Emory law school calls for probe of Atlanta Immigration Court

AJC file

Credit: Jim Galloway

Credit: Jim Galloway

AJC file

The Emory University School of Law and Southern Poverty Law Center are calling for an investigation into the Atlanta-based federal immigration court, alleging discrimination and hostility on the part of some judges. From the Tuesday's SPLC press release:

Click here for a copy of the letter.  GPB radio has some sound on the topic here.

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Meanwhile, our AJC colleague Jeremy Redmon reports that the Clarkston city council voted unanimously Tuesday night to limit their tiny DeKalb County city's cooperation with federal deportation officers amid the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration:

The new policy, which took effect immediately, says city authorities shall not arrest or detain anyone based on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement requests called "detainers" or "administrative immigration warrants."

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You know that "sanctuary" has become a loaded term in Washington. So Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed has insisted instead that his is a "welcoming" city.

Today, members of the Fulton County Commission will decide whether to call themselves residents of a “compassionate region.” Because calling yourself a euphemism county would be just plain silly.

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Look before you tweet. This is the lesson that Steve Handel, husband of Sixth District congressional candidate Karen Handel, just learned. From CNN:

"Like many of us, he (Steve) made a mistake and retweeted something he didn't pay a lot of attention to, thinking it was just an absentee vote message. It clearly was not appropriate and has been deleted," a campaign spokesperson said.

Ossoff on Wednesday declined to make hay out of it, saying that he largely avoids Twitter.

"Sometimes, social media can be dangerous," he said.

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Democrat Jon Ossoff was in Washington earlier this year for a fundraiser with Nancy Pelosi. On Tuesday, it was Republican Karen Handel's turn to collect checks with her party's House leader.

She was in Washington to hang with House Speaker Paul Ryan, and a tipster sent us this picture of the two:

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A few more details have trickled out about the internal poll conducted for Jon Ossoff's campaign that shows him in a dead heat with Karen Handel in the June 20 runoff.

The Ossoff campaign released another memo from Anzalone Liszt Grove Research - the pollster who also worked for Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton - that delved deeper into the nubmers.

A few takeaways:

  • The 5 percent of undecided voters trend disproportionately female, minority and tend to live in DeKalb, the bluest part of the district.
  • Almost six in 10 Ossoff supporters believe the race is "more important than most elections" while about one-third of Handel backers say the same.
  • An even half of voters in the district give Ossoff a favorable rating, while 44 percent give Handel the same reviews.

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Several Georgia lawmakers on Capitol Hill -- including both Johnny Isakson and David Perdue, we hear -- joined a last-minute, behind-the-scenes effort by their South Carolina colleagues to aid Westinghouse Electric, the lead contractor on two new nuclear power generators at Plant Vogtle near Augusta that recently filed for bankruptcy.

As we wrote in this morning's story on what Georgia does and doesn't get in the new federal spending deal, they were looking to extend the deadline for a production tax credit that would provide economic incentives for new nuclear power plants that come online before 2020.

Westinghouse's recent bankruptcy is expected to push the time frame beyond that for new units at Vogtle and V.C. Summer in South Carolina. One Capitol Hill staffer estimated that Vogtle could earn as much as $2 billion in incentives should the deadline be extended.

Our pal Emma Dumain over at the Charleston Post and Courier has more details on the ultimately unsuccessful effort, and she reports that some South Carolina Republicans, including U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, plan to vote against the $1.1 trillion spending package in protest. Many of Georgia's lawmakers said yesterday they were still undecided on the legislation.

The new hope, according to three Georgia congressional staffers who were not authorized to speak on the record, is to have the same provision hitch a ride onto a tax overhaul or other legislation later this year.

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Whoops. Brian Kemp's campaign sent out the following fundraising note this week:

House Bill 238 will keep Georgia students safe and sends a clear message that our state still believes in the rule of law.

Except House Bill 238 involves solar power changes, not sanctuary campuses. He should have referred to House Bill 37. His campaign said it was an unfortunate mixup.