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  • 25
    Mar
    2013
    3:07pm, EDT

    FBI aiding in 5-state search for missing Brown University student

    NBC Connecticut

    Brown University student Sunil Tripathi has been missing for more than a week.

    A student from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island has been missing for more than a week and the Federal Bureau of Investigation is helping in a five-state search, according to the Providence Journal.  


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Sunil Tripathi, 22, of Pennsylvania, was last seen on Friday, March 15 on the campus of the Ivy League university, according to the Journal, and the search has expanded to Connecticut, Boston, New York and Philadelphia.

    His family said Sunil’s wallet, ID cards, credit cards and cell phone were found in his room.

    “Our concerns are first and foremost with Sunil and his family,” Margaret Klawunn, vice president for student life and campus services at Brown, said in a statement posted on the university’s Web site.

    “We are hopeful that by encouraging the Brown community to help spread the word that Sunil will be located.”

    Tripathi grew up in Bryn Mawr, Pa., and has been living in Providence since 2008, according to Brown University, where he is a philosophy major and a talented saxophonist.

    Tripathi’s sister, Sangeeta Tripathi, has offered her contact information for further information:sangtrip@gmail.com, 917-774-9208.

    A Twitter account, @findingsunny, and a Facebook page have been set up to help with the search. 

    If you have any information or think you've seen him, call police.

    By NBCConnecticut.com

    149 comments

    A young man is missing and his family is worried. Whether he has harmed himself or has been harmed by another, the family deserves to know what has happened and to be supported in their quest. If you can't help, then don't hurt by your hateful posts.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: missing, student, brown, nbcconnecticut
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    11:22am, EDT

    California Governor Brown vetoes bill that allowed towns to release undocumented immigrants

    Damian Dovarganes / AP file

    High school student Claudia Rueda, 17, center, is arrested by Los Angeles Police officers for failing to disperse, as protesters blocked the intersection of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department Twin Tower Correctional Facility in Los Angeles Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012. Students demanded the passage of Assembly Bill 1081, also known as the Trust Act.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    California’s governor has vetoed a bill that would have allowed police and sheriffs to free undocumented immigrants from custody once they became eligible for release even if federal immigration authorities had asked to hold them for possible deportation proceedings.

    Immigration advocates say the federal requests, known as detainers or holds, cast a wide dragnet that has ensnared even those who had committed minor crimes or no offenses at all. But Immigration and Customs Enforcement had said the program was instrumental in helping enforce immigration laws and in getting violent offenders off the streets.


    Follow @mimileitsinger

    In his veto message late Sunday, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said he could not sign the bill because under it, “local officers would be prohibited from complying with an immigration detainer unless the person arrested was charged with, or has been previously convicted of, a serious or violent felony.

    “Unfortunately, the list of offenses codified in the bill is fatally flawed because it omits many serious crimes,” he said. “For example, the bill would bar local cooperation  even when the person arrested has been convicted of certain crimes involving child abuse, drug trafficking, selling weapons, using children to sell drugs, or gangs. I believe it's unwise to interfere with a sheriffs discretion  to comply with a detainer issued for people with these kinds of troubling criminal records.”

    Brown noted he would work with lawmakers to improve the legislation and said undocumented immigrants “play a major role in California's economy, with many performing low-wage jobs that others don't want.

    “Comprehensive immigration reform -- including a path to citizenship -- would provide tremendous economic benefits and is long overdue,” he wrote. “Until we have immigration reform, federal agents shouldn’t try to coerce local law enforcement officers into detaining people who’ve been picked up for minor offenses and pose no reasonable threat to their community.”

    Immigration activists denounced Brown’s veto, comparing it to Arizona’s controversial immigration law that includes a provision forcing those stopped by police to show their immigration papers. 

    "By vetoing the Trust Act Governor Brown has failed California's immigrant communities, imperiling civil rights and leaving us all less safe. The President's disastrous Secure Communities program is replicating Arizona's model of immigration enforcement nationally, causing a human rights crisis. Immigration and Customs Enforcement strong-armed the Governor to defend its deportation quota instead of defending Californian's rights,” Pablo Alvarado, executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said in a statement. “On this sad day, we renew our commitment to fight to keep our families together despite the Governor and the President's insistence on seeing them torn apart."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Alvarado was referring to ICE’s “Secure Communities” program, under which the FBI shares fingerprints of those arrested with federal immigration authorities who check to see if the person is not legally in the U.S. or if they can be deported due to a criminal conviction.

    ICE says it prioritizes the deportation of those who present the most significant threats to public safety, and that it has deported more than 147,400 convicted criminal undocumented immigrants, including more than 54,200 individuals convicted of violent offenses such as murder, rape and the sexual abuse of children, under the program. 

