News from the South - Florida News Feed
Gen Xers mourn drowning death of The Cosby Show’s Theo actor Malcolm-Jamal Warner
SUMMARY: Malcolm-Jamal Warner, known for playing Theo Huxtable on the groundbreaking 1980s sitcom “The Cosby Show,” tragically died from accidental drowning in Costa Rica. The show, which aired from 1984 to 1992, was celebrated for positively portraying a Black family, resonating deeply with Generation X and Black audiences by reflecting their experiences and challenging racial stereotypes. Fans and community members expressed profound grief, describing Warner as a relatable figure and role model who shaped their childhoods and cultural memory. His death was unexpected, heightening the sense of loss felt by those who admired both his acting and activism.
The post Gen Xers mourn drowning death of The Cosby Show’s Theo actor Malcolm-Jamal Warner appeared first on www.clickorlando.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
US considers ban on wholesale shopping and other visa restrictions for Iranians during UN meeting
SUMMARY: The Trump administration has denied visas to Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and is considering imposing travel restrictions on delegations from Iran, Sudan, Zimbabwe, and Brazil for the upcoming UN General Assembly. Iran’s diplomats may face bans on shopping at wholesale clubs like Costco without State Department approval to limit their ability to send goods to economically isolated Iran. Brazil’s delegation might also face restrictions, amid tensions over President Lula da Silva’s legal actions against former President Bolsonaro, a Trump ally. Meanwhile, Syria has received eased travel restrictions to foster diplomatic ties. Specific Sudan and Zimbabwe restrictions remain unclear.
The post US considers ban on wholesale shopping and other visa restrictions for Iranians during UN meeting appeared first on www.news4jax.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
The District of Columbia sues over Trump’s deployment of the National Guard
SUMMARY: The District of Columbia sued to stop President Trump’s deployment of over 1,000 National Guard troops during his law enforcement intervention in Washington, calling it an “involuntary military occupation” and illegal under the Home Rule Act. Attorney General Brian Schwalb argued Trump acted without the mayor’s consent and wrongly asserted federal control over out-of-state Guard units. This follows a federal judge’s ruling that Trump’s National Guard deployment in Los Angeles was illegal, though that ruling doesn’t directly apply to D.C. The Guard’s presence is expected to continue through December amid ongoing crime concerns.
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The post The District of Columbia sues over Trump’s deployment of the National Guard appeared first on www.clickorlando.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Immigration groups ask appeals panel to reinstate refugee programs
by Ariana Figueroa, Florida Phoenix
September 4, 2025
WASHINGTON — Immigration attorneys asked a federal appeals court Wednesday to restore two injunctions against the Trump administration’s move to suspend refugee processing and to reinstate funding for refugee resettlement.
Attorneys from the International Refugee Assistance Project pushed for three judges on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to lift a stay the court issued earlier this year that narrowed a ruling from a district court judge in Washington state.
That stay allowed the Trump administration to continue blocking refugees, but said the processing for individuals conditionally approved for refugee status must continue, despite a more favorable ruling for the immigration groups at the district court level.
Earlier this year, a district court in Seattle issued two preliminary injunctions, one to block the Trump administration from ending the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program and another to resume funding to refugee assistance organizations. The judge found the president exceeded his authority in trying to end a program established by Congress.
Melissa Keaney, a senior IRAP attorney, said during Wednesday’s oral arguments that failing to restore the program and funding would upend the half-century-old legal framework for refugee resettlement and those it is meant to serve.
“What is at stake are the lives of thousands of refugees for whom Congress devised a careful plan for their effective resettlement that’s been in place for 50 years,” Keaney said.
Day 1 executive order dismantled refugee program
The suit challenges President Donald Trump’s January executive order that suspended all refugee admission and processing, as well as funding for organizations that handle resettlement in the United States.
Three groups that had their cooperative resettlement agreements with the State Department terminated are plaintiffs in the suit — Church World Service, Lutheran Community Services Northwest and the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, or HIAS.
