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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Top Scientist Just Explained The One Biological Superpower That Made Africa A Target

 

'Andrew Jackson'

First Chapter

The struggle for North America began long before Andrew Jackson was born. Like similar struggles on all the inhabited continents, it ran back millennia, perhaps to the moment humans first found their way across the Arctic plain from Asia. Oral tradition and archaeological evidence indicate that conflict was a regular feature of life among the North Americans. They fought for forests where the game was most abundant, for rivers where the fish were thickest, for bottomlands where their corn and beans and squashes grew most readily. Great warriors were the heroes of their tribes, emulated by other men, sought by women, hallowed in memory. Strong tribes expanded their territories, driving the weak to less-favored regions and sometimes to extinction. Diplomacy complemented military force: the Iroquois confederation made that alliance a terror to its neighbors. 

The arrival of the Europeans added new elements to the competition. These far-easterners possessed weapons the aboriginals hadn't seen: steel knives, swords, and axes; muskets and rifles; cannon. But their most potent agents of conquest were ones neither they nor their victims understood: the pathogens to which long exposure had inured the Europeans but that devastated the native Americans. In many instances the novel diseases raced ahead of European settlers, who arrived to discover human deserts and concluded that the Christian God in his wisdom and power had prepared the way for their colonies. 

But the diseases didn't kill all the Indians. Those who survived often welcomed the interlopers, at least at first. Especially after smallpox and the other epidemics killed as many as three-fourths of the members of the afflicted tribes, there seemed room enough for all. And the newcomers' traders brought goods the natives quickly learned to value: iron pots, which bested clay for durability; steel blades, which held an edge longer than flint or obsidian; rifles, which felled game at distances arrows couldn't reach and gave their possessors an advantage in battle over tribes that lacked them. Some purists among the Indians rejected everything European, but most of the natives adapted happily to the improved lifestyle the new technology brought. 

In time, however, the palefaces got pushy. Their farmers followed the traders and expropriated Indian land. This was when the real struggle started. In New England in the 1670s a coalition led by a chief the English called King Philip contested the advancing settlement by destroying several towns and killing the inhabitants. The English fought back, with the help of Indians holding a grudge against Philip's group, and eventually won. Philip was beheaded and his captured followers enslaved. 

The Indians' resistance grew more sophisticated. They discovered that the Europeans belonged to more than one tribe, with the French as hostile to the English as either were to any of the Indians. Some Indians sided with the French, others with the English, and when the French and English went to war-as they did once a generation-the various Indian tribes exploited the opportunities to their own advantage. The largest of the conflicts (called the French and Indian War by the English in America) began in 1754 and inspired the Delawares and Shawnees, allies of France, to try to drive the English away from the frontier. To this end they launched a campaign of terror against British settlements in the Ohio Valley. The terror began successfully and over three years threatened to throw the English all the way back to the coast. But British victories in Canada and elsewhere weakened the French and emboldened Britain's own allies, including the Iroquois, and when the war ended in 1763 the French surrendered all their North American territories. 

This was good news for Britain's American subjects but bad news for nearly all the Indians of the frontier, including Britain's allies. As long as the British and French had vied for control in America, each had to bid for the support of the Indians, who learned to play the Europeans against one another. With the French departure the bidding ended and the Indians were left to confront British power alone. 

The Ottawa chief Pontiac was among the first to appreciate the new state of affairs. The Ottawas had long been rivals of the Iroquois and were recently allies of the French. For both reasons they fought against the British in the French and Indian War. When that war ended in French defeat, Pontiac saw disaster looming for the Ottawas-and for Indians generally. A tall, powerful warrior with a striking mien, he was also a charismatic political leader and an adroit diplomat. The fighting between Britain and France had hardly ceased before he welded together a coalition of tribes dedicated to expelling the British from the interior of the continent. Pontiac's forces besieged Fort Detroit above Lake Erie during the spring of 1763. From there the offensive spread north and east along the Great Lakes and south into the Ohio Valley. One British garrison after another was surrounded and destroyed. As this was a psychological offensive as much as a military one, the methods of destruction often included the most gruesome treatment of those soldiers, traders, and dependents who fell into the attackers' hands. 

