PODCAST: ¿Por qué los inmigrantes detenidos están pasando más tiempo en salas de procesamiento de ICE?

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En la ciudad de Nueva York, en la dirección 26 Federal Plaza en Manhattan hay un edificio federal y en el décimo piso, la duración media de la detención en las salas ha aumentado casi un 600 por ciento, según el periódico inglés The Guardian.

Visitantes entran en el 26 Federal Plaza, el edificio donde se celebran muchas audiencias de inmigración. (Adi Talwar)

Cuando el Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (o ICE como se le conoce normalmente) arresta a inmigrantes, los lleva a salas de espera o procesamiento (holding rooms) que están dentro de edificios de oficinas federales, oficinas locales, aeropuertos y juzgados por todo el país.

Estas salas son habitaciones pequeñas, sin ventanas, sin camas y sin luz solar.

Estos espacios deberían albergar a los inmigrantes durante unas pocas horas, el tiempo suficiente para que los funcionarios de inmigración tramiten la detención, para luego trasladar a la persona a un centro de detención.

Antes de finales de junio, las propias políticas internas de ICE prohibían detener a inmigrantes por más de 12 horas en estas salas, pero en un memorándum de finales de junio, la agencia anunciaba que las personas recientemente detenidas podían permanecer hasta por tres días, 72 horas.

Sin embargo, un nuevo reportaje de The Guardian ha revelado que, cada vez más, las personas permanecen en estas salas durante días o incluso semanas.

En la ciudad de Nueva York, en la dirección 26 Federal Plaza en Manhattan hay un edificio federal y en el décimo piso, la duración media de la detención en las salas ha aumentado casi un 600 por ciento, según el periódico inglés. 

En agosto, un juez ordenó al Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS por sus siglas en inglés) que mejorara las condiciones en estas salas de procesamiento para que las personas dispongan de llamadas telefónicas, más espacio y colchonetas para dormir, entre otras cosas.

ICE ha utilizado al menos 170 salas de procesamiento en todo el país, incluidas 25 oficinas locales de ICE.

Según el reporte, tras la toma de posesión del presidente Donald Trump, el tiempo medio que las personas pasan detenidas aumentó en 127 salas de procesamiento en todo el país.

Estas salas de procesamiento no son centros de detención, por lo que no están sujetas al mismo tipo de escrutinio que otras instalaciones de ICE. 

Así que para hablar sobre estas áreas y lo que implica largos procesamientos, invitamos a uno de los autores del reportaje, José Olivares, quien cubre inmigración para el periódico inglés.

Más detalles en nuestra conversación a continuación.

Ciudad Sin Límites, el proyecto en español de City Limits, y El Diario de Nueva York se han unido para crear el pódcast “El Diario Sin Límites” para hablar sobre latinos y política. Para no perderse ningún episodio de nuestro pódcast “El Diario Sin Límites” síguenos en Spotify, Soundcloud, Apple Pódcast y Stitcher. Todos los episodios están allí. ¡Suscríbete!

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Top diplomats will talk with Ukraine’s foreign minister at the G7 meeting in Canada

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By ROB GILLIES and MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ontario (AP) — Top diplomats from the Group of Seven industrialized democracies are meeting Ukraine’s foreign minister on Wednesday as Ukraine tries to fend off relentless Russian aerial attacks that have brought rolling blackouts across the country ahead of winter.

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U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will participate in a G7 session on Ukraine and defense cooperation.

Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand is hosting the meeting in southern Ontario as tensions rise between the U.S. and traditional allies like Canada over defense spending, trade and uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s ceasefire plan in Gaza and efforts to end the Russia-Ukraine war.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said he wants to order 25 Patriot air defense systems from the United States. Combined missile and drone strikes on the power grid have coincided with Ukraine’s frantic efforts to hold back a Russian battlefield push aimed at capturing the eastern stronghold of Pokrovsk.

Canada announced additional sanctions on 13 people and 11 entities, including several involved in the development and deployment of Russia’s drone program.

Britain says it will send $17 million to help patch up Ukraine’s energy infrastructure as winter approaches and Russian attacks intensify. The money will go toward repairs to power, heating and water supplies and humanitarian support for Ukrainians.

U.K. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, who made the announcement before the meeting, said Russian President Vladimir Putin “is trying to plunge Ukraine into darkness and the cold as winter approaches” but the British support will help keep the lights and heating on.

Canada recently made a similar announcement.

The two-day meeting in Niagara-on-the-Lake, near the U.S. border, comes after Trump ended trade talks with Canada because the Ontario provincial government ran an anti-tariff advertisement in the U.S. that upset him. That followed a spring of acrimony, since abated, over the Republican president’s insistence that Canada should become the 51st U.S. state.

Anand will have a meeting with Rubio, but she noted that a different minister leads the U.S. trade file. The U.S. president has placed greater priority on addressing his grievances with other nations’ trade policies than on collaboration with G7 allies.

The G7 comprises Canada, the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan. Anand also invited the foreign ministers of Australia, Brazil, India, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, South Korea, South Africa and Ukraine to the meeting, which began Tuesday.

Putin has tried to justify Russia’s attack on Ukraine by saying it was needed to protect civilians in eastern Ukraine — a false claim the U.S. had predicted he would make as a pretext for his invasion.

Fatal crash: Driver speeds off I-94 in St. Paul, collides with another vehicle

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The Minnesota State Patrol is investigating a fatal crash in St. Paul that happened early Wednesday.