    In a statement last week, ICE Deputy Press Secretary Gillian Christensen said the agency didn’t comment on pending state legislation.

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    “The identification and removal of criminal offenders is ICE’s highest priority and over the past three and half years, ICE has been dedicated to implementing smart, effective reforms to the immigration system that allow it to focus its resources on priority individuals,” she wrote in a statement, noting that the Department of Homeland Security would continue to exercise prosecutorial discretion for certain people who came to the U.S. as children and other individuals who were “low priorities.”

    “The federal government alone sets these priorities and places detainers on individuals arrested on criminal charges to ensure that dangerous criminal aliens and other priority individuals are not released from prisons and jails into our communities,” she added.

    Several counties and cities have enacted ordinances that limit police cooperation with federal immigration authorities, The New York Times has reported.

    Assemblymember Tom Ammiano, a San Francisco Democrat who sponsored the legislation, said late Monday that the California State Sheriff's Association, which had opposed the bill, called his office on Monday to negotiate on the issue, which he took as a "good sign."

    "Governors come and go, you know, but this issue is more than a political issue, it is a movement," he said.

    Some immigration rights' activists took Brown to task for also vetoing a bill requiring the creation of state regulations governing the working conditions of domestic workers but instead signing off on legislation that would allow some undocumented youth to get a driver's license.

    It is intended for those who qualify for the federal government's deferred action policy, which provides a two-year work permit and a reprieve from deportation for those who were brought to the U.S. as children. There are some 300,000 youth in California who are currently eligible for the policy, according to the Immigration Policy Center.

    “Brown waited until the 11th hour of his legislative cycle to … veto the most important and impactful bills that would have (brought) tremendous relief for the immigrant community in California and instead decided to sign a very symbolic and hollow bill,” Carlos Amador, of immigrant rights' group Dream Team Los Angeles, told NBC News by phone.

    But Assemblymember Gilbert Cedillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who introduced the driver’s license bill, said he’d received many messages from those who were elated by the passage of the law.

    “We don’t want this to be a decision made by a director of DMV or made by a judge. But we want this to be a matter of right, of duty and obligation,” he told NBC News. “We made it certain …we’re not going to leave this to chance.”

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    497 comments

    Toss their illegal asses back across the border. You think if we went into Mexico illegally they wouldn't throw us in jail?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: governor, immigration, customs, california, immigrant, brown, ice, enforcement, communities, secure, undocumented
  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    3:18pm, EDT

    12-year-old Kansas boy held on rape charges

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    A 12-year-old northeast Kansas boy is being held on rape charges in Brown County, authorities say.

    Brown County Attorney Kevin Hill said Friday the Hiawatha boy was charged in county District Court last week on two counts of rape and two counts of aggravated criminal sodomy. Hiawatha is the county seat of Brown County, which has a population of about 10,000.


    Hill told NBC News the crimes occurred in the last 60 days. He said the victim is a 5-year-old girl.

    "At this time I have no further comment on the case," Hill told NBC News. He would not say where the boy was being held until his Oct. 9 hearing.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    211 comments

    We all need to take responsibility for raising our children better. This is appalling and should have been prevented.

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    Explore related topics: crime, rape, sodomy, brown, county
  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    11:52am, EDT

    Alaska man mauled by bear climbs tree to escape

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A hiker who clambered 30 feet up a tree in the Alaskan woods after being mauled by a brown bear is recovering after state troopers rescued him.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    From high up in the tree, Ben Radakovich called 911 early Sunday to report the attack three miles from the head of Bird Creek Trail.

    “I was mauled by a brown bear,” he gasped in the call. “I’m bleeding bad.”

    Radakovich told the emergency operator that he was bleeding from his back and neck, and asked for an ambulance. The call appeared to disconnect at one point, and when Radakovich got back on the line, he told the operator that a bear cub was also on the scene.

    “I can hear the brown bear, it’s still huffing in the trees,” he said. “I was able to climb a tree. So I’m as high up in a tree as I can get.”

    “The damn thing was batting at me,” he later added.

    Troopers reached Radakovich about two hours after his 911 call, KTUU-TV reported.

    "He was pretty cold, shivering," Trooper Tim Lewis told the station. "He had multiple injuries, serious injuries."

    The Associated Press reported that Radakovich, of Eagle River, used ski poles to protect himself.

    Radakovich has been released from the hospital, KTUU-TV reported.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    270 comments

    Luckiest man on the planet today goes to....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: alaska, bear, brown, mauled, trooper, hiker, 911, cub, mauling

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