It Could Happen Here - The Campaign to Free Albeiro From ICE
Episode Date: January 20, 2026Mia talks with organizer Elly Belle about ICE’s kidnapping of Albeiro Remolina, the campaign to free him, and how you can help. Sources/Links: Albeiro's Family's Crowd Fund Change.org Camp...aign Instagram Campaign Post #1 Instagram Campaign Post #2 Instagram Campaign Post #3 Elly Belle on Instagram Elly Belle WebsiteSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
You know Roald Dahl.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
In the new podcast, The Secret World of Roll Dahl,
I'll tell you that story, and much, much more.
What?
You probably won't believe it either.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Listen to The Secret World of Roll Dahl,
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I actually drop better when I'm high.
It heightens my senses, calms me down.
If anything, I'm more careful.
Honestly, it just helps me focus.
That's probably what the driver who killed a four-year-old told himself.
And now he's in prison.
You see, no matter what you tell yourself, if you feel different, you drive different.
So if you're high, just don't drive.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council.
I didn't really have an interest of being on air.
I kind of was up there to just try and infiltrate the building.
From the underground clubs that shaped global music
to the pastors and creatives who built a cultural empire.
The Atlanta Ears podcast uncovers the stories behind one of the most influential cities in the world.
The thing I love about Atlanta is that it's a city of hustlers, man.
Each episode explores a different chapter of Atlanta's run.
featuring conversations with ludicrous
Will Packer, Pastor Jamal Bryant, DJ Drama, and more.
The full series is available to listen to now.
Listen to Atlanta is on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Back in 2016, we said, let's do a podcast.
Little did we know it would last 10 years.
I mean, but here's the thing.
Stay out of the forest.
You're in a cult.
Call your dad.
This is terrible.
Keep going.
You guys stay sexy.
Don't get murdered.
Elvis, do you want a cookie?
A cookie?
My favorite murder turns 10 this month.
Join us for new episodes every Thursday on the Exactly Right Network.
Listen to my favorite murder on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Goodbye.
Welcome to Kadaapit here, a podcast where so many things are happening here that we frankly have worn out the bit about trying to use this as our introduction.
I am your host, Bea Wong, one of the many.
many, many, many, many, many crises that are unfolding in this country right now is a rolling ethnic
cleansing carried out by ICE and Border Patrol with the assistance of the cops. And we have
talked about this from a lot of angles. But a thing I want to sort of draw attention back to in
this moment where there's increased attention and scrutiny from truly a series of really
hideous ice shootings, is what it's like to be in detention right now and how possibly people
can be gotten out of detention? And with me to talk about something that I feel like I can't
even describe as the horrors, because it's simply worse than that, is Ellie Bell, who is a
community organizer does many things, wears many hats.
Welcome to the show.
Thank you.
Hello.
I'm Ellie.
And the reason I am here right now for this specific podcast conversation is that I am on a team that is trying to help many immigrants, but one in particular that I will be talking about tonight, Al Barrow, who is a father.
and a husband and is currently detained in an ICE detention center in Indiana after being transferred
from his home in Chicago. And, you know, we are trying to get him out and to get his family's
story out there and his story out there. And, you know, among many other things that ICE is doing
in the way that fits into all of that, that's what I am here to talk about today.
Yeah, so let's begin.
So I guess one thing that I want to sort of lead off with here is obviously the most intense ice repression and raids have shifted to places like Minneapolis right now.
I mean, who knows, as you're listening to this, maybe they've pivoted it to another place.
I don't know.
Everything is moving so unbelievably fast and horribly.
but also raids are still continuing in the places where ICE has nominally pulled out.
Now, the frequency of those raids has decreased because they simply don't have the personnel to run these kind of, I don't know,
they describe it as operational tempo.
I describe it as they don't have the people to kidnap this many people out once.
They can't kidnap or kill us all.
Yeah, which, you know, not enormously happy to see people chanting that here.
I have a bunch of visceral memories of the last two times that I saw people chancing that and didn't go great.
So let's not go on the like Sudan 2019 tangent.
Yeah.
Actually, no, no, sorry, sorry.
I am wrong.
The Sudan one was we are not afraid to die, which is in some way bleaker.
There's so much, there's so much history packed in here.
Moving to the presence of, you know, our version of the ethnic cleansing, can you go to sort of the start?
of this and talk about what the specific raid here looked like?
Yeah.
So, I mean, I think I want to zoom out for a moment before I get into the specifics of
what happened with this man, this father and husband and his family and then get into it.
But, you know, as I'm sure, you know, we are all talking about, we are, we are
seeing ice escalating their tactics in just an egregious way. They killed a woman in cold blood
and just executed her in the street the other day. Renéin Good. Now, of course, this is not
the first or only person that they've killed recently. It's one of many. I think there are
now 11. It might be 12. The number just keeps rising every day. Yeah. So we still don't have
think very good information about what happened, but literally the next day in Portland,
someone, either ICE or Border Patrol, at the time I'm recording this, it's Tuesday the 13th.
We still don't know whether it was ICE or Border Patrol, but someone shot two people in Portland.
So, yeah.
And I think they're being charged right now for terrorism because this is just what happens now.
Yeah, these are all connected.
But, but, you know, we know that there are, I believe there's been, it was nine, two days ago,
then it now it's like 11 or 12.
It just keeps rising the number of people that we know of.
I want to be really clear that we know of.
And as you said, we don't have really data on this.
We do not have correct data on this,
which is also an intentional tool of the state to obscure what is happening.
But there are so many people who have been killed by ICE.
And those are the ones that we know of, you know, since let's say in the last two or three months,
There are so many more.
There are so many people missing from alligator Alcatraz.
What we saw happen in Minneapolis last week is horrendous.
And, you know, the same way that Al Barrow, who I am part of this team trying to help get him out of detention, he did nothing wrong.