The assault on a British fort at Mackinac showed the swiftness with which the Indians commenced their attacks and the brutality with which they completed them. Pontiac's campaign was spreading faster than the news of it, and the troops and traders at Mackinac knew of no reason to fear the large group of Ojibwas who approached the fort in amicable fashion and commenced a game of lacrosse immediately beneath the walls. The British came out to watch, as they did on such occasions. The intensity of the game mounted, until one of the players threw the ball close to the gate. The laughing, cheering spectators took no alarm when both teams tore after it. But then the players dropped their lacrosse sticks, snatched war axes from under the robes of their women, and rushed through the unguarded gate. The surprise was total and the carnage almost equally so. A trader named Alexander Henry, who managed to hide in a storage closet, left a chilling account: 

Through an aperture, which afforded me a view of the area of the fort, I beheld, in shapes the foulest and most terrible, the ferocious triumphs of barbarian conquerors. The dead were scalped and mangled; the dying were writhing and shrieking under the unsatiated knife and tomahawk; and from the bodies of some, ripped open, their butchers were drinking the blood, scooped up in the hollow of joined hands, and quaffed amid shouts of rage and victory. 

The story was much the same all along the frontier. The offensive continued to outrace reports of it, and in many cases the first intimation the English settlers and soldiers had of trouble was the arrival of war parties. One by one the garrisons fell, until Pontiac and his allies controlled the entire region west of Fort Pitt, at the forks of the Ohio. Isolated frontier settlements were even more vulnerable and the destruction was commensurately greater. Some two thousand settlers were killed, and about four hundred soldiers. Many others were taken hostage. Those who survived the attacks and evaded capture fled east, bearing tales of calamity and horror. 

The British commander in North America, Jeffrey Amherst, a large man with a big nose and a deeply held conviction that his talents were being wasted in the colonies, received the news of the western disaster at his headquarters in New York. Although the reports shocked him, he wasn't surprised at the behavior of the Indians, whom he considered savages beneath regard by civilized men. This attitude was common among the British, and it had helped trigger the current uprising. (By contrast, the French, whose imperial policy relied less on displacing the Indians than on trading with them, developed a more sophisticated view of the indigenes.) Amherst terminated the practice of sending gifts to Britain's Indian allies, and he curtailed the trade in guns and ammunition. He judged that though the Indians had been useful against the French, now that the French were vanquished it was time to make the Indians understand who the true rulers of North America were. 

While Amherst had to respect the fighting ability of the Indians, he blamed incompetence among his subordinates for the success of Pontiac's offensive. Upon receiving a report of a massacre of the British garrison at Presque Isle, which followed the fort's surrender by its commanding officer, he could hardly contain his anger. "It is amazing that an officer could put so much faith in the promises of the Indians as to capitulate with them, when there are so many recent instances of their never failing to massacre the people whom they can persuade to put themselves in their power," he wrote in his journal. "The officer and garrison would have had a much better chance for their lives if they had defended themselves to the last, and if not relieved, they had confided to a retreat through the woods or got off in a boat in the night. These people are undoubtedly murdered unless the Indians may have feared to do it lest we may retaliate. There is absolutely nothing but fear of us that can hinder them from committing all the cruelties in their power." 

Amherst determined to answer the terror of the Indians with terror of his own. Knowing that the Indians rightly feared the white men's diseases more than anything else about the Europeans, he directed Henry Bouquet, the commander of the western district, to launch a campaign of biological warfare. "Could it not be contrived to send the smallpox among the disaffected tribes of Indians?" Amherst inquired. "We must on this occasion use every stratagem in our power to reduce them." 

Bouquet responded at once. Some of his own troops were suffering from smallpox; he proposed to take blankets from the sick men and distribute them among the Indians. "I will try to inoculate the -- with some blankets that may fall in their hands, and take care not to get the disease myself," he told Amherst. (Whether discretion caused him not to identify the targets or he hadn't decided which Indians to infect is unclear.) 

Amherst approved the plan. "You will do well to try to inoculate the Indians by means of blankets, as well as to try every other method that can serve to extirpate this execrable race," he said. 

Bouquet distributed the blankets. By the time he did, they may have proved redundant, as the smallpox had already jumped from the whites in the area to the Indians. Yet the outcome was certainly what Bouquet and Amherst desired. "The smallpox has been very general and raging among the Indians since last spring," an observer wrote several months later. A subordinate of Bouquet-who, unlike his commander, wasn't beyond pity-reported from the front, "The poor rascals are dying very fast with the smallpox; they can make but little resistance and when routed from their settlements must perish in great numbers by the disorders." 

