paredes, a University of Colorado infectious disease expert, it is impossible for the detention facilities to comply with CDC guidelines around social distancing, quarantine, and treatment. He predicts the facility’s rudimentary medical units will quickly become overwhelmed. Dr. Franco-Paredes states that the attack rate of new infections inside Aurora detention center may reach exponential proportions if left unchecked. The plaintiffs themselves report that the detention facilities have not provided those detained with any information about coronavirus beyond basics of handwashing, including guidelines for preventing it or virus symptoms; that many are housed in open dorms with beds only a few feet apart; and that staff cycle through the dormitories regularly without wearing masks or gloves. 

Detained people do not have personal protective equipment or cleaning supplies other than a generic bath bar and spray solution. In recent days, five staff members who work in the facility have tested positive for the virus, and several dorm units in the facility were placed under quarantine. Given the presence of the virus among the facility staff, attorneys say it is reasonable to suspect that detained individuals have already been exposed and that serious illness or death for many immigrants and asylum seekers confined there is inevitable. 

“ICE’s needless detention of people in the immigration system has always been excessive, but in the current circumstances, it is also recklessly endangering lives,” said Sirine Shebaya, Executive Director of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild. “ICE is fully aware of the risks involved in detaining people — especially those who are medically vulnerable or who are housed in facilities that have long histories of poor conditions. Their continued detention shines a clear light on the bloated system of mass incarceration that our immigration authorities are continuing to hold onto, even in the face of a public health emergency. It shouldn’t take an emergency lawsuit to obtain their release.”

The 14 detained plaintiffs include 11 transgender women, most of whom are living with HIV and have weakened immune systems. The women report paralyzing fears of falling ill with COVID-19. As a result, they are taking every precaution within their control and refraining from going to the recreation area or the law library. 

“Transgender individuals face extraordinary vulnerability, abuse, and neglect in ICE detention even when we are not facing a global pandemic,” says Allegra Love of the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, an organization that represents many of the transgender women. “Over the last four weeks we have given ICE every opportunity to make the respectful, dignified and life-saving decision to release our clients. Since they have failed, it is time to ask the court to intervene.” 

The clients included in this group all experience serious health issues, including respiratory illness, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart conditions, cancer, asthma, and otherwise severely compromised immune systems. One petitioner has a history of cancer, is living with only one lung, and has chronic asthma, yet she is unable to control her contact with the outside world given that she is currently detained. Attorneys say coronavirus quarantines have exacerbated the already dire conditions in the ICE facility.

Timothy Macdonald, pro bono counsel for the petitioners at Arnold & Porter, said: “In these unprecedented times, it is critically important to protect those who are the most vulnerable in our community.  Our clients faced unthinkable circumstances at home and came to this country seeking asylum. We cannot consign them to a COVID-death sentence because of the inadequate conditions in immigration detention facilities.” 

“We believe strongly in the dignity of every human being and will work tirelessly to secure their release,” Adrienne Boyd, pro bono counsel for the petitioners at Arnold & Porter added. The complaint filed today argues that it is simply not possible for the detention center to implement COVID-19 protocols such as social distancing (maintaining a distance of at least six feet between oneself and others), preventive hygiene, and the medical isolation of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 cases and that this creates a risk of death and other harm that violates constitutional protections ensuring adequate care and preventing deliberate indifference to obvious medical risks. 

Still, the people being detained are resolute in advocating for themselves and the others who live and work in the facility. 

“If the virus befalls one person here, it will befall everyone here,” the lead plaintiff, Jennifer Codner, a Jamaican native and transgender woman who has high blood pressure and other health conditions, said in her declaration. “The virus does not discriminate and no one will be safe. Because we are at the mercy of this place, there is no way to ensure our own health.” In light of this pandemic, she is reminded of the words of Nelson Mandela, who said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails.

Co-counsel in the case are Timothy Macdonald, Adrienne Boyd, Katie Custer, and Sarah Grey of Arnold & Porter, Sirine Shebaya, Khaled Alrabe, and Amber Qureshi of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and Laura Lunn of the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network. 

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With nearly 1,000 lawyers practicing in 14 offices around the globe, Arnold & Porter serves clients across 40 distinct practice areas. The firm offers 100 years of renowned regulatory expertise, sophisticated litigation and transactional practices, and leading multidisciplinary offerings in the life sciences and financial services industries. 

The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG) 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. NIPNLG utilizes impact litigation, advocacy, and public education to pursue its mission. Follow NIPNLG on social media: National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild on Facebook, @NIPNLG on Twitter.

The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) is a nonprofit organization that provides critical immigration legal services to individuals in immigration detention, as well as to children and families throughout Colorado. Follow RMIAN on social media: The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network on Facebook, @RMIAN_org on Twitter. 

The case is Codner v. Choate and was filed in federal district court in Denver.

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The Colorado Trust: For Undocumented Workers, More Risk and Little Safety Net

Undocumented people in the United States face a unique set of vulnerabilities that other marginalized communities are at least somewhat inured from. Unless they have work authorization or some other protected status, undocumented immigrants can’t tap the beefed-up unemployment benefits Congress approved last month, nor will they receive a one-time stimulus check. Those who still have jobs can’t take paid sick leave if they develop symptoms or have to stay home to care for a family member who takes ill.

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