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发布时间: 2025-05-24 17:36:49北京青年报社官方账号
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  天津龙济医院秘尿   

At least 300 of the nearly 700 people detained during the ICE raids in Mississippi last week have been released. But Andres Gomez-Jorge isn't one of them.His wife, Juana, and children are desperate to find him.Juana says she hasn't slept since her husband was detained.Gomez-Jorge was working at the Morton Koch Foods plant Wednesday when the raids occurred and has not been in contact with his family since.Juana invited CNN into the family's home Monday to discuss how the raids have affected their family."We don't know where he is," she said. "We don't know if he's dead or alive."The couple has four children, ages 11, 9, 6 and a toddler, Juana says. In a video that has now gone viral, Juana's oldest child, Magdalena, was seen crying after her father was detained.Juana says her daughter loves her father and, like all of her children, is sad that he is gone. "Her father is very important to her. Her heart was moved," she said of her daughter."My children are sad. They are worried," the mother said. "I don't know where he is."Juana says she doesn't work and depends on her husband to bring in all their income. She says she doesn't have any family in the area.She is afraid she won't be able to afford rent, utilities or whatever bail she may need to get her husband out of detention. She thinks it could be as much as ,000 and doesn't know how or where she would get that much money."I feel very powerless. I don't have a job, only my husband works. I'm thinking, what am I going to do?" she asked.Juana says she and her husband have lived in the United States for more than a decade and came here for better opportunities."He didn't come here to rob anybody," Juana explained. "He came here to work. It is out of necessity."Juana tells CNN that if her husband is deported she will have no choice but to return to Guatemala with her children in tow. The kids were all born in the United States. They have never been to Guatemala and have told her they don't want to go, she said.The fact that her 11-year-old daughter Magdalena's tearful pleas went viral has not escaped her.Juana says she is frightened because the entire world has seen her daughter's face.She says the family has had interactions with people that have scared them since the video was taken. Juana says that the family has received strange calls with some people even inquiring about adopting Magdalena.The video has been shared so widely that even US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) responded."I understand that the girl is upset, and I get that. But her father committed a crime," Mark Morgan, the acting commissioner of CBP told CNN's Jake Tapper on State of the Union on Sunday.ICE spokesman Bryan Cox told CNN Monday that Gomez-Jorge does not have any prior criminal convictions. The father of four was arrested while "working without legal authorization," Cox said.Cox said that although Gomez-Jorge has not been convicted of a crime, the US Attorney Southern District of Mississippi will decide whether he or any of the people detained last week will be deported.All Gomez-Jorge's family can do now is search for him and wait for his release.Magdalena seems uncomfortable with the fame she's garnered. She was very quiet when CNN visited. She worked on her homework and played with her younger siblings after school, sharing soda and candy.The 11-year-old said her favorite subject is math, so much so that she wants to be a math teacher when she grows up.But right now, she just wants her dad to come home. Magdalena says a lot of her friends had parents who were detained in the raids and a large number of them, like her, still have a parent in detention.Her teachers didn't address the raid when she returned to school the day it occurred, she says.Juana says she will continue to search for her husband and is looking for a lawyer to help the family. She's being strong for her kids, telling her daughter not to cry and that they will find a way to pay bond so Gomez-Jorge can come home."For my children, I want to find him," she said. "It's like there has been a death." 4081

  天津龙济医院秘尿   

BREAKING: @UAW announces a strike begins TODAY for @GM auto workers. As soon as this press conference ends, the strike begins. VP Dittes says they are standing up for their union members, for fair wages, health care, job security, ‘our’ share of the profits ... cont. pic.twitter.com/wR33Y9oivh— Jennifer Ann Wilson WXYZ (@JennaWils) September 15, 2019 364

  天津龙济医院秘尿   

ATLANTA, Ga. – Frank Reiss has a deep love for books. "I think they're beautiful," he said. "I love looking at them I love holding them."The success of the titles, authors and tales on the shelves of his Atlanta shop are a big part of the twists and turns in the story of his small business.He opened A Capella Books in 1989. In the beginning, he focused on books that were hard to find."Used books, ordinary used books, scarce and rare books," Reiss said. Then, people started to turn to the internet for books. "When Amazon showed up, books came pretty available, anyone with a computer could find a book anywhere and it got more and more that way," Reiss said. "A lot of our inventory that used to be scarce, out of print, to to even 0 books became pretty common," Reiss said. "Became and books and it became difficult to make a living selling those."Reiss says his expenses continued to rise while his sales didn't. To keep his business and his job alive, he had to climb into a hole. He says he started putting expenses on credit cards. He says 15 years ago, the debt was at its worst."I probably got to about a quarter million dollars in debt," he said. The plot twist that changed his store was figuring out what to offer the internet couldn't. "We could really capture an audience for books when you could bring the authors to town or store or other venues in town and give their fans the opportunity to meet them and get their books signed," Reiss said. Reiss started to work with the Carter Presidential Library, not far from A Capella, to hold book signings and events. He also started to sell newer books and moved his business to a cheaper location. "Sales versus our low point versus now is probably six times the revenue that we had at its low point," Reiss said.He also says an independent bookstore has a human element the internet does not. "We know our customers reading taste, they know our taste, we have conversations and its a very real experience," Reiss said.Independent book sales rose steadily at the end of last decade, according to the Independent Booksellers Association. “I think you can open a book and just be they can take you anywhere,” said Reiss. While commerce is king, for the characters with a more personal touch, the end hasn't been written. 2318

  

An outbreak of hepatitis A in Indiana, Nebraska and Wisconsin has been "potentially linked" to blackberries from the Fresh Thyme chain of grocery stores, 165

  

CALABASAS, Calif. – Vanessa Bryant has filed a lawsuit against the company that owned the helicopter that crashed in January, killing her husband Kobe, their 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven others, 216

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