He has had no criminal activity.
There was nothing to warrant the excuse that he must be detained or treated violently.
It's the same as how Renee did nothing wrong.
and nothing to deserve being murdered.
She was witnessing.
She was witnessing and being there for her neighbors
and she was sitting there in her car
and that is what we know.
But her murder,
the same way that these raids and everything going on,
it's an escalation tactic used by ICE
that's part of deep-rooted old-school,
fascist and authoritarian measures
to test what they can get away with.
while people remain complacent in times of genocide and ethnic cleansing and for societal upheaval.
You know, they just want to see what they can get away with and how much control they can exercise.
So that being said, to get into what happened to Alberto and his wife is they are in Chicago and they've been there for a little over a year since they came here to seek asylum.
and they were first in a shelter
and then they finally were able to get the work they needed
to have a home with their three kids.
You know, I want to be really explicit that this person is a father,
a husband who has other family members here who look up to him,
who he is a father figure or an uncle too.
He is a community figure and a leader
after he was taken, you know, I was told by a family friend who is part of the team that I'm working with,
they told me that the women in the neighborhood, the other like immigrant women who all like work
together and know each other, called him a pen to Dios, like a loving term for someone who is just like a
community member, like a shining beacon in a community. And that is, that is who he is.
And I also really want to emphasize that it wouldn't really matter if that wasn't who he was.
And if he was somehow, quote unquote, lesser than that, or not a saint.
Because there's no such thing as like a good or bad immigrant.
Nobody deserves to be treated this inhumanely.
Unless, of course, you're a fascist.
Then I think, you know, fair game.
Hey, look, I'm going to put my foot down there and say we are more than capable of dealing with fascists internally.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We can simply hold the line on no deportations and simply deal with them here.
I believe in us.
But so what happened was it was early, early morning, the morning of Monday, December 29.
Okay?
It's officially been two weeks since this happened.
Monday, December 29th, it's like somewhere between maybe 5 and 6 a.m., 6.30.
It's still dark out.
He and his wife, whose name I'm not going to.
to use to protect her anonymity and her identity, but he and his wife got into their car.
And the windows were rolled down the slightest bit. They were getting in their car to drive to
work so that then she could go back home and be with her kids after taking him to work. And I want
to be really explicit that we know that when ICE agents came to do this raid, they didn't have
their names when they approached them. They didn't know anything about them until they took them in.
In the Chicago area, you know, you can talk about this a little if you want, but I have to have a
warrant for the people they're picking up. They can't just pick up anyone based on the NAVA consent
decree, which was just extended by the appeals court. We know that in Chicago, this is something that
has been continuously happening. Yeah. And as we look at this from a broader context, they go after
non-white people, kidnap them and ask questions later just because they think no one is going to care.
And part of the reason that I'm talking about all of this is because I want to be very clear that
people are watching, people care, and more people need to be watching and more people need to care
when it happens to people who are not white.
Yeah.
Not just white women.
Because obviously Renee's murder is horrific.
And I saw her be able to raise $1.4 million in less than a day.
And Albeiro's campaign has been at $14,000 for more than a week.
And we can't raise more money because people have so much more sympathy and empathy for
white people.
And that is actually so tied into why ICE does the things they do because of that same
whiteness, that same white supremacy, where they think we can do whatever we want to immigrants.
brown people who's going to care.
Yeah, and that's, that is one of the major constituent elements of this entire, like,
rolling ethnic cleansing is that, you know, and this has been a thing in Chicago,
and like since the raids really kicked off, is that every fucking day someone just disappears.
And everyone just goes about their lives.
Absolutely.
And they count on us to do that.
And they count on us to not be paying enough attention.
that we can't keep track of how shitty their data is and how inconsistent their data is
and all of the numbers we don't have.
Yeah.
Well, and everything they're relying on is they're relying on they're not being any attempt to stop them.
Absolutely.
What they're relying on is, you know, once they grab someone, everyone just going,
okay, well, this is, you know, this is a statistic counting up on a counter and not this is a life
that needs to be fought for.
Exactly.
And that is why I find it so important
and why I am doing the work that I am doing
alongside everyone else who's doing this kind of work
to uplift stories and tell them
because they can't be told by the immigrants themselves right now
because they're being tortured inside detention.
And it's so crucial for people to understand
that these are not numbers,
these are not just names on a page.
these are real people's lives.
This is a real man
whose three children,
whose three young children
have now gone to bed
without him every night
for two weeks.
They don't know where their dad is.
They don't know why he's not there.
Yeah.
They don't know why he's apparently being tortured.
They just know that their dad isn't there.
And I need people to understand,
you know, think about.
can you imagine? Can you imagine being away from your family for two weeks and counting,
not knowing when you're going to come back, if you're going to come back, if you're going to die in detention,
can you imagine being the child of someone? And a lot of people don't have to imagine. I'm saying
this for like, you know, white people and privileged people who don't have to think about these things
or can get away with just going about business as usual
because there are a lot of us who have immigrant family
and have loved ones who this has been done to.
And we don't get to go about our days' business as usual
because it's just not possible.
It's just not possible.
It would be like asking me to go about my life business as usual
when my family in Lebanon and Palestine are being bought.
Yeah.
Like it's not possible.
It is not possible.
All of these things are connected.
Our lives are connected.
And we owe it to each other to pay attention and to witness, especially because we are seeing that they will kill you for paying attention and witnessing.
Because they don't want you to be able to exercise that right.
Yeah.
Well, and, you know, the secondary thing, and this is something that's been pretty well known for,
very long time is that the more of you that there are at a thing, the less likely they are to kill
you. Yeah. And this has been a thing with, you know, U.S. police killings of protest forever.
