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NewYorker's profile
The New Yorker
The New Yorker
The New Yorker
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@NewYorker

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The New YorkerVerified account

@NewYorker

The New Yorker is a weekly magazine with a mix of reporting on politics and culture, humor and cartoons, fiction and poetry, and reviews and criticism.

New York, NY
newyorker.com
Joined May 2008

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    1. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Politicians often invoke the prospect of death by deportation in debates about the fate of immigrants and others with precarious status, like the Dreamers. These conversations have been largely theoretical, devoid of names and faces: http://nyer.cm/472g14a pic.twitter.com/arwthxc97Y

      7 replies 66 retweets 72 likes
      Show this thread
    2. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Our staff writer @stillsarita set out, with a dozen graduate students, to create a record of people who had been deported to their deaths or to other harms. Here are some of those stories.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      2 replies 51 retweets 38 likes
      Show this thread
    3. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Elena grew up in Honduras, where her teen brother was murdered by MS-13 for being gay, another brother was killed for refusing to join the gang, and her sister was shot for ignoring a gang leader’s sexual advances after he’d raped and impregnated her.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      3 replies 31 retweets 19 likes
      Show this thread
    4. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      A different gang member began pursuing Elena, and fired shots at her house after she turned him down. She reported the crime to police, and then learned that he was planning further retaliation against her.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      4 replies 9 retweets 13 likes
      Show this thread
    5. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      In 2012, Elena crossed the U.S. border near Eagle Pass, Texas, and told a Border Patrol agent that she feared for her life. He asked, “Would you be harmed if you are returned to your home country?” He wrote down a single word: “No.”http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      3 replies 5 retweets 7 likes
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    6. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      In detention, Elena fought back against this supposed denial, and won a hearing with an asylum officer, who corrected the record. Nonetheless, she was deported two days after a hearing with an immigration judge, in which she was asked only one question.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      2 replies 19 retweets 17 likes
      Show this thread
    7. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Back in her hometown, she was assaulted at gunpoint by the man she’d fled. He tortured her, holding a lighter to her skin. Other gang members cracked her thirteen-year-old son’s skull.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      1 reply 15 retweets 17 likes
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    8. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Elena fled, with her two kids, to a tobacco-farming town in western Honduras, where the man who’d been pursuing her found her again. Once more, she escaped to the U.S. But she is barred from receiving asylum because of her prior deportation.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      4 replies 13 retweets 14 likes
      Show this thread
    9. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      Constantino Morales was a cop in Guerrero, Mexico, until he tried to break up a drug cartel and became a target of violence. He escaped to the U.S. and worked in Des Moines, Iowa. A minor traffic stop led to his removal, which he initially fought.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      1 reply 24 retweets 24 likes
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      The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

      “If I am sent back, I will face more violence, and I could lose my life,” Morales said. He had applied for asylum a month earlier. He was denied. Seven months after Morales’s deportation, he was shot and killed.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

      8:07 AM - 10 Jan 2018
      • 30 Retweets
      • 33 Likes
      • arman Apurba Shakalaka Daniel Posadas it's B! Cavello 🐝 ScientisticLeader1 Frostrages Md Azmir Ali Mithu pajareh
      2 replies 30 retweets 33 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

          After Trump’s inauguration, the Department of Homeland Security created an office for the victims of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, called VOICE—Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

          1 reply 8 retweets 10 likes
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        3. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

          The office is compiling an online database to track “illegal alien perpetrators of crime.” (Data show that undocumented immigrants actually commit crimes at lower rates than U.S. citizens.)http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

          3 replies 17 retweets 21 likes
          Show this thread
        4. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

          There is, however, no White House initiative to track a more sprawling set of legal violations involving immigrants—violations such as those above, for which the U.S. government is often culpable,http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

          4 replies 23 retweets 38 likes
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        5. The New Yorker‏Verified account @NewYorker Jan 10

          Read our full story about the immigrants deported from the United States to death and violence.http://nyer.cm/472g14a 

          2 replies 51 retweets 62 likes
          Show this thread
        6. End of conversation

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