Aided by the epidemic, the British managed to roll back the Indian advances. Bouquet battered an Indian army at Bushy Run near Fort Pitt, and he sent his troops to burn Indian villages and drive off their inhabitants, many of whom then perished of hunger and disease. The villages were always the weak spot of Indians, for although Indian warriors were masters at raiding garrisons and terrorizing settlers, they lacked the numbers and firepower to defend their own women and children against British counterattack. In the face of Bouquet's scorched-earth strategy, Pontiac's allies fell away band by band and tribe by tribe, to make peace with the British. 

Yet the outcome was far from an undiluted victory for British arms. To entice Pontiac's allies to the peace table, the British government recalled Amherst and repealed most of the measures the Indians resented. As a result, it wasn't hard for many of the Indians to conclude that, in dealing with the Europeans, war worked. (For Pontiac personally, the failure to drive the British from the Ohio marked a defeat from which he never recovered. His fellow Ottawas turned to others for leadership, and the younger warriors derided the old man as a relic of the past. In 1769 he was fatally stabbed by a Peoria Indian at a trading post on the Mississippi River. None of the Ottawas, not even his own sons, lifted a finger to avenge him.) 

The lesson American colonists drew from Pontiac's War was similar in content to that drawn by the Indians but altogether different in tone. The uprising had sent shudders all along the American backcountry, from New York to Georgia. In every community that lived within sight or consciousness of the great forest that stretched away to the west, the reports of the Indian atrocities-with the torture of prisoners and the mutilation and cannibalism of the murdered recounted in excruciating detail-caused hearts to clutch and eyes to examine every grove of trees for signs of the enemy's approach. The flood of refugees from the war provided additional evidence of the scope and meaning of the Indian uprising. An inhabitant of Frederick, Maryland, noted, "Every day, for some time past, has offered the melancholy scene of poor distressed families driving downwards through this town with their effects, who have deserted their plantations for fear of falling into the cruel hands of our savage enemies, now daily seen in the woods." A witness in Winchester, Virginia, explained, "Near 500 families have run away within this week. I assure you it was a most melancholy sight to see such numbers of poor people, who had abandoned their settlements in such consternation and hurry that they had hardly anything with them but their children. And what is still worse, I dare say there is not money enough amongst the whole families to maintain a fifth part of them till the fall; and none of the poor creatures can get a hovel to shelter them from the weather, but lie about scattered in the woods." 

For the refugees, and for the many more who held on to their homes but watched their cold, hungry compatriots stream by, the outcome of Pontiac's War was decidedly unsatisfactory. Except for the traders, who required the Indians as customers, nearly all the Americans who lived anywhere near the frontier considered the Indians an existential danger. Few would have mourned had every one of the natives fallen victim to British arms or European disease. And when the post-Pontiac settlement essentially restored the status quo, the Americans once more saw the tomahawk hanging over their heads. 

Among those who fought against Pontiac were members of a peculiar tribe with origins in the foggy North Atlantic. During the first decade of the seventeenth century-at the same time as the founding in America of English Jamestown and French Quebec-King James of England and Scotland planted a colony of English and Scots in the north of Ireland. The purpose of the Ulster plantation was to subdue the unruly Irish, who were considered by the English to be fully as savage as the Indian tribes of North America. So refractory were they that few Englishmen accepted James's invitation to emigrate to Ulster, leaving it to the Scots to claim the Irish territory James opened to them. Nor were these just any Scots, but bands of Lowlanders who had fought for centuries against rival tribesman-or clansmen-of the Scottish Highlands. The centuries of battle had forged a character equal to almost any challenge requiring courage and determination. As one Scotsman explained, "When I do consider with myself what things are necessary for a plantation, I cannot but be confident that my own countrymen are as fit for such a purpose as any men in the world, having daring minds that upon any probable appearance do despise danger, and bodies able to endure as much as the height of their minds can undertake." Another Scotsman, perhaps more candid, characterized those who accepted James's offer rather differently: "Albeit amongst these Divine Providence sent over some worthy persons for birth, education and parts, yet the most part were such as either poverty, scandalous lives, or, at the best, adventurous seeking of better accommodation, set forward that way." . . .