Yep. Which is the U.S. doesn't, like, fire regular bullets into crowds because it's a terrible
idea. It's how you get uprisings, right? Like, you know, I mean, I say this on the show all the time.
This is how the Mexican government lost control of the city of Oaxaca. Like, they literally
accidentally started like a pseudo-anarchist revolution in that city by doing that, right?
So normally what they do is they pick off people when they're on their own.
I'm going to be totally honest.
I kind of wish that the government would make a ridiculous mistake right now that lends itself
to people being able to get justice.
That's all I'll say.
I'm not going to give specifics.
But I mean, you know, but it's also the other thing I'll say about that, right, is like
whether or not they get away with this is also up to us.
It is. It absolutely is. And that is why I say we owe each other everything and we owe each other witnessing because the thing is the job of telling these stories of trying to help get people vulnerable, vulnerable people out of detention is also falling to a select few people who are the most vulnerable already and who have things.
on the line and things we're risking to do this because we know it's the right thing.
And there are so many people with so much privilege who could be doing something,
whether it's really, really small, like donating $5 or sharing someone's story or calling
Congress to have them pressure ice to let immigrants out, whatever it is that you could be doing,
there are so many people who are not doing that. And when there are so many people who are not
doing any of the labor.
All of that labor gets distributed so unevenly among a few people.
You know, I always think about the, what is it, James Baldwin quote,
about how it is the job of, you know, like a few people.
It's only a few people on this earth who are like doing the job of like loving people
well.
I'm completely butchering it right now because it's late at night and I, you know, can't think of it.
But it's something like that.
and I think about that all the time and something that I'm thinking about right now a lot
and having a lot of conversations, mostly with white people about, is, hey, you need to start
doing something because you have a lot of privilege that you're not utilizing. And when you don't
utilize it, you actually are doing a lot of harm, not in necessarily the same way that the ICE agents are,
but you're still kind of capitulating to what they want you to do by putting
all of this labor on vulnerable people who have so much to lose and so much to risk.
And we can't afford to burn out constantly because we don't have the support and the more
equitable division of labor that's needed.
Like we need everyone.
We need everyone who can possibly do anything, whether that's putting your bodies on the
in person or if you're a disabled person and you're in bed and you can post something online
or you can tell someone. We need to activate our community networks for each other.
Yeah. And there's also a lot of sort of logistical stuff. You know, I mean, there's like the old
line about the army that like five or 10 to one like logistics people for every like person
who's out on the front. And that's also the way that or if you're going to have an organizing
thing that works. There's a massive sort of logistical tail behind everyone who's out doing stuff.
Absolutely right. You need safety people too. Yeah. Yeah, there's a lot of stuff to be done.
Every January, we're encouraged to start over. But what if this year is about slowing down
and learning how to understand ourselves more deeply? What if this year is about giving ourselves
permission to feel what we've been holding and knowing that it's okay to ask for help?
I'm Mike Delarocha, host of Sacred Lessons.
This is a podcast for men navigating stress, emotional health, fatherhood, identity,
and the unspoken pressures were taught to carry alone.
We talk honestly about mental health, about healing generational wounds,
and about learning how to show up with more presence and care.
If you want a healthier relationship with yourself and the people you love,
then Sacred Lessons is the podcast for you.
Listen to Sacred Lessons with Mike Dolorotcha on America's number one podcast network,
IHeart.
Follow Sacred Lessons with Mike Delocha and start listening on the free IHeart Radio app today.
The moments that shape us often begin with a simple question.
What do I want my life to look like now?
I'm Dr. Joy Hardin Bradford.
And on therapy for Black Girls,
we create space for honest conversations about identity,
relationships, mental health, and the choices that help us grow.
As cybersecurity expert, Camille Stewart Gloucester reminds us,
We are in a divisive time where our comments are weaponized against us.
And so what we find is a lot of black women are standing up and speaking out
because they feel the brunt of the pain.
Each week, we explore the tools and insights that help you move with purpose.
Whether you're navigating something new or returning to yourself.
If you're ready for thoughtful guidance and grounded support, this is the place for you.
Listen to Therapy for Black Girls on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
You know Roll Doll, the writer who thought up Willie Wonka, Matilda, and the BFG.
But did you know he was also a spy?
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Our new podcast series, The Secret World of Roll Doll, is a wild journey through the hidden chapters of his extraordinary, controversial life.
His job was literally to seduce the wives of powerful Americans.
What?
And he was really good at it.
You probably won't believe it either.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Did you know Dahl got cozy with the Roosevelt's?
Played poker with Harry Truman and had a long affair with a congresswoman.
And then he took his talents to Hollywood,
where he worked alongside Walt Disney and Alfred Hitchcock,
before writing a hit James Bond film.
How did this secret agent wind up as the most successful children's author ever?
and what darkness from his covert past
seeped into the stories we read as kids.
The true story is stranger than anything he ever wrote.
Listen to the secret world of Roll Dahl
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Like if we're on the air here and I literally have my contract here
and I'm looking at, you know, as soon as I sign this,
I'm going to get a seven-figure check.
I've told them I won't be working here in two weeks.
From the underground clubs that shaped global music
to the pastors and creators who built a cultural empire.
The Atlanta Ears podcast uncovers the stories behind one of the most influential cities in the world.
The thing I love about Atlanta is that it's a city of hustlers, man.
Each episode explores a different chapter of Atlanta's rise, featuring conversations with ludicrous, Will Packer, Pastor Jamal Bryant, DJ Drama, and more.
The full series is available to listen to now.
I really just had never experienced anything like what was going on in the city as far as like, you know, seeing so many young, black affluent,
creatives in all walks of life.
The church had dwindled almost to nothing.
And God said, this is your assignment.
And that's like how you know, like, okay, oh, you're from Atlanta for real.
I ain't got to say too much.
I'm a grader, baby.
