Some Native Americans seek documentation amid concerns about ICE enforcement
Tribal nations are accelerating ID issuance to help Native Americans prove U.S. citizenship amid ICE's largest immigration operation, with over 3,400 arrests reported, officials said.
- Some U.S. citizens in Minneapolis are carrying their passports due to fears of being detained by federal immigration agents.
- Native Americans are also carrying tribal documents proving their U.S. citizenship in case they are stopped or questioned.
- There have been reports of Native Americans being stopped and detained by ICE officers despite being U.S. citizens.
82 Articles
82 Articles
Native Americans, literally the furthest thing from immigrants, fear deportation amid unprecedented ICE actions
When U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement flooded Minneapolis, Shane Mantz dug his Choctaw Nation citizenship card out of a box on his dresser and slid it into his wallet. Some strangers mistake the pest-control company manager for Latino, he said, and he fears getting caught up in ICE raids. Like Mantz, many Native Americans are carrying tribal documents proving their U.S. citizenship in case they are stopped or questioned by federal immigr…
Fearing ICE, Native Americans rush to prove their right to belong in U.S.
Many of the people whose ancestors lived in the U.S. thousands of years before Europeans are carrying tribal identification for protection against the Trump administration’s anti-immigration agenda.
Native nations make it easier to get tribal IDs as community fears ICE, fight to prove their right to belong in U.S.
Many of the people whose ancestors lived in the U.S. thousands of years before Europeans arrived are carrying tribal identification for protection against the Trump administration’s anti-immigration agenda.
Fearing ICE, Native Americans rush to prove their right to belong in the U.S.
When U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement flooded Minneapolis, Shane Mantz dug his Choctaw Nation citizenship card out of a box on his dresser and slid it into his wallet. Some strangers mistake the pest-control company manager for Latino, he said, and he fears getting caught up in ICE raids. Like Mantz, many Native Americans are carrying tribal documents proving their U.S. citizenship in case they are stopped or questioned by federal immigr…
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