Saturday, June 06, 2026

ICE arrest in a rural Montana town prompts a conservative community to take action

 

Are Chinese Content Creators Exploiting African Children For Money? | TSR Investigates - YouTube

 

The Government Gets Involved After Black Stress Relief Doll Goes Viral

 

What Visual Evidence Tells Us About Israel’s Use of White Phosphorus in Lebanon - The New York Times

What Visual Evidence Tells Us About Israel’s Use of White Phosphorus in Lebanon

"Videos collected by The Times shows how the Israeli military has deployed a munition that can be extremely harmful over populated areas in Lebanon.

News agency video filmed by Reuters on May 11 shows white phosphorus functioning over the border between Israel and Lebanon.

The Israeli military has deployed white phosphorus, an incendiary substance that can be extremely harmful, over populated areas in Lebanon in its battle against Hezbollah, according to experts, aid groups and visual evidence collected by The New York Times.

Distinctive smoke trails from this type of munition were seen as recently as May 30 in Nabatieh, a city of roughly 40,000, in social media footage verified by The Times, which was filmed as Israeli forces captured Beaufort Castle, a landmark in the area. 

Other verified footage showed that white phosphorus had been used in the vicinity of the coastal city of Tyre, as well as near three small towns — Qlayaa, Khiam and Yohmor — in the months since fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militant group, began again in March. The latest fighting erupted after Hezbollah fired rockets into northern Israel, following joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

Once exposed to air, white phosphorus spontaneously ignites and is exceptionally difficult to extinguish.

Often deployed by militaries to create fires and smoke screens during combat, white phosphorus is not illegal in itself, but deploying it deliberately against civilians or in an area populated by civilians violates the international laws of war. Human rights advocates have raised concerns that civilians have been affected by the Israeli military’s use of it.

Israel denies using the substance in violation of those laws. It is not clear for what purpose the Israeli military used white phosphorus in these incidents.

The Times asked the Israeli military questions about its use of white phosphorus in Nabatieh, Qlayaa, Khiam and Tyre in four specific instances and provided the coordinates for those incidents. The Israeli military had no comment on those incidents. The Times also asked the military about its internal guidelines for the usage of white phosphorus.

“I.D.F. procedures require that such shells are not used in densely populated areas, subject to certain exceptions. This complies and goes beyond the requirements of international law,” it said in a statement. 

Israel uses  American-made 155-millimeter M825A1 artillery projectiles that contain 116 felt wedges, in the shape of pizza slices, coated with white phosphorous. They are designed to create five to 10 minutes of dense white smoke, providing cover to fighters.

Video filmed on April 30 shows white phosphorus over the town of Qlayaa, in the south of Lebanon.Associated Press

The shells can be fuzed to break apart  and dispense their cargo midair, which will spread their incendiary effect over a wide area. That can be used to create a smoke screen, but also will cause fires on the ground wherever the wedges land.

The munitions can also be set to rupture on impact — to  create a single fire, thatmilitaries use as a visual marker to guide additional strikes.

Munitions experts who analyzed recent footage from news agencies as well as social media posts concluded that the imagery showed artillery projectiles bursting midair in Lebanon, releasing streams of burning white phosphorous below — consistent with previous Israeli uses of American M825A1 shells.

In response to questions by The Times, the Israeli military said that, “the primary smoke-screen shells used by the I.D.F. do not contain white phosphorus.” 

“Like many Western militaries,” the statement added, “the I.D.F. also possesses smoke-screen shells that include white phosphorous that are legal under international law. These shells are used by the I.D.F. for creating smoke screens and not for targeting or causing fires and are not defined under law as incendiary weapons.”

There are currently no publicly available statistics about the Israeli military’s use of other smoke-screen shells. 

Israel’s use of white phosphorus

News agency video filmed on March 27 shows these munitions dispersing over an area near Tyre, a large city in the south of Lebanon.Associated Press

The substance is “cheap, plentiful and pretty good at what it’s used for,” said N.R. Jenzen-Jones, the director of Armament Research Services, a private intelligence consultancy based in Australia that tracks arms and munitions.

Israel’s deployment of white phosphorus in populated areas has brought about scrutiny in the past.

A 2024 report by Human Rights Watch documented its widespread use in Lebanon and questioned its necessity, pointing out that there were safer alternatives, such as the M150 shells, which the Israeli military reportedly used in 2024. . 

The traces of these shells are visually distinct from the feathery trails of white phosphorus, which are more irregular.