Shut up.
Listen to Atlanta is on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'll finish telling the story of what happens to Elbeiro, too, because I want to, you know, center that.
Yeah.
Because, again, you know, this is a, this is a community.
issue and this is a community member who is missing now who can't do his part as a part of a whole
community because he has he's been taken and and like when he was taken they had guns they had one
pointed right at his wife he was saying you know they were saying we're not resisting but they
they kept dangling on the car window and they reached inside the car window and they like you know
he and his wife emphasized that they were just going to work
they weren't doing anything.
And ICE didn't care.
They see a non-white person and they grow hungry for violence.
And after detaining her, you know, they asked her to sign a document so that she could go get for kids.
She refused because she didn't trust them.
And she told them that she wasn't going to sign anything.
And then later they found out, I think the lawyers found out that what it was is that they were giving her a voluntary deportation paper for the whole family.
And that level.
They do this all the time.
They do this all the time.
that level of deceit and trickery is just horrible
because they did it, they gave it to her in English
and she doesn't speak English.
They thought they could just get her to sign it
to get them out.
Yeah.
This is being run by like the same people
who are banging doors down
and just going into houses in Minneapolis.
Yeah.
It's all connected.
They use the same.
tactics of violence and fear mongering.
And it's terrible.
Yeah. And I mean, they've been moving personnel around.
So, like, there's like a non-zero chance.
It was literally the same person.
Yeah.
Like, that person could be in Minneapolis now.
We don't know.
Right.
And this has become the sort of background noise of American life.
And it used to fucking not be the background noise because they're fucking grabbing people
out of cars.
It shouldn't be.
I mean,
day I see people post some type of video on TikTok or Instagram Reels or Twitter or Blue Sky.
I just see people, everyday people post, God, you know, it feels so horrific to watch all
of this happen and have to go to a 9 to 5. And I have empathy for that, especially as someone
who does community organizing.
And I mean, I think there is a lot of sacrifice.
I know there's a lot of sacrifice
in the types of things that I do.
And there's also a lot of privilege in the fact
that I even have community and loved ones
who help me to pay my rent
so that I can do this kind of organizing
without worrying about not having shelter.
And it's like we were saying before we, you know, started the recording.
Like, I take it very seriously that I need to rest and I need to feed myself and I need
to take care of myself because rest is not resistance, but me getting the rest that I need
and the care that I need allows me to resist in a way that helps someone else to get free.
And that's like what we all need to be doing for each other.
I'm just going to say this because, you know, there used to be a thing people would do.
Whenever there was a large social upheaval.
It was called the occupation of the factories.
Yeah.
You could go read Bellatesta writing about it in like 1921.
Very old thing.
See, the Seattle General Strike was like the most famous example of people doing this in the U.S.
But it was like, okay, so there's some shit going on.
We need to stop something from happening.
So we are going to take over our workplaces and run the parts of it that need to be run.
so that people could get food and then otherwise we're not
and otherwise we're just going to heat control.
You don't actually just have to go to your line to five.
The people in Seattle,
those people didn't know what a television was.
Wow.
And they were able to do this.
If you showed one of the people in like in like the Seattle like 19,
19 general strike people who did this,
like if you showed them a computer,
they would have a heart attack and they did this.
So I believe in all of you.
You have seen things that would have obliterated these people's minds.
Like it's.
I have like a slightly different take.
I don't know if this is like a hot take or a cold take or a lukewarm take.
But my perspective is one, who said that you just have to go to your 9 to 5 while you watch all of this happen?
Who said that?
You are saying, oh, I have to do that.
No one is actually making you do that.
The consequences of that are that if you don't go to your 9 to 5 or are you 10.5 or are you
take a sick day or something, you might get fired and you might be in a similarly vulnerable
position to someone whose life is already on the line. But if we all stood in solidarity with
each other, that would be less dangerous. Like if we chose each other over capitalism, that would be
so radical. But that's my take. There are not enough cops to evict us all. There simply aren't.
There really just aren't.
I think that people forget or conveniently compartmentalize the truth that we as a collective,
when we band together, when we refuse to participate in individualism, the ways that they want us to,
we are so powerful.
And I think that that scares people, because that's a lot of responsibility.
But again, that's really only so much responsibility if you see yourself as an individual as opposed to part of a collective.
If you see yourself as bearing a piece of responsibility as part of a collective the same way that ants all move in a colony and carry like a piece of bread together,
maybe you wouldn't feel so much overwhelmed because you would understand that we are in this together.
And I think that we really owe that to each other to reframe that in our minds and in our nervous systems as well
so that we can just like maybe shut up and show up.
Yeah. Now, speaking of showing up, okay, we're locking back on here.
We're locking in.
We're locking the fuck in. We can do this. I believe in us.
So going back, I guess, from the sort of macro perspective to the might of the might.
micro individual perspective of the exact specific ways that one individual person gets treated.
Totally.
So, sure, locking back into what is happening on a more micro level, giving an example of how ICE is dehumanizing immigrants in detention.
Whether they are here, quote unquote, illegally or not.
Albero is not here illegally.
Okay, he's going through the asylum process.
When the immigration attorneys on our organizing team spoke with Albeiro and specifically asked about his conditions at Faye County, he said that, and granted, this, I believe, was sometime in the last week.
I think they haven't spoken to him in maybe a week.
It's been hard to.
But when they asked about his conditions, he said that he had all the basics.
is now being given three meals a day
and was at least at that point
being administered medication.
We don't have very good context
and accurate data
on how often that's actually been happening.
He has a severe seizure disorder
and he requires
medication to be administered
at least, I think, twice a day.
And even one missed dose
can be fatal.
It's been a while
since they've been able to talk.
I do know that he checks in with his family and a family friend every morning, only briefly.
I spoke to them just before this call to get any updated information.
