Rights groups concerned about Operation Tidal Wave raids

(NewsNation) — A recent Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid in South Florida tallied more than 1,100 migrant arrests, but civil rights organizations and other groups are concerned about some of those who were swept up and detained by federal agents.

ICE officials claim that 63% of those who were arrested during Operation Tidal Wave had prior criminal records. However, Abel Delgado, the president of the Miami-Dade Democratic Hispanic Caucus, said that the raid also led to the arrest of at least one U.S. citizen, as well as migrants with legal protective status, leading to questions about the operation.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, says more immigration enforcement will take place as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts. DeSantis recently said there are tens of thousands of immigrants living in Florida who have already been ordered to leave the United States but have not.

While DeSantis claims that the previous orders of removal equate to due process, Delgado disagrees, saying that those removal orders do not equate to immediate deportation.

“That’s not how due process works,” he told NewsNation.

Delgado also takes issue with the fact that the federal government should be in charge of detaining migrants who entered the country illegally, rather than local law enforcement agencies being involved in immigration enforcement.

Delgado is not opposed to federal immigration agents going after what White House border czar Tom Homan has called the “worst of the worst.” But he fears that ICE raids like Operation Tidal Wave are extending beyond that.

“We’ve always supported criminals being deported and seeing (the) law come to fruition,” Delgado told NewsNation. “But we don’t know that’s happening.”

Delgado said that he and other organizations do not trust the claims that federal immigration agents are only going after immigrants with criminal backgrounds. He said DeSantis and others have not provided proof to back up the statistics he offered concerning who was swept up in the recent raid.

“When you have an operation this large, people are going to get caught in the crosshairs because the governor and his team do not care about following the law,” he said.

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Criticism of Donald Trump's remarks regarding Rob Reiner's death intensified on Tuesday morning when a prominent conservative columnist questioned the aging president's mental fitness.

In a notably direct column for conservative publication The National Review, Jim Geraghty asserted that Trump's statements suggest "something deeply wrong." He proceeded to question whether "psychopath or sociopath" better characterizes the president's behavior.

Acknowledging the tragedy of Reiner and his wife Michele, who were reportedly killed by their son, Geraghty suggested that Trump's actions reveal long-standing indicators of instability. He characterized the president as consistently "obsessed with grievances; vindictive and prone to posting late-night tirades on social media; uninterested in details; erratic, impulsive, spiteful."

Geraghty argued that Trump lacks the capacity to assess moral character through objective standards. Instead, he wrote, "Donald Trump's entire worldview of whether someone is a good person or a bad person depends entirely on whether that person offers praise or criticism of Trump."

The columnist raised concerns about Trump's access to nuclear weapons while simultaneously pursuing aggressive military policies globally, suggesting his emotional state presents a national security concern.

Geraghty acknowledged that Trump supporters could defend his policies or express satisfaction with their electoral choices. However, he concluded, "But what you can't say is that Donald Trump is a good and decent human being."

He further contended that Trump's inability to empathize with the Reiners' tragedy mirrors his disconnect from Americans struggling with cost-of-living concerns. "This is why his approval rating on the economy hit 31 percent. There are far-reaching consequences of having a president who is emotionally broken," Geraghty wrote.

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