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NC’s Latino churches manage concern over possible ICE visits
With news of the Trump Administration’s authorization for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to visit churches, once protected spaces, to make arrests, the state’s predominantly Latino churches are working to prepare their congregations for potential interactions during services. Celeste Headlee talks to Ricardo Correa, pastor of Monte Sinai Durham.
Ricardo Correa, pastor of Monte Sinai Durham, state director and national advocacy director for the National Hispanic Pastors Alliance
Ten years ago, three young Muslim Americans were murdered in Chapel Hill in a case that received national and international attention.
What was first called a “parking dispute” by police and many media outlets was eventually shown to be what the victims’ families and countless others knew immediately – that the murders were hate crimes. Filmmaker Tarek Albaba joins co-host Leoneda Inge to talk about his documentary about the murders, “36 Seconds: Portrait of a Hate Crime." We are also joined by Durham District Attorney Satana Deberry and UNC law professor Joseph Kennedy.
Tarek Albaba, filmmaker, director of "36 Seconds: Portrait of a Hate Crime"
Satana Deberry, District Attorney, Durham County
Joseph Kennedy, Willie Person Mangum Distinguished Professor, and Martha Brandis Term Professor of Law, UNC School of Law
By Jeff Tiberii, Leoneda Inge4.7
2727 ratings
NC’s Latino churches manage concern over possible ICE visits
With news of the Trump Administration’s authorization for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to visit churches, once protected spaces, to make arrests, the state’s predominantly Latino churches are working to prepare their congregations for potential interactions during services. Celeste Headlee talks to Ricardo Correa, pastor of Monte Sinai Durham.
Ricardo Correa, pastor of Monte Sinai Durham, state director and national advocacy director for the National Hispanic Pastors Alliance
Ten years ago, three young Muslim Americans were murdered in Chapel Hill in a case that received national and international attention.
What was first called a “parking dispute” by police and many media outlets was eventually shown to be what the victims’ families and countless others knew immediately – that the murders were hate crimes. Filmmaker Tarek Albaba joins co-host Leoneda Inge to talk about his documentary about the murders, “36 Seconds: Portrait of a Hate Crime." We are also joined by Durham District Attorney Satana Deberry and UNC law professor Joseph Kennedy.
Tarek Albaba, filmmaker, director of "36 Seconds: Portrait of a Hate Crime"
Satana Deberry, District Attorney, Durham County
Joseph Kennedy, Willie Person Mangum Distinguished Professor, and Martha Brandis Term Professor of Law, UNC School of Law

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