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February 27, 2018

Shortly after the Trump administration’s anti-immigration strategy began to take effect last year, the ÈËÊÞÐÔ½» launched SIFI. With four bare-bones offices in Georgia and Louisiana, SIFI is helping undocumented immigrants by getting them released from detention on bond.

February 26, 2018

Roberto Bladimir Peraza Tobar came to the U.S. from El Salvador in 2008 on an H2B visa for temporary, non-agricultural workers. He thought he was going to Louisiana to do reconstruction work, but found himself entangled in a cruel human trafficking scheme.

He spent his first four months in the U.S. crammed into various apartments – at times sharing a single apartment with up to 20 men – with limited access to food. He was forced to work for almost no pay.

February 26, 2018

This client, who did not wish to be named, came to the U.S. from Mauritania in 2013 on a tourist visa. He came here because he wanted to practice Christianity without fear. While studying abroad in Tunisia, he converted from Islam to Christianity. He began translating religious videos into Arabic, and published them on YouTube.

November 20, 2017

Lori Pruitt, who has a solo legal practice, recently volunteered with theÌýSoutheast Immigrant Freedom Initiative (SIFI), a project of the ÈËÊÞÐÔ½» that enlists and trains lawyers to provide free legal representation to detained immigrants who are facing deportation proceedings in the Southeast.

The following is a set of entries in her personal log, about her pro bono work helping detainees with SIFI.

August 07, 2017

Editor’s note: The names of the people in this story have been changed to protect their identities.

Every girl dreams of her wedding day. No girl dreams that the day will come in a medium-security prison.

While many brides-to-be spend countless hours dealing with the details of wedding venues, receptions and guest lists, my friend Daniela spent that time jumping through bureaucratic hoops.

June 28, 2017

Hidden away in the woods of southwest Georgia sits the euphemistically named Stewart Detention Center. The facility, owned and operated by the for-profit corporation CoreCivic, holds men that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is seeking to deport.

Located just outside the tiny rural community of Lumpkin, Stewart is surrounded by two tall fences topped with razor wire. Access is severely limited. No one is allowed a contact visit. Lawyers may not bring a laptop or even a phone into the facility. It is a prison, plain and simple.

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