There was a day this week where he didn't text first thing in the morning and we were all really worried and we had no idea what that meant.
It turns out that the Wi-Fi just was down.
But oh my God, how horrifying.
Every day I wake up and I just, I don't know if he's,
still alive. And he's only one of many, many immigrants that I have worked on cases for and that I
am trying to bring attention to. And it's terrifying to never know if he's going to be one of the
many, many people who have died in there because it's been weeks or months or a year.
And so, you know, as far as as conditions go, we don't have a lot of information about his specific
condition. We know that he has been struggling. We know that it's been very hard on his health. It would
be hard on anyone's health, whether they were disabled or sick or not. Yeah. Because the conditions are
inhumane. We do know, as reported by other clients of the immigration attorneys on our team,
we know that at different detention centers, many have told her that it's very cold,
one who was with the gen pop and could only speak with her from a tablet in the room.
while other detainees were around.
Several have told her that they were denied access to nurses and medical care when they had headaches or a sore throat.
Yeah.
I also want to tie this back to, you know, the global pandemic.
We've seen a lot of people die of COVID or other illnesses well in detention.
This is a public health issue.
This is a public health and safety issue.
just the same way that people who are in prisons are treated poorly and not given the medical care they need
and that that cruelty is part of the point.
Immigrants in detention are also completely deprived of medical care that they need.
And again, that would be really dangerous for anyone.
But for Elbeiro, he has a severe seizure disorder.
Like, one thing could go wrong and he would be gone.
Yeah.
Like his life hangs in the balance.
There's another client she has with gastrointestinal problems,
and she told her that they basically can't eat anything
because the food quality is so poor.
And coupled with their condition,
they just vomit and have diarrhea constantly.
This is what is happening in ice attention facilities.
They are just completely overrun with these public
health and safety disasters, and they don't have the care or attention because those conditions
happening are orchestrated.
Yeah, like they don't give a shit.
They're orchestrated.
They're a part of the cult feed.
They don't care.
Yeah.
What's worse is they do care, but they care about creating the suffering.
Yeah.
Well, it's like, for them, it's like these people's ultimate goal is to not have non-white
people in the U.S., right?
you can look at like, you know, Stephen Miller's wife, like, last week was, like,
posting shit about what will happen when they deport 100 million Americans.
It's like, yeah.
Right, they want an ethno state.
Absolutely.
No, like they, and they don't, it doesn't really matter to them.
Like, you know, it's, it's kind of bad PR if people die in their, in their fucking camps,
but they don't give, like, these people don't give a shit whether these people die or, like,
are sent away.
Like, they don't fucking care.
Like, they care about hurting people.
They don't care where they live or die.
They don't care about bad PR either to an extent because, I mean, you know, this is what the show is about.
Authoritarian regimes and fascism is about control.
Yeah.
I mean, sure, I guess maybe if there's enough bad PR and they can't literally control people on the streets who are overtaking the situation and fighting back,
because they've gotten bad PR, that's a problem.
But in and of itself, I don't really know if they care about the bad PR.
They should care about the results of the bad PR,
which is why we should all keep giving them bad PR.
We've seen a lot of that.
There are so many things that have happened since the escalation in Minneapolis last week,
where Renee Engood was shot and killed.
Okay?
I was collecting notes before this call, and I'd already had many.
And then when I was collecting notes just from today alone, I was like, oh, my God, 20 things have happened.
Yep.
We found out in the last day alone, there was a huge piece published in Slate today that ICE is doing zero background checks on their applicants.
A journalist got officially hired despite being a prominent person who speaks about leftism online.
They failed a drug test.
They didn't even complete all the proper paperwork.
ICE has literally no idea who they're hiring and they don't care because they'll take anyone
who is willing to terrorize people.
Yeah.
Like that's going to cause, it's already causing a lot of community ruffers.
It's going to ruin communities.
And the reality is they don't care if it does because it's actually the point.
If this were about accuracy or real quote unquote justice for Americans,
who are, you know, quote-unquote being wronged by immigrants or whatever their narrative is,
they would have a vetting process. They would want the best of the best. But they don't,
because it's just about annihilation and control. Yeah. Well, and the other part of that, too,
if you want to look at the sort of more positive angle of it is like part of what's going on here
is that they can't find enough people who want to commit an ethnic cleansing.
Here's my thing. I'm little concerned. That's not true. They are incessing.
incentivizing people to betray their values.
And part of what's going on in this country is that people are out of work.
People need to stay fed and housed.
Yeah, but here's the thing.
If they were able to really easily, like, recruit those people into doing this,
then they wouldn't be continuously upping the bonus rates and they wouldn't be trying to,
like, steal cops from other agencies.
Like, I think they seem to be having legitimate problems, even in a shitty job market.
And we should give them more.
I think we should give them more.
I think that we should incentivize.
I personally would love to figure out how to incentivize ICE agents to quit their jobs.
Like, I don't know what I have to do.
Maybe I'll gather my like sex worker friends to organize some kind of campaign.
I don't, I don't know.
I don't know.
Well, you can just make their lives miserable until they quit.
Like that's the easy.
Sure, yeah.
And by the way, I say sex worker friends
specifically because doms are tough
and they
would bully
ICE agents to no end.
And I say this of the former dom.
I believe in us. I believe in us.
We can make these people's lives hell.
We could do this.
I really think that if we take
collective action and we all take
stock of what are my skills
and then use that to put the pressure on the people who are making this terror possible,
I think that we can take them all down.
Yeah.
I think that we truly could convince people to quit if we make their lives of living hell.
Do not let them stay at hotels.
Do not let them buy groceries.
Don't let them show their faces anywhere in public.
Okay, this is also another thing that happened today.