The driver of a Tesla “was at a high rate of speed” when it exited from eastbound Interstate 94 to Dale Street, according to the State Patrol. The vehicle collided with a Toyota RAV4 crossing the intersection at 2:56 a.m.

There were two people in the Tesla — a 22-year-old man from Fridley was driving and a 19-year-old woman was the passenger — and one in the Toyota, a 31-year-old man from St. Paul.

The State Patrol didn’t immediately release information Wednesday morning about which of the people died, and a spokesperson said more information will be available later in the day.

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Small grocers and convenience stores feel an impact as customers go without SNAP benefits

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By DEE-ANN DURBIN, Associated Press Business Writer

A little more than a year ago, Ryan Sprankle welcomed President Donald Trump to one of the three grocery stores his family owns near Pittsburgh. Trump was on the campaign trail; they talked about high grocery prices, and the Republican nominee picked up a bag of popcorn.

But these days, Sprankle would have a different message if Trump or any lawmakers visited his store. He wants them to know that delayed SNAP benefits during the government shutdown hurt his customers and his small, independent chain.

People leave Sprankle’s Neighborhood Market, Monday, Nov. 10, 2025, in Kittanning, Pa. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

“You can’t take away from the most needy people in the country. It’s inhumane,” Sprankle said. “It’s a lack of empathy and it’s on all their hands.

The Trump administration froze funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program at the end of October, impacting food access for some 42 million Americans. On Monday, the U.S. Senate passed legislation that would reopen the federal government and replenish SNAP funds, but the U.S. House of Representatives still must consider the bill. It’s unclear when SNAP payments might resume if the government reopens.

In 2024, SNAP recipients redeemed a little more than $96 billion in benefits, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers the program. The majority – 74% — was spent at superstores and supermarkets, a category that includes big chains like Walmart and Kroger but also some independent stores like Sprankle’s.

Around 14% was spent at smaller grocery and convenience stores, businesses often tucked into neighborhoods and more easily accessible to SNAP beneficiaries.

A stalled economic engine

Etharin Cousin, a former director of the United Nations World Food Program and founder of the nonprofit Food Systems for the Future, said the cutoff of SNAP benefits had immediate impacts on grocers and convenience stores of all sizes, most of which operate on slim profit margins of 1% to 2%.

“SNAP isn’t just a social safety net for families. It’s also a local economic engine,” Cousin said. “SNAP benefits flow directly into neighborhoods, stores, regional distributors and community jobs.”

Walmart declined to comment on the impact of the SNAP funding lapse but noted that it has been lowering prices and donating to local food banks. Kroger also declined to comment.

Shoppers not receiving their food benefits affects all retailers but becomes “a big problem more quickly” at small chains, Sprankle said. His Kittanning, Pennsylvania, store gets 25% of its revenue from SNAP, but customers who don’t get government assistance also are worried about the shutdown, according to Sprankle. They’re spending less, trading down to cheaper goods or heading to food banks, he said.

Ryan Sprankle, left, owner of Sprankle’s Neighborhood Market, speaks with Timothy A. Mohney at the market Monday, Nov. 10, 2025, in Kittanning, Pa. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

Sprankle said lower sales cut into the overtime he can offer to the chain’s 140 employees. Many are worried about losing their jobs, he said.

“They have families to feed, they have kids for buy gifts for,” he said. “If I have to sell my truck, we’re going to give Christmas bonuses.”

Liz Abunaw, the owner and operator of Forty Acres Fresh Market in Chicago, recently saw a customer putting back a full cart of groceries because she couldn’t afford them without SNAP.

Abunaw opened the supermarket in September after years spent selling produce at pop-up markets and in delivery boxes. Only about 12% of Abunaw’s revenue comes from SNAP benefits right now, she said. But without it — or if SNAP recipients spend less money in her store — it will slow Forty Acres’ growth and make it harder to pay the workers, suppliers and farmers who depend on her, she said.

“SNAP is currency. I get money I then use in this economy. It’s not a food box,” Abunaw said. “The economic impact of SNAP is larger than the dollars spent.”

From neighborhood shops to food pantries

The suspended food aid also had an immediate impact on Kanbe’s Markets, a nonprofit that stocks produce in coolers at 110 convenience stores around Kansas City, Missouri. Kanbe’s distributes a mixture of donated food and food purchased from wholesalers to keep prices low, founder and CEO Maxfield Kaniger said.

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Kanbe’s also distributes free food to 50 food pantries and soup kitchens around the city.

Kaniger said some of the convenience stores he works with saw their sales drop 10% in the days after Nov. 1, when SNAP benefits weren’t paid. At the same time, the food pantries he supplies asked for double or triple their usual orders.

Because it’s giving away more food than usual, Kanbe’s has to spend more buying produce for the coolers it stocks. It’s frustrating for Kaniger, who must make decisions quickly before food spoils.

“It should be enough that people are going without food. Period, end of sentence. People going without food is wrong,” he said.

Babir Sultan sells berries, lemons, potatoes, bananas and other produce from Kanbe’s at his four FavTrip convenience stores in the Kansas City area. His stores are in food deserts, far from other groceries or big retailers, he said, so it’s important to him to stock fresh produce for those neighborhoods.

Sultan said foot traffic at his stores fell 8% to 10% in early November after SNAP funding ceased. He decided to offer $10 of free produce to SNAP beneficiaries but said he’s also happy to help out other customers who might be struggling right now.

“If you’re in need, just ask, we’ll take care of you,” Sultan said. “Everybody is affected whenever the customer is feeling the pinch.”

Durbin reported from Detroit. Associated Press data journalist Kasturi Pananjady in Philadelphia contributed to this report.