Jenny Jarvie is a national reporter for the Los Angeles Times based in Atlanta, where she covers a range of stories on U.S. identity, politics and culture. She has lived in the South for more than 20 years, working for The Times as Atlanta bureau chief, Fast Break reporter and political reporter covering the 2024 and 2020 presidential campaigns, as well as freelancing for publications including The Times, the New Republic, Atlantic’s CityLab and ArtsATL. Raised in England and Italy, Jarvie studied English literature and philosophy at the University of Glasgow in Scotland and began her journalism career at the Daily Telegraph in London.
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Any immigrant who uses the CBP Home App to inform the government that they plan to return home, Homeland Security says, will receive a $1,000 payment after their confirmed return.
The State Bar of California announced Friday that its embattled leader, who has faced growing pressure to resign over the botched February roll out of a new bar exam, will step down in July.
As Trump ramps up his deportation agenda, state Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta signaled that California would not let up on scrutinizing facilities for detained immigrants.
One order directs the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary to publish a list of state and local jurisdictions that ‘obstruct the enforcement of federal immigration laws.’
After the botched roll out of the new exam in February, the state’s highest court directed the agency to plan on administering the July exam in the traditional in-person format.
The arrest appears to heighten the stakes in the Trump administration’s aggressive actions against judges who have challenged its immigration crackdown.
The Court demanded the State Bar to explain how it used AI to develop questions — and what actions it took to ensure the reliability of the questions.
Using AI-developed questions written by non-legally-trained psychometricians represents ‘an obvious conflict of interest,’ critics say.
Pope Francis was a particularly beloved figure in the Los Angeles region. The pontiff’s death finds the community grappling with a ‘big loss.’
Trump’s release of the files is backed by the senator’s son Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long believed there may have been a second gunman.