I think it was there was the largest data breach ever.
there was a data breach today or yesterday that was 4,500 names got leaked with info in them so they can't be
anonymous. We have to take that and run with it. Yeah, now legal disclaimer, we are not advocating
illegal actions here. We are simply not doing this. I'm just saying anything is possible if you
believe. Yeah. However, comma, what other people do with this data is not something we can really control.
It exists now. Yeah.
I actually think it would be a shame if we did something with that data.
You know?
Now, speaking of doing things with our data, I don't know.
I was probably supposed to have taken like two out breaks right now, but fuck it.
We're doing one here.
I believe it.
A new year doesn't mean erasing who you were.
It means honoring what you've survived and choosing how you want to grow.
It means giving ourselves permission to feel what we've been holding and knowing that it's
okay to ask for help. I'm Mike Dalarocha, host of sacred lessons. This podcast is a space for men
to talk openly about mental health, grief, relationships, and the patterns we inherit,
but don't have to repeat. Here, we slow down, we listen, we learn how vulnerability becomes
strength and how healing happens in community, not in isolation. If you're ready to let go of what
no longer serves you and step into the year with clarity, compassion, and purpose.
Sacred Lessons is your companion on your healing journey.
Listen to Sacred Lessons with Mike Delo Rocha on America's number one podcast network, IHeart.
Follow Sacred Lessons with Mike Delo Rocha and start listening on the free IHeart Radio app today.
The moments that shape us often begin with a simple question.
What do I want my life to look like now?
I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford.
And on therapy for black girls, we create space for honest conversations about identity, relationships, mental health, and the choices that help us grow.
As cybersecurity expert, Camille Stewart Gloucester reminds us, we are in a divisive time where our comments are weaponized against us.
And so what we find is a lot of black women are standing up and speaking out because they feel the brunt of the pain.
Each week, we explore the tools and insights that have.
help you move with purpose, whether you're navigating something new or returning to yourself.
If you're ready for thoughtful guidance and grounded support, this is the place for you.
Listen to Therapy for Black Girls on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
You know Roll Doll, the writer who thought up Willie Wonka, Matilda, and the BFG.
But did you know he was also a spy?
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Our new podcast series, The Secret World of Roll Doll, is a one.
wild journey through the hidden chapters of his extraordinary, controversial life.
His job was literally to seduce the wives of powerful Americans.
What?
And he was really good at it.
You probably won't believe it either.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you, the guy was a spy.
Did you know Dahl got cozy with the Roosevelt's?
Played poker with Harry Truman and had a long affair with a congresswoman.
And then he took his talents to Hollywood, where he worked alongside Walt Disney and Alfred
Hitchcock, before writing a hit James Bond film.
How did this see?
Secret Agent wind up as the most successful children's author ever,
and what darkness from his covert past seeped into the stories we read as kids.
The true story is stranger than anything he ever wrote.
Listen to the secret world of Roll Dahl on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Like if we're on the air here, and I literally have my contract here,
and I'm looking at, you know, as soon as I sign this,
I'm going to get a seven-figure check.
I've told them I won't be working here in two weeks.
From the underground clubs that shaped global music to the pastors and
creatives who built the cultural empire.
The Atlanta Ears podcast uncovers
the stories behind one of the most influential
cities in the world.
The thing I love about Atlanta is that
it's a city of hustlers, man.
Each episode explores a different chapter of Atlanta's
rise, featuring conversations with
Ludacris, Will Packer, Pastor
Jamal Bryant, DJ Drama, and
more. The full series is available
to listen to now. I really just
had never experienced anything like what
was going on in the city as far as like
you know, seeing so many young
black affluent,
creatives,
in all walks of life.
The church had dwindled
almost to nothing.
And God said,
this is your assignment.
And that's like how you know,
like, okay,
oh, you're from Atlanta for real.
I ain't got to say too much.
I'm a grader, baby.
Shut up.
Listen to Atlanta is on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we are back.
Now,
one of the bleak things
and something that you wanted to talk about,
Ali, is that the condition
that we're seeing here
are things that have already killed people
and the danger here compounds
the more risk you're at the more
for a few again
to take it to take a completely
non-abstracted example
if you need seizure meds twice a day
when you might die
the odds of terrible stuff happening to you increases
but yeah can we talk a bit about
the other people who this has already
fucking happened to
I mean, yeah, there's so many and we can't name them all because we don't know all of their names.
Because again, we don't have all the proper data. We only know some things. But that's why we're part of a big part of this campaign has been asking people to put pressure on Congress people to release Al Barro to show that we're not going to give up on him.
Yeah.
The way that other people have just been given up on and died in detention and that we're going to work relentlessly to get him out.
because he matters.
But, you know, as ICE escalates its attainments across the country and in the Midwest,
specifically in Ohio and Minnesota and all these places, Chicago, Minneapolis, Columbus,
what happens to him sets a precedent for others,
the same way that what's been happening to other immigrants has set the precedent that
this is going to keep happening.
You know, showing that ICE can't just take someone and disappear them and get away with it
really matters for everyone else.
People are watching for every immigrant detained recently
and everything that ICE is rolling out.
And this is, God, the,
I don't even know.
I've lost track because the numbers keep changing and growing.
I wanted to say that's the second person that we know of,
that Renee was the second person that we knew of that ICE
had murdered since New Year's Eve,
but it wouldn't be surprising if there are, you know,
so many, there's just so many immigrants who have died in custody
are currently dying in custody, which is what we're trying to prevent for Albeiro.
And like in L.A., I still keep Porter in his own home.
Meanwhile, you know, in Chicago or now, I guess, Indiana, because that's where they're keeping him.
They're violating and detaining families like Alberos who have done nothing to deserve this treatment.
