FOCD - Formerly: Friends of Orange County Detainees

FOCD - Formerly: Friends of Orange County Detainees FOCD offered regular visits to immigration detainees, in an act of friendship and to help end isolation. The U.S.

Our volunteers currently assist unaccompanied minors with transportation to local airports for flights to unite with family or friends in the U.S. Immigration detention is the practice of incarcerating immigrants while they await determination by an immigration judge of their immigration status, including potential deportation. operates the world’s largest immigration detention system. There are 2

00 facilities with ICE contracts across the U.S. Detainees can languish for months, sometimes years, separated from family and friends, with no visitors, no legal support, and no access to legal and community resources. Our mission is to offer regular visits to any undocumented detainee who indicates a need. We offer listening ears and compassionate hearts in an act of friendship to end isolation and affirm each person’s human dignity and worth. Our community of volunteers currently visit immigration detainees at Adelanto ICE Processing Center, CA. We currently visit both male and female detainees from countries all over the world. The men and women we visit identify by a variety of faiths, ethnicities, gender identities, and sexual orientations. Since we began recording our visits in 2013, our volunteers have made over 10,000 individual visits to detainees. Please visit our website to learn more about FOCD, and how you can join a dedicated team of volunteers, committed to restoring hope and humanity to the lives of immigration detainees: http://friendsofocdetainees.org/.

11/04/2025
10/30/2025
Sharing information about an upcoming luncheon/fundraiser for a local family, recently separated by the administrations ...
10/29/2025

Sharing information about an upcoming luncheon/fundraiser for a local family, recently separated by the administrations cruel immigration enforcement tactics. We'll be there and hope to see a lot of familiar faces! 🦋

10/29/2025

Increased ICE raids in Orange County raise concerns over constitutional rights violations and impact on immigrant communities.

08/03/2025

A little good news in this morning's L.A.Times!
Judge blocks expanded fast-track deportations
By Michael Kunzelman and Elliot Spagat
WASHINGTON — A federal judge agreed on Friday to temporarily block the Trump administration’s efforts to expand fast-track deportations of immigrants who legally entered the U.S. under a process known as humanitarian parole — a ruling that could benefit hundreds of thousands of people.
U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb in Washington, D.C., ruled that the Department of Homeland Security exceeded its statutory authority in its effort to expand “expedited removal” for many immigrants. The judge said those immigrants are facing perils that outweigh any harm from “pressing pause” on the administration’s plans.
The case “presents a question of fair play” for people fleeing oppression and violence in their home countries, Cobb said in her 84-page order.
“In a world of bad options, they played by the rules,” she wrote. “Now, the Government has not only closed off those pathways for new arrivals but changed the game for parolees already here, restricting their ability to seek immigration relief and subjecting them to summary removal despite statutory law prohibiting the Executive Branch from doing so.”
Fast-track deportations allow immigration officers to remove somebody from the U.S. without seeing a judge first. In immigration cases, parole allows somebody applying for admission to the U.S. to enter the country without being held in detention.
Immigrants’ advocacy groups sued Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to challenge three recent DHS agency actions that expanded expedited removal. A surge of arrests at immigration courts highlights the lawsuit’s high stakes.
The judge’s ruling applies to any noncitizen who has entered the U.S. through the parole process at a port of entry. She suspended the challenged DHS actions until the case’s conclusion.
Cobb said the case’s “underlying question” is whether people who escaped oppression will have the chance to “plead their case within a system of rules.”
“Or, alternatively, will they be summarily removed from a country that — as they are swept up at checkpoints and outside courtrooms, often by plainclothes officers without explanation or charges — may look to them more and more like the countries from which they tried to escape?” she added.
A plaintiffs’ attorney, Justice Action Center legal director Esther Sung, described the ruling as a “huge win” for hundreds of thousands of immigrants and their families. Sung said many people are afraid to attend routine immigration hearings out of fear of getting arrested.
“Hopefully this decision will alleviate that fear,” Sung said.
Since May, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have positioned themselves in hallways to arrest people after judges accept government requests to dismiss deportation cases. After being arrested, the government renews deportation proceedings but under fast-track authority.
President Trump sharply expanded fast-track authority in January, allowing immigration officers to deport someone without first seeing a judge. Although fast-track deportations can be put on hold by filing an asylum claim, people may be unaware of that right and, even if they are, can be swiftly removed if they fail an initial screening.
“Expedited removal” was created under a 1996 law and has been used widely for people stopped at the border since 2004. Trump attempted to expand those powers nationwide to anyone in the country less than two years in 2019 but was held up in court. His latest efforts amount to a second try.
ICE exercised its expanded authority sparingly at first during Trump’s second term but has since relied on it for aggressive enforcement in immigration courts and in “workplace raids,” according to plaintiffs’ attorneys.
Kunzelman and Spagat write for the Associated Press.

Address

Lake Forest, CA

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when FOCD - Formerly: Friends of Orange County Detainees posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to FOCD - Formerly: Friends of Orange County Detainees:

Share