“With one stroke of his pen, the president has elected to dismantle it all, causing overwhelming and irreparable harm to refugees stranded abroad, their families who are awaiting reunification, and the states and localities that have planned for their arrival,” Keaney said.
Arguing on behalf of the Trump administration, Justice Department attorney Tiberius Davis said the Refugee Act allows the president to set caps on refugees and to determine who is allowed to be admitted into the country.
“The president here made a finding that it was against the national interest because of the unprecedented surge of migration over the last four years, and because of the burden that placed on localities and on taxpayer funds,” Davis said.
The panel of three judges that heard oral arguments were Kenneth Kiyul Lee, Jay S. Bybee and Richard R. Clifton. Former President George W. Bush nominated Bybee and Clifton. Trump nominated Lee.
128,000 refugees waiting to enter
The judges questioned the indefinite nature of the proclamation, which allows the president to make a determination every 90 days whether to continue suspending refugees’ admissions.
“If we don’t know when the proclamation will end, what’s the justification for stopping the processing for people who, … at least in theory, in six months, the door may be opened again, but since nobody has been processed, nobody will actually be standing in line,” Clifton said.
Davis said that 128,000 refugees have been processed and would be waiting to enter the U.S.
Clifton asked why processing of refugees should be stopped completely.
Davis said the State Department doesn’t believe it’s efficient to “start processing a bunch of people who won’t have any chance of getting in until the president determines that.”
Bybee said processing refugees is different than allowing them to enter the U.S.
“The (executive order) covers admission, it doesn’t cover processing or applications,” Bybee said. “The Refugee Act provides a very, very detailed set of instructions about how we designate refugees and how we ultimately admit them.”
Davis said that “if you can’t get admitted, there’s not really much of a remedy.”
Refugee resettlement services
Davis gave a similar answer about why resettlement services for refugees were suspended, saying the State Department suspended them because “it didn’t make sense to continue providing funds when no new refugees would be admitted.”
Lee asked if there are refugees admitted into the U.S. who would be eligible for resettlement services.
Davis said some of the lead plaintiffs in Wednesday’s suit have gotten services and that the cancellation of grants was for future services.
“A lot of the money has already gone out throughout the year, and the government has committed to paying for any work that’s already been done,” Davis said. “It’s just terminated individual grants going forward.”
Lee asked if those resettlement funds were mandatory under a federal law authorizing funding for refugee services, but Davis said the Trump administration’s reading of the statute is that the funds are discretionary.
“So you say, ‘You got into the United States, good luck?’” Bybee asked.
Davis said the secretary of State has the authority to make that determination.
Clifton pushed back and said the statue says the federal government “shall” provide refugee resettlement services.
“We’ve got a congressional act which says this is what the government should do,” Clifton said. “Where does that give the government discretion to decide we don’t want to do it anyway?”
Order subverted law, immigration attorney says
Linda Evarts, senior IRAP attorney said Trump’s executive order overrode Congress’ authority, which created the refugee program.
She added that by suspending refugee services the executive order also violates the Refugee Act because the law entitles qualified refugees to certain resettlement services such as job training.
“The act has two main objectives,” Evarts said. “One: To provide a permanent and systematic procedure for admitting refugees of special humanitarian concern to the United States. And two: To provide comprehensive and uniform provisions for the effective resettlement of those admitted refugees.”
Bybee asked if Congress allows the president to set caps on the number of refugees admitted in a year, why Trump couldn’t set the cap at zero.
Evarts answered that would effectively kill the program Congress created.
“That would be directly contrary to Congress’s system, to have a permanent and systematic way for admitting refugees into this country and providing for them once here,” Evarts said.
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
The post Immigration groups ask appeals panel to reinstate refugee programs appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This content presents a detailed critique of the Trump administration’s suspension of refugee processing and funding, emphasizing legal challenges and humanitarian concerns. It highlights arguments from immigration attorneys and refugee advocacy groups who oppose the executive order, portraying the administration’s actions as overreach and harmful to refugees. While it includes the government’s defense, the overall framing and choice of sources lean toward supporting refugee rights and criticizing restrictive immigration policies, which aligns with a center-left perspective.
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