We saw a 44-year-old woman, Marie-Ange Blaze, from Haiti, who died in a U.S. ice facility two or three weeks ago after being detained since February.
of 2025, I believe,
who was captured and taken into custody
at an airport outside of U.S. territories
and, you know, once again,
showing ISIS's lack of regard for the law,
just total lawlessness.
She was transferred to Louisiana
and then somewhere else where she died
after vocalizing chest pain.
And as far as I know,
she didn't go in with a disability.
She didn't go in with a health condition,
but the conditions are so
horrifying there
that that is just
to be expected,
which is terrible.
And this dangerous pattern
can't continue to unfold.
We don't want this to be Elbero
and his family's reality,
nor any immigrants
living nightmare.
You know, like,
this is such a community issue
across the world.
Like, every one of the people
connected to
anyone who has died in ICE's attention
is impacted for the
rest of their life by this.
You know, like, it's what I was saying when I said, people who have immigrant family,
we can't just go about business as usual.
Every day I wake up, and I don't know if something is going to happen to one or all
of my loved ones who might be targeted by virtue of having dark skin, which is not a crime.
But in America, we're trying to make it one.
And, like, again, we don't want.
want this to happen to O'Baro. He's a community member. Everyone in the community is saddened.
He's a father. He is an uncle. He is a husband. His wife is so upset and so worried and doesn't
understand why this is happening because to her, he is a man who goes to work day and night
to help his family and to provide for his family. And they're just,
is absolutely no reason for him to be in there.
And she was originally in detention too.
They were both detained, but they let her out.
And that also feels like part of the cruelty.
You know, part of the cruelty and the conditions of dying in ICE custody
are also rooted in being separated from hair and love.
They let her out, you know, probably we don't know.
We have no idea why.
we can't begin to imagine or guess.
But it probably has something to do with separating them
because it makes the experience more excruciating.
Yeah.
And, you know, as bleak as a situation is,
and it's really, really fucking bad,
we do in terms of being able to turn this,
A, try to save one person's life
and be used this as a precedent we can use
to fucking try to get other people out.
There is a legal advantage we have here
that we don't in most places,
which is that,
yeah,
as you're talking about earlier,
this stop was so illegal.
They literally did a whole bunch of things
that they were specifically ordered
by a judge not to do.
Yes.
And that gives us a little bit of hope
in a situation where it allows us to put pressure
in ways that normally,
like,
would be very,
very difficult to.
So can you talk a bit more about that?
The Naba consent decree.
Yeah.
Or like,
or how,
how it can be deployed here.
Yeah.
I mean,
so right,
there was nothing
remotely legal
about what they did.
The Nava consent decree
that exists
in Chicago
specifically,
you know,
limits
ICE's
ability to
carry out
warrantless arrests
and vehicle stops.
They
require
pre-distance.
determine fallible cause with the most recent rulings and forcing that despite
constant violations by ICE. But, you know, groups like the National Immigrant Justice Center
have used that to successfully challenge those violations leading to potential releases
and actual releases for people who have been detained and orders.
for officers being retrained, which I mean...
They're just going to keep doing it, right?
But like...
They're just going to keep doing it.
But, you know, with what happened in Minneapolis, for example, with Renee and Good,
they got in trouble, actually.
The officers had something sent to them to remind them like, hey, so you actually, like,
can't do things the way that you did.
And things like the NAVA consent decree, right?
They cause problems because you can wave around a paper and say,
hey, like, you can't do this.
And like, is it kind of as fake as the Constitution in some ways?
Yeah.
Like, they kind of don't care about it.
Yeah.
But it is a tool that can be used by lawyers,
like the wonderful immigration lawyers that we have on our team.
We have Paula and Ange,
who are the immigration attorneys helping Albeiro and his wife.
And they can use that.
like they've filed a habeas and they can use all of this evidence of how they were illegally detained and violated without any grounds to push back and say you need to release him immediately.
The piece of paper from the judge does give us a little bit of openings here.
Could you explain to people like what, you know, what people listening to the show right now can do to help here?
Yeah, I mean, I would say twofold.
If we are looking at Alberos' case and his family's case, there is a crowd fund that they can
donate to. I can send you the link that you can share. Yeah, we will link it in the description.
We really need people to donate to that. Again, Renee Ann Good was able to, her wife was able to raise
$1.4 million in a day. And while I am hoping and have faith that they will redistribute that,
to other people in need who are impacted by situations like this.
It doesn't really feel great to see white people get all that money
when we can't even push past $14,000 for Albeiro.
So we really need people to donate.
There is also a change.org petition for people to sign.
We have a few thousand people who have signed it,
but we need more asking for Congress to pressure ICE to release him.
This would also be monumental for other immigrants and detention.
Yeah.
Okay.
If we can use this as a case study, we know what we can get done through people power,
through sheer will and through not allowing things to just fall through the cracks of social media
because you're too busy doom scrolling.
That being said, what people can also do is they can post.
I mean, I think that people should dom scroll less.
if it means that their nervous systems will be more regulated so that they can show up to defend
community members and protect community members. But if what you have is your phone in bed and you're
scrolling, post, fair, let people know what is happening, refuse to be silent, refuse to just go
about your day, business as usual. Talk about things.
let them know that people see what's happening and they're paying attention.
And we are not going to just let people be disappeared or killed and die in detention.
We are not going to abandon vulnerable people.
Every single one of us has the opportunity to use our voice.
You don't have to be me.
You don't have to be a well-known person who has large platforms.
every single one of us as a community that we can activate at any time.
You text five people and tell them about something that is being done to someone,
and they text five people, and they text five people.
That's the entire world, baby.
Like, we got this shit.
I believe we can appropriate pure mid-scape tactics to help people.
I believe in us.
Pete Seeger said solidarity forever, okay?
I believe that we will win.
If what you do is make memes, make a meme.
Make a copy pasta.
Make a copy pasta and send it to people.
Like, if your method is shit posting, sure.