Israel has also deployed white phosphorus in Gaza — in 2009, and in conflicts in Lebanon, including 1982 and 2006. In the year following the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, the Israeli military used white phosphorus more than 200 times in Lebanon, according to Ahmad Beydoun, an independent researcher who built a visual database of its sightings in the country.

The Lebanese government has filed four letters since October 2023 raising concerns about Israel’s use of white phosphorus to the United Nations and the U.N. Security Council. One of the letters, dated July 3, 2024, cites government  figures showing that more than 600 fires have broken out as a result of the use of white phosphorus  in southern Lebanon.

Smoke of the type emitted by white phosphorous is shown exploding with the buildings of a town in the background.
Plumes of smoke with the distinctive shape of white phosphorus are shown over the border between Israel and Lebanon in late April.Ayal Margolin/Reuters

What is the impact on civilians?

According to the World Health Organization, white phosphorus causes severe burns if it comes into contact with flesh. It can also cause respiratory and eye injuries if inhaled.

“The harm that white phosphorus causes is horrific,” said Bonnie Docherty, a senior arms adviser at Human Rights Watch. “It inflicts burns that can penetrate to the bone.” The dense smoke it produces, she said, “causes severe respiratory damage, and organ failure. Wounds can reignite when bandages are removed and remnants of the substance are exposed to oxygen.”

White phosphorous can also set homes, cars, buildings, fields and other objects on fire. An Amnesty International report from 2023 found that residents of Dhayra, a town in the south of Lebanon, fled after repeated release of white phosphorus on Oct. 16, 2023, and that cars and homes were still burning when they returned days later.

Traces of white phosphorus can exist in water and soil long after its use, experts said, and forested areas and farmland can be significantly damaged.

“There are understudied risks with long-term exposure to its smoke,” said Wim Zwijnenburg, who works at PAX, a Dutch peace organization, and researches the effects of conflict on the environment. “We also know that residents and farmers can face loss of access to their land and they often need specialized clearance operations after.”

.

Because white phosphorus munitions are primarily designed as smoke screens and illuminants, they often fall in a loophole in existing international law, Ms. Docherty said.

“Their destructive effects — such as causing fires or severe burns — are seen as a side effect of their use, rather than the main reason a military would use these weapons,” she added.

Although white phosphorous is legal if not deliberately deployed in populated areas, it is often hard to tell whether it was used intentionally. “These munitions are not precision weapons, and they can’t make a distinction between civilians and the military,” Mr. Zwijnenburg said. “It might not be a banned weapon, but we know that militaries don’t always use it as intended.”

Video filmed in Khiam on March 8 shows white phosphorus providing a smoke screen for Israeli military vehicles, which are advancing on a road near the town.Anadolu, via Agence France-Presse

The Israeli military is not the only army to use white phosphorus in combat. The United States  has used it in several operations in the Middle East, including in Falluja, Iraq, in 2004 and its campaign against ISIS in Syria in 2017. Ukraine and Russia have also accused each other of using white phosphorus since 2023.

Establishing that white phosphorus has been used intentionally against civilians can be difficult. A Human Rights Watch report in 2009 found that the Israeli military had repeatedly used these munitions over densely populated parts of Gaza. Four years later, after international pressure from rights organizations, the Israeli military announced that it would significantly reduce its use of white phosphorus.

John Ismay contributed reporting from Washington."

What Visual Evidence Tells Us About Israel’s Use of White Phosphorus in Lebanon - The New York Times

Tensions rise as protesters block vehicles at Delaney Hall, with tear gas deployed and cars damaged - nj.com

Tensions rise as protesters block vehicles at Delaney Hall, with tear gas deployed and cars damaged

Anti ICE protesters outside Delaney Hall
Anti ICE protesters block the exit from Delaney Hall as employees attempt to leave the facility on Doremus Ave. outside Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey on Friday, June 5 2026. Chris Pedota | For NJ.com

Protesters blocked the entrance to a secure lot at Delaney Hall on Friday afternoon, sitting on car hoods, yelling at drivers and kicking vehicles. At least one windshield was broken and several protesters were tear-gassed. 

On a hot, sticky day outside the immigrant detetion center in Newark, protesters waved anti-ICE posters as traffic passed by. It wasn’t until around 3:30 p.m. when the demonstration became violent.

