Latest #ICE statistics show as of June 29, there were 57,861 people detained by ICE, 41,495 w 71.7% had no criminal convictions. That includes 14,318 people w pending criminal charges & 27,177 who are subject 2 #immigration enforcement but have no known #criminalconvictions or pending criminal charges. Each detainee is assigned threat level by ICE on scale of 1-3, w 1 being highest. As of June 23 latest data available, 84% of people detained at 201 facilities nationwide not given a threat level.

"Essentially, Trump's ability to travel to certain countries would likely depend on each nation's willingness to allow him entry."

Unpacking the Claim That 37 Countries Will Ban #Trump as a Felon | Snopes.com
https://www.snopes.com/news/2025/01/07/trump-countries-banned-felon/#Echobox=1736522819

#criminalconvictions
#declaringcriminalconvictions
#USPresident

Unpacking the Claim That 37 Countries Will Ban Trump as a Felon

Snopes.com

#Harris came onstage with a clear plan: throw #Trump off his game.

It was, by any measure, a dramatic success. When the #vicePresident mentioned Trump's #criminalConvictions and outstanding legal issues, he bit. When she called him out for sinking a bipartisan #immigration bill, he bit harder. And when Harris suggested Trump's rallies were boring, he nearly choked on the bait.

#debate2024 #HarrisTrumpDebate #DebateNight #TrumpIsUnfitForOffice #HarrisWalz2024 #VoteBlue

https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/10/politics/debate-takeaways-trump-harris/index.html

Takeaways from the ABC presidential debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris baited Donald Trump for nearly all of the 1 hour and 45 minutes of their first and potentially only debate on Tuesday night – and Trump took every bit of it.

CNN
There’s a Junk Science Crisis in Criminal Convictions. Sonia Sotomayor Calls It Out in Alabama Bite-Mark Case.

While the Supreme Court refused to hear the case of Charles McCrory, Sonia Sotomayor said states should act to help those imprisoned on debunked forensics.

The Intercept
Grenfell fire: focus shifts to possible criminal convictions as inquiry ends

Criminal trials may not start before 2025 and government pledges have not yet been delivered

The Guardian
Reducing childhood poverty could cut criminal convictions by almost a quarter, study shows

A significant reduction in childhood poverty could cut criminal convictions by almost a quarter, according to a study conducted in Brazil. An article on the study is published in Scientific Reports. The researchers used an innovative approach involving an analysis of 22 risk factors that affect human development and interviews with 1,905 children at two points—a first interview to form a baseline (mean age 10.3) and a follow-up interview seven years later (mean age 17.8).

Phys.org