Take whatever you got and find a way to spread the news.
And, you know, do it for other immigrants, too.
You know, do it for whoever.
But the more you speak out, the more you make it positive.
for other people to speak out.
Yeah.
Because they realize they're not going to be the only ones,
even if they're afraid to say something.
Yeah.
And it's harder to crack down on everyone.
Sure.
And also, the more you show people,
like, I actually have no idea if he knows how much support he has.
I would love for him to know that.
Yeah.
So that it helps him to get through.
I know he knows that he has his family support.
And that's a lot.
That's more than enough.
But I would also, you know, love for people to just really, like, care for immigrants and non-white people in general right now who are on this soil that we call, you know, the land of the United States.
Because basically anyone who is not white right now is terrified of what might happen to them if they're,
on the wrong street at the wrong time. And they're rolling out these terror campaigns in
Oregon and Columbus and Minneapolis and Chicago and New York. I knew they were going to escalate
things in New York after Zoran took office because it's a great excuse. Everyone is terrified
right now. And the best thing that you can do is show up every day and be human to each other.
buy someone a coffee, like offer to just listen to a non-white person in your life.
Take an anti-racism course.
Show up as a human being who cares about other human beings because that is the thing
that matters most.
When I think about stories that we have from way back in history, like I'll just flag,
you know, Anne Frank, because that's the one that everyone knows.
The thing that mattered for her, the thing that.
back her alive for longer than she could have maybe been alive is people being human to each other.
Like I think that's such an underrated way to show up and we take it for granted every day
because we don't consider always how our smallest actions impact each other.
And the truth is that your smallest actions could be the difference between someone losing their life or not.
Yeah. I don't know. I'm going to close this by doing
by as this tradition, about one and every
12 episodes, I do answer something from the fucking
Andoranemic manifesto.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He has this lie where he goes, remember that the
frontiers of the rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of
insurrection pushes our lines forward.
And it does, right? It's impossible to know
until it happens
what the single push
that makes the damn break is going to be.
But it will be something.
Yeah.
And it is literally impossible
to tell what it's going to be
until, you know, the only way
you can find out if the action that you
are taking is going to be the one that knocks everything over
is by doing it. So
go do.
Absolutely. Yeah, we owe
each other everything.
And I'm going to
I'm going to do something kind of silly because I am who I am,
but this is one of my favorite songs in the world.
And this is a Shrek reference.
Oh, my God.
All Star by Smash Mouse.
Like, you know, all that glitter is gold.
Only shooting stars break the mold.
You'll never know if you don't go.
You'll never shine if you don't glow.
like that's a directive.
That's a directive.
I think we should listen to Smash Mouse
and we should try.
We should just try for each other.
I take that song very serious.
You know, I really, really truly,
when I was planning this episode
like a week ago, I did not think it was going to end
with Andorrent Shrek.
But, you know, this is why you could never,
look, you never know how things are going to go.
And sometimes they had,
Well, yeah, Ellie, do you have anything else that you want to make sure people know and where can people find you?
I don't have anything else that I think people should know.
People can find me on Instagram at L-E-L-E-R-E-L-L-L-Y, like literally, but with my name, E-L-L-L-Y.
Incredible.
We'll have this in the description, too.
Great.
That's been my username everywhere on social media.
since I was 15, so it's been 16 years.
People are always like, how did you get that username?
Gil, deal, baby.
You had to, you had to be on Twitter as a kid.
But yeah, that's, it's my same username everywhere.
I have a newsletter that you could find on my social media
where I write about community care and what we owe to each other.
I'm way less concerned about people being able to find me,
except to just go share the campaigns that I've shared on my page for Albero and other immigrants.
Because I am constantly sharing things.
This helps me to get more of a platform so that people share more of the crucial campaigns that I share.
That is great.
My main concern is I don't need to be seen or heard or
listen to any more than is necessary to get people to take action to help more vulnerable people
than me. But if people also want to listen to things I have to say, sure, go for it. I quote
Mashmouth a lot and I'm very gay. We love to see it. Okay, this has been it could happen here,
a podcast done by the girl who posted I supposed to be destroyed after every single post for
eight goddamn years and now we're here.
So let's go fight.
And now we're here and for its e-books, everything happens so much.
Yes.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media,
visit our website, Coolzonemedia.com,
or check us out on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can now find sources for It Could Happen here
listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
You know Roll Doll.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
In the new podcast, The Secret World of Roll Doll, I'll tell you that story, and much, much more.
What?
You probably won't believe it either.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you, because I was a spy.
Listen to The Secret World of Roll Doll on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I actually drop better when I'm high.
It heightens my senses, calms me down.
If anything, I'm more careful.
Honestly, it just helps me focus.
That's probably what the driver who killed a four-year-old told himself.
And now he's in prison.
You see, no matter what you tell yourself,
if you feel different, you drive different.
So if you're high, just don't drive.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council.
I didn't really have an interest of being on air.
I kind of was up there to just try and infiltrate the building.
From the underground clubs that shaped global music
to the pastors and creatives who built a cultural empire.
The Atlanta Ears podcast uncovers the stories behind one of the most influential cities in the world.
The thing I love about Atlanta is that it's a city of hustlers, man.
Each episode explores a different chapter of Atlanta's rise,
featuring conversations with ludicrous, Will Packer, Pastor Jamal Bryant, DJ Drama,
and more.
The full series is available to listen to now.
Listen to Atlanta is on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know, we always say New Year, New Me, but real change starts on the inside.
It starts with giving your mind and your spirit the same attention you give your goals.
Hey, everybody, it's Michelle Williams, host of checking in on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
And on my podcast, we talk mental health, healing, growth, and health.
everything you need to step into your next season, whole and empowered. New year, real you.
Listen to checking in with Michelle Williams from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast.