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Nearly a dozen protesters formed a line at the northern exit to the facility, blocking cars as they were attempting to leave the immigration detention center. 

“Isn’t it nice you get to go home,” one protester yelled.

One of the protesters yelled at a driver, “You’re Spanish. You should be ashamed of yourself.” 

As a woman with children in her car left, protesters stepped back to let her pass. “We’re with you,” one shouted as she drove off.

Staff at the detention center, run by the GEO Group, redirected vehicles to come back inside the gated and fenced lot, but some drivers decided to inch through the crowd, knocking some people over. One staff member from Delaney Hall Corrections Emergency Response Team pepper sprayed protesters blocking the vehicles.

As a silver sedan left the facility, a physical altercation between protesters and Delaney Hall security staff occurred after a protester, who held onto the driver’s side mirror and door handle, was pulled to the ground by security. The altercation was quickly broken up. The same protester had ended up on the hood of another vehicle, holding onto the windshield wipers before falling off the vehicle. 

The protester, identified as a 28-year-old resident of Seattle, Washington, was arrested by the Newark Police Department and charged with three counts of criminal mischief after police said he smashed the windows of at least one car.

Another protester, an Arizona resident, was arrested by Homeland Security Investigations for allegedly assaulting an ICE officer on Friday, police said.

Minutes before the damage was done to the cars trying to leave Delaney Hall, an ambulance and supervisor’s vehicle from University Hospital in Newark were escorted into the parking area. 

Just past 6 p.m., several protesters dumped large sand-filled barrels meant to serve as traffic barriers, blocking the exit with piles of sand and the barrels. 

The escalation came just a day after protesters slashed the tires of an ICE vehicle at Delaney Hall. 

Protests at the ICE facility have been ongoing for about two weeks. They started over Memorial Day weekend following allegations of hunger and abuse at the privately-owned detention facility."

Tensions rise as protesters block vehicles at Delaney Hall, with tear gas deployed and cars damaged - nj.com

Newark Mayor to Scale Back Police Presence at Delaney Hall ICE Detention Center - The New York Times

Fight Erupts After Newark Mayor Scales Back Police Presence at ICE Facility

"The mayor, Ras Baraka, said the city would not spend taxpayer money to safeguard Delaney Hall, an immigration detention center in Newark run by a private prison company.

Two people fight next to a car.
On Friday evening, a day after Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark decided to scale back police presence at Delaney Hall, a fight broke out between protesters and security guards.Lexi Parra/The New York Times

One day after the mayor of Newark said the city’s police department would scale back its presence outside the Delaney Hall immigration detention center, a melee broke out in front of it between dozens of protesters and employees of the Geo Group, a private prison company that operates the facility.

Unlike previous confrontations at Delaney Hall, many of which happened at night, the altercation on Friday happened in broad daylight, at around 5:30 p.m. Scrums of people punched and tackled one another to the ground. Several protesters were also pepper-sprayed by Geo Group employees. The fights were broken up by other protesters and Geo Group workers.

There were no officers from the Newark Police Department or the New Jersey State Police present throughout the melee, which sprawled across Doremus Avenue, the busy industrial thoroughfare where Delaney Hall is located. The closest law enforcement presence appeared to be a number of Newark police cars parked about a quarter of a mile north of Delaney Hall, where officers were controlling traffic.

Minutes after the fight ended, a number of Newark police cars arrived. Officers arrested one protester, placed him in a police vehicle and drove away, once again leaving no local or state law enforcement officers present at the scene. Separately, officers with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement exited Delaney Hall soon after the melee, took a male protester into custody, and took him into the facility.

The man arrested by the Newark police was later identified as Zion Napier, 28, of Seattle. Catherine Adams, a spokeswoman for the Newark Police Department, said that Mr. Napier was seen smashing car windows near Delaney Hall on Friday. He was charged with three counts of criminal mischief.

In a video released by the police department, a protester can be seen climbing onto the hoods of three cars as they leave the Delaney Hall parking lot. In two of the cases, the protester snaps off the cars’ windshield wipers.

Officials with the New Jersey State Police and ICE did not respond to questions about the incident. Sean Higgins, a spokesman for Gov. Mikie Sherrill, referred questions about law enforcement at Delaney Hall to the mayor, Ras Baraka. After the police left, several protesters toppled a barrel of sand, which had been placed in the middle of the street to control traffic.

