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Hundreds of illegal immigrants arrested over the past week in one of the biggest U.S. immigration stings have already been deported, but some are being held for possible criminal prosecution.Federal autho
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stanley website een deported for crimes or defied final deportation orders. The action is part of Operation Return to Sender.Of the 761 people arrested in a five-county region since Jan. 17, more than 450 have already been removed from the country, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE .More than half of those arrested in the sweeps were already in jail and are being turned over to federal authorities as their sentences expire, an ICE official said.At least one person, however, was hit with a criminal case instead of being placed in civil deportation proceedings. Erik Omar Galindo-Vazquez, a Mexican national taken
stanley cup uk in during the sweeps in Orange County, was charged with illegal re-entry to the United States after felony deportation mdash; a federal crime than can carry up to 20 years in prison.ICE officials said Galindo-Vazquez was deported in October 2005 after being detained in Arizona and was convicted six years earlier in Orange County for assault with a deadly weapon, a felony charge.While federal law makes it a crime to enter the country illegally, only a fraction of the tens of thousands of illegal Mgyx When She Spoke, Americans Listened
Despite popular perception, your Facebook news feed isn ;t just a string of updates from your friends and Pages you Like. It a highly-customized list created by Facebook mind-bogglingly complex algorithms. So what would your feed look like if you decided to Like every single thing you saw on it Mat Honan, Wired intrepid reporter, bravely took the plunge. He added more than a thousand things to his Likes page and came away with the conclusion and he didn ;t really, well, Like what happe
botella stanley ned next. Content Mills Ruled Honan feed was inundated by Upworthy and the Huffington Post. As I went to bed that first night and scrolled through my News Feed,
stanley thermos mug the updates I saw were in order : Huffington Post, Upworthy, Huffington Post, Upworthy, a Levi ad, Space, Huffington Post, Upworthy, The Verge, Huffington Post, Space, Upworthy, Space. His Friends ; Feeds Got Messed Up Too I heard from numerous people that my weirdo activity had been overrunning their feeds, writes Honan. One of his Facebook friends noted that over 70
stanley cup percent of her news feed was things that Honan liked. At one point, Facebook PR gets involved, thanks to Honan Liking frenzy. It an interesting experiment that highlights the ravenous nature of Facebook data-hungry algorithms. Head over to Wired to read the full post. You ;ll like it. [Wired] Facebook