
The Hate Report and Kids on the Line: Hate doesn’t stop at the border
In this week’s roundup: Alongside the chaos unfolding at the nation’s borders, hate has continued to flow toward immigrants across the country.
Fact-based journalism is worth fighting for.
DonateIn this week’s roundup: Alongside the chaos unfolding at the nation’s borders, hate has continued to flow toward immigrants across the country.
Seventh-grader Erick Araujo, 13, of Lost Hills, Calif., was expelled from his middle school last semester and sent to an alternative county-run school 38 miles away. Because of the distance, Erick is on an independent study program and sees a teacher one day a week. Reading and answering questions in this history text was the
A review of the operation by Reveal casts doubt on the official narrative.
The government hasn’t provided any proof of its claim that the man is affiliated with MS-13. He hasn’t seen his two kids in three months.
Unsealed internal documents show the company orchestrated a multi-year effort that duped children and their parents out of money.
Lack of access to the pop-up federal detention camp has frustrated town residents and alarmed advocates who question the conditions there.
Twenty-five children continue to be held at Shiloh Treatment Center, which has documented cases of child deaths and serial abuse.
More than a week after a judge ordered that immigrant children staying at the facility should be moved, more than two dozen children are still there.
Just as Texas stopped sending foster children to centers operated by one man, the U.S. government tossed him a new source of money: immigrant kids.
A federal judge rules that the government should remove immigrant kids from a troubled Texas facility and stop drugging them without consent.