Later in the evening, ICE officers arrested three more protesters.  Separately, a protester was hit by a car driven by someone leaving Delaney Hall in a convoy of vehicles. He received care from medics on the scene and was then driven by friends to a nearby hospital.

Mayor Baraka said on Thursday that the city police department would scale back its presence outside the Delaney Hall immigration detention center, where local, state and federal officers have confronted protesters on and off for the past two weeks at demonstrations that have sometimes turned chaotic.

Mr. Baraka said the city would not spend local taxpayers’ money “in an already strapped budget to safeguard a privately owned facility, especially when it places our officers at unnecessary risk.”

The mayor took credit for what he called a “significant reduction in unrest” in recent days and said in a statement that starting on Friday, the Newark police “will focus on traffic management and public safety, ensuring the protection of both protesters and motorists.”

Before the altercations on Friday, it was not immediately clear whether ICE or the New Jersey State Police, both of which have clashed with demonstrators during this wave of protests, would increase their presence at Delaney Hall. Usually, the state police will assist municipal law enforcement agencies only upon request, so Newark would need to reach out if it wanted help from the state.

Mr. Higgins, Ms. Sherrill’s spokesman, said in response to questions about the state police’s plans that “the governor’s focus is on fighting for humane treatment for detainees and their families inside Delaney Hall. Newark is keeping us updated on the situation outside the facility, and we continue to urge all those protesting to remain peaceful.”

Before the violence erupted, ICE said in a statement that “the perimeter around Delaney Hall is FULLY closed. No rioters have breached the perimeter. Our ICE operations continue undeterred. ANYONE who attempts to obstruct law enforcement or disrupt our operations will be prosecuted and face justice.”

Since the mayor lifted the curfew on Tuesday, three people were arrested on Wednesday and accused of assaulting a police officer and setting a dumpster fire. On Thursday night, tensions flared again when protesters briefly blocked a road with metal barricades.

And before the melee began on Friday, a small group of protesters stood at the end of a driveway at Delaney Hall and tried to physically block Geo Group employees and vehicles from leaving.

The policing of the protests at Delaney Hall, where at least 90 people have been arrestedsince May 26, has been complicated and contentious. Delaney Hall is one of the largest immigrant detention centers in the Eastern United States and has been a magnet for opponents of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. It is also in a very Democratic city in a Democrat-led state, and both Mr. Baraka and Ms. Sherrill have at times joined with the protesters.

Last week, after several days of clashes between protesters and federal agents who fired pepper balls and spray to control the crowds, Ms. Sherrill sent in the state police to de-escalate the situation. But last Friday, after demonstrators shoved barricades at officers, threw bottles of liquid and set fires, state troopers charged the crowd and set off smoke grenades.

After Mr. Baraka instituted a 9 p.m. curfew on Sunday, 61 protesters were arrested on charges of violating the curfew, rioting and resisting arrest. On Friday, the New Jersey public defender’s office moved to dismiss charges against 45 of those 61 protesters, arguing that the complaints against them were so generic and similar that they failed to articulate any probable cause to charge the individual defendants.

Lexi Parra and Mark Bonamo contributed reporting.

Andy Newman has reported from the New York region for The Times for more than 30 years."

Newark Mayor to Scale Back Police Presence at Delaney Hall ICE Detention Center - The New York Times

As Trump Pushes Deportations, a Skyrocketing Caseload Strains Immigration Courts - The New York Times

ICE Says Detainees Are ‘Worst of the Worst.’ Government Data Disagrees.

"Federal officials said they are removing killers and rapists from the streets. Data obtained by The New York Times indicates most detainees at a Newark facility haven’t been convicted of crimes.

Barbed wire outside a building with “Delaney Hall” in large lettering on the side. A person’s silhouette can be seen in a window of the building.
Delaney Hall, an immigration detention center in New Jersey, has been the site of persistent and at times violent clashes between law enforcement officers and protesters over the past two weeks.Todd Heisler/The New York Times

When reports emerged last month that immigrants held at a Newark detention center were staging a hunger strike to protest conditions there, demonstrators mobilized and New Jersey’s governor, Mikie Sherrill, demanded to be let in so that she could inspect the building.

Federal officials rejected her demand and said that she and other Democratic officials in New Jersey should be grateful that Immigration and Customs Enforcement was removing killers, rapists and other criminals — “the worst of the worst,” they said — from the state.

