Advocates train immigrants to 'prepare to stay' in the US under Trump
		
		 
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		 [December 20, 2024]  
		By AMY TAXIN and SOPHIA TAREEN 
		
		LOS ANGELES (AP) — Winston Leiva rattles off a long list of things 
		immigrants should do to protect themselves against President-elect 
		Donald Trump's promise to conduct mass deportations when he returns to 
		the White House. 
		 
		Make a plan for someone to care for your children if you are arrested. 
		Don't open the door unless authorities slip a signed judicial warrant 
		under it. And above all, exercise your right to remain silent. 
		 
		“We already know this administration,” Leiva told participants of a 
		bilingual workshop in Los Angeles for immigrants who want to stay in the 
		United States. “The truth is we don’t know to what extent it will affect 
		us." 
		 
		The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights meeting, in a conference room 
		decorated with a colorful mural of civil rights icons and a large 
		American flag, is one of many taking place nationwide as immigrant 
		advocates steel themselves for Trump’s second term. It’s déjà vu for 
		those who sprung to action during Trump's first four years, when he 
		changed the nation’s immigration system arguably more than any other 
		U.S. president. 
		 
		Advocacy groups from Utah to Massachusetts have hosted know-your-rights 
		trainings to teach immigrants how to protect themselves, their friends 
		and families from Trump’s promise to start deportations on his first day 
		back in office. The efforts are underway in immigrant-friendly states 
		including California and Illinois — which both enacted protections for 
		immigrants in response to Trump's focus on enforcement during his first 
		administration — and those with more stringent laws affecting immigrants 
		such as Florida. 
		
		
		  
		
		Connecticut Students for a Dream, an advocacy group for undocumented 
		youth, recently held a session in the city of Danbury, which is home to 
		immigrants from Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and elsewhere. 
		Organizers advised that you don't have to speak with immigration agents 
		if they knock on your door, and warned in a Facebook post: “If you 
		choose to speak, remember not to lie.” 
		 
		Advocates are also urging those who are eligible to complete 
		applications for U.S. citizenship or other immigration benefits before 
		next year, aiming to avoid potentially lengthy wait times under an 
		incoming administration that seems focused on immigration enforcement 
		rather than integration. 
		 
		The Florida Immigrant Coalition is offering free clinics to help 
		thousands of immigrants who may have a pathway to a legal status and 
		can't afford a lawyer. Inside an already busy immigration court in 
		Chicago, National Immigrant Justice Center attorneys who help run a 
		legal help desk said they are trying to resolve as many cases as 
		possible before Trump takes office. 
		 
		“It feels a little different because we have a clear expectation of what 
		is coming,” said Lisa Koop, the Center's national director of legal 
		services. “It is demoralizing that the electorate lived through what 
		happened last time and decided to go back to it.” 
		 
		The Trump campaign has said the president-elect will start the largest 
		deportation program in U.S. history during his second administration, 
		but questions remain about how he will find and detain people. 
		 
		Fear is widespread in immigrant communities. Advocates say they're 
		fielding calls from immigrants with and without legal status and even 
		from naturalized U.S. citizens worried about how the administration 
		could affect them and their families — especially the American-born 
		children of parents who wind up deported. Advocates are urging families 
		to draft legal papers in case this happens. 
		 
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            Winston Leiva, community education programs manager at the Coalition 
			for Humane Immigrant Rights, stands next to a U.S. flag while giving 
			a bilingual workshop for immigrants who want to stay in the United 
			States, in Los Angeles, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Jae C. 
			Hong) 
            
			
			
			  
            “We know that separation is an issue, and we want to make sure that 
			families are prepared for who takes care of their children, who 
			takes care of their property,” said Renata Bozzetto, deputy director 
			at the Florida Immigrant Coalition. 
			 
			In New Haven, Connecticut, immigrant advocates have been holding 
			sessions in high schools. 
			 
			“That’s because they’ve reached out to us to request it,” said 
			Rachel Doft, director of legal services for Integrated Refugee & 
			Immigrant Services. “A lot of kids have questions, and especially 
			kids in mixed-status families. They’re really afraid of (Trump’s 
			deportation plan) and want to understand their rights.” 
			 
			In Chicago, immigration attorney Fiona McEntee said advocates 
			learned a lot during Trump's prior administration, including better 
			ways to organize. She was among hundreds of lawyers who provided 
			free legal services to immigrants at O’Hare International Airport in 
			January 2017, after Trump temporarily banned refugees and citizens 
			from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. 
			 
			“As much as we didn’t want to be here again, we’re more 
			experienced,” McEntee said. “We are different immigration lawyers 
			than we were eight years ago.” 
			 
			In Los Angeles, Julie Gomez, 50, sat and listened attentively to the 
			Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights workshop, filming key snippets 
			on her cellphone. She came with an Armenian community member who 
			needs help, and Gomez wants to learn and prepare so she can spread 
			the word to others in her Guatemalan community. While she said she 
			doesn’t have reason to worry about Trump's immigration proposals, 
			she knows many people who do. 
			 
			“They’re obviously worried because they could be deported and what 
			would happen to their children?” Gomez said. “Confused, and 
			worried.” 
			 
			Leiva, who manages community education programs at CHIRLA, spent 
			more than an hour spelling out what immigrants should and shouldn't 
			do if contacted by federal authorities. He said they should put all 
			their important documents in one place and save money in case they 
			need a lawyer. And if they are detained by authorities, Leiva said 
			they should provide their name and birthdate — but nothing more — so 
			relatives can look them up in an immigration detention database. 
			 
			“Do not make their job easy,” Leiva told the group. “They have a 
			job. You have a right.” 
			___ 
			 
			Tareen reported from Chicago. Associated Press writers Gisela 
			Salomon in Miami and Susan Haigh in Hartford, Connecticut, 
			contributed. 
			
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