ABC News: “US Embassy in Russia suspends issuing nonimmigrant visas”

The US Embassy in Russia announced yesterday that it would temporarily suspend issuing nonimmigrant visas beginning August 23, 2017, after Russia’s decision to reduce embassy and operational staff. On September 1, 2017, visa operations will resume on a “greatly reduced scale,” and only the US Embassy in Moscow will issue visas. The consulates in St. Petersburg, Yekaterinburg, and Vladivostok have indefinitely suspended their visa issuance. This decision will affect thousands of Russian tourists and visa applicants. Despite the visa shutdown and staff reduction, the US Embassy in Moscow and the three consulates will continue to provide emergency and routine services to American citizens, although hours may be adjusted.

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The New York Times: “A Game of Cat and Mouse With High Stakes: Deportation”

The federal government’s current heightened focus on arresting and deporting undocumented immigrants has turned courthouses in New York State and across the country into places where criminal law practitioners “face off” against immigration law enforcers. Although Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials are prohibited from making arrests inside courtrooms, they are permitted to do so in hallways and directly outside courthouses. The prevalence of ICE agents, often in plain clothes, making arrests has reportedly made many immigrants afraid to appear in court as defendants or witnesses.  

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New York Times: “Fewer Immigrants Mean More Jobs? Not So, Economists Say”

The Trump administration last week announced support for a proposed bill aiming to reduce legal immigration in order to “preserve” jobs for Americans and increase wages. In response, leading economists say that such a reduction of legal immigration will not create more American jobs and may even have a negative impact on the economy. Economist Giovanni Peri from the University of California, Davis, for example, believes that the average American worker is likely to lose rather than gain anything from such a reduction in immigration. The administration says it still wants foreign high-skilled workers to come to the US, and the cuts target low-skilled immigrants.

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New York Times: “Survivors of Smuggling Trip Could Gain Entry to U.S. by Becoming Witnesses”

Twenty-nine immigrants who were rescued from an overheated tractor-trailer last week in what officials believe was a tragically botched human trafficking or smuggling operation may be given an opportunity to stay in the US under a T or U visa. The immigrants suffered without water in over 100 degree temperatures, and eight immigrants tragically died inside the trailer, with two dying later. Some surviving immigrants fled, and the remaining immigrants were taken to local hospitals to be treated for critical conditions including heat stroke and exhaustion. James M. Bradley, the driver of the truck, is currently in jail facing smuggling charges while local and federal authorities investigate with hopes of reaching higher levels of smuggling rings that would lead to more arrests. 

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