But the federal government’s own data, including some from internal documents The New York Times obtained this week, indicates that people with criminal convictions account for just a fraction of the detainees at the Newark center, Delaney Hall.

In early April, ICE stopped updating its once-regular public reports on the number of people being detained at its facilities. The internal data obtained by The Times shows that of 591 people held at Delaney Hall this week, 76 — about 13 percent — had criminal convictions and 123 — about 21 percent — had pending criminal charges.

The detainees had been at the center for about 80 days on average, the data shows.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement on Friday that it was “working rapidly and overtime to remove these aliens from detentions centers to their final destination — home.”

Delaney Hall’s population has dropped sharply since ICE’s April report, which showed 891 people (833 men and 58 women) being held there as of April 2. Less than 10 percent — 61 men and two women — were classified as criminals.

When people are detained, and then periodically during their detention, they are divided into categories that reflect the level of security risk they are believed to pose and then housed accordingly, according to ICE.

The categories — low, medium low, medium high and high — are based on factors such as previous convictions, disciplinary records and “special management concerns,” ICE says. As of April 2, just one Delaney Hall detainee was considered a high security risk, ICE data shows; 789, or just under 90 percent, were deemed low risk.

Immigration officials also assign detainees to “ICE threat level” categories determined by their “criminality,” including “the recency of the criminal behavior and its severity.” They are ranked on a scale of 1 to 3, with 1 being the most severe. Detainees with no criminal convictions are classified as “no ICE threat level.”

As of April 2, just six detainees were classified in the highest threat level. About 90 percent were said to be no ICE threat, agency data shows.

“If you were looking for an ICE facility that holds a large number of dangerous criminals,” Austin Kocher, a political and legal geographer and research assistant professor at Syracuse University, wrote in a recent edition of his newsletter on Substack, “Delaney Hall just isn’t it.”

Professor Kocher, whose research focuses on the politics and policies of the U.S. immigration and refugee system, did a more fine-grained analysis of the criminal detainee population. He used data from the Deportation Data Project, which collects and posts government immigration enforcement data sets, some released voluntarily by the government and some obtained through public records requests.

He found that of 844 people detained at Delaney Hall as of March 10, about 12 percent were convicted criminals, about 18 percent had pending criminal charges and about 70 percent had been accused only of immigration violations.

Of the 99 people with criminal convictions, none had been found guilty of homicide, sexual assault or drug trafficking. About 70 percent were convicted of misdemeanors; just nine had felonies, according to Professor Kocher.

For the past two weeks, Delaney Hall has been the site of steady and sometimes violent confrontations between protesters and law enforcement officers. At least 90 protesters have been arrested since May 26.

As Ms. Sherrill sought access to the center, federal officials insisted that detainees were being well cared for and denied there was a hunger strike. They accused her of engaging in a “political stunt.”

“These sanctuary politicians should be thanking ICE law enforcement for removing murderers, rapists, pedophiles and drug traffickers from their communities,” Lauren Bis, a Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman, said in a statement on May 25. “We need these sanctuary politicians to stop peddling this garbage and cooperate with us.”

The statement was accompanied by a list of 16 detainees who had been arrested in New Jersey, with brief descriptions of what was described as each one’s “criminal history.”

The offenses cited included homicide, sexual assault, drug trafficking, aggravated assault, illegal possession of a weapon and enticement of a minor for indecent purposes. It was unclear whether a “criminal history” reflected convictions, charges or some combination.

Delaney Hall is run by GEO Group, one of the largest private prison operators in the United States, under a $1 billion, 15-year federal contract.

The two-story center has 1,000 beds, according to a GEO Group news release from last year, and a permitted capacity of just under 1,200 beds, according to filings in a company lawsuit against New Jersey officials.

Asked this week for current data on the detainees and their criminal records, the Department of Homeland Security responded with a statement that did not include the requested information.

“It is a crime to enter the United States illegally,” the statement said. “Everyone being held inside Delaney Hall broke the law. If you come to our country illegally, we will find you and arrest you.”

Allison McCann contributed reporting.

Ed Shanahan is a rewrite reporter and editor covering breaking news and general assignments on the Metro desk.

Hamed Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for The Times."

As Trump Pushes Deportations, a Skyrocketing Caseload Strains Immigration Courts - The New York Times