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Sue Lefebvre
www.suelefebvre.com
Lives in Phoenix, Arizona

Sue's blog
I am a volunteer with the humanitarian organization, No More Deaths. This group works to save lives and prevent suffering among migrants crossing into the united states from mexico. they are desperate and face untold dangers when attempting to cross the sonoran desert. This blog provides current information about this crisis.

Blogs will be posted intermittently. To purchase my book, NO MORE DEATHS, go to amazon.com.
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blog #31

3/19/2020

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This  is one of my new ads for Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. You are getting  preview. Sue
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blog #30

3/19/2020

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​No More Deaths owes a huge debt of gratitude for letting us use her property near Arivaca in Southern Arizona as a site for us to help migrants. She has done this for more than 15 years despite the efforts of Border Patrol to shut us down. Steve Johnston, No More Deaths volunteer reminds us that on March 28, Byrd will be 96 (or maybe 95) years old. He wrote this tribute to her:


BYRD BAYLOR is the HEART and SOUL of No More Deaths.(A tribute - honoring Byrd for the NMD 10th Anniversary Reunion (2014- by Steve Johnston)


She has shined the light of JUSTICE to guide our way in the desert. Let me tell you what I mean by this. Byrd has been providing humanitarian aid to travelers in the desert for well over 20 years. I’ve heard her tell many stories about these folk, including Salvador, who showed up as Byrd and her friends were chinking the logs in her then-new home. He asked if he could have a job helping with this. When told by the others that they were working for free to help Byrd build her home, Salvador just jumped right in and joined in the work too.

Salvador became a great friend of Byrd, staying at her home for weeks and finally making it to his family at a ranch near Santa Fe, New Mexico. Don’t tell anybody, but Byrd drove him there. They still keep in touch over 20 years later. (Though Byrd tried to refuse, Salvador’s mom insisted on paying Byrd for bringing him home. They finally settled on a price of $7 for a 1000-mile round trip - a very Byrd-like solution, where everyone wins and feels good about the process.)

Byrd’s writing room is outdoors in a converted chicken coop and overlooks the Papalote Wash, a major migrant trail. She has watched travelers put down their backpacks and take advantage of the tall swing she has hanging from a huge walnut tree in the middle of the wash. From her perch Byrd has called out to an uncountable number of those passing through to offer water and food – in a word, hospitality. The NMD Byrd Camp is directly across this wash. In 2004, when she heard we were looking for a place for the camp, Byrd actually sought us out to offer her land. Byrd has allowed us to use her land for these last 10 years (now 15) for our desert camp and medical facility. From there we send out several patrols almost every day year-round to leave water and humanitarian assistance on the trails and to search for the sick, injured, and those simply lost, who are crossing the desert. At the medical facility we have treated many 100s, if not 1000s, of travelers through the years. The perfect spot – for all roads from the mountains south and east of there lead directly past our driveway and the No Mas Muertes sign.

Let me tell you a Byrd story in which I had a small part. On a cold, cold February day 6 or 7 years ago, before we had a year-round camp, Ed McCullough and I were mapping trails in the Tumacacori foothills. On Bear Grass Tank Rd. that early afternoon we found a pair of migrants, a brother and sister, who had been lost for 6 days and had no food or water. They were sick, exhausted, famished, and freezing. We warmed them up in Ed’s truck and gave them aid, and then took them to Byrd’s home, since they wanted us to call Border Patrol so they could return to Mexico. Byrd was in Tucson that afternoon, but Tom Lewis, her horseman and caretaker back then was there. The brother collapsed into a blanket in the hammock on Byrd’s porch and we got the sister to crawl into Byrd’s bed. We phoned Border Patrol, giving them Byrd’s home address as the location. Tom agreed to care for them till BP arrived, and Ed and I chased the dark back to Tucson.

The rest we found out later from Tom. BP never showed, though Tom phoned them again. When Byrd returned from Tucson around 10 pm, her guests were still resting – “passed out” a more accurate phrase. Byrd phoned BP again and the female dispatcher said they had no record or knowledge of anyone having phoned about this. It seems they were discarding pending calls when they changed shifts. The dispatcher asked Byrd where the travelers were now. Byrd said the brother was on the porch and the sister was in Byrd’s bed. The dispatcher got irate, telling Byrd she was breaking the law by “harboring an illegal” and that she could be arrested. “Get her out of your house now,” she demanded. Byrd calmly told the dispatcher that, when they came for the migrants, they had better send the sheriff too to arrest her, because she wasn’t going to push this exhausted woman out of her bed until she had to.

Well, you know, Byrd is the same woman who answered a question at the newly-installed Arivaca Rd. BP checkpoint of “How you doin?’” with “I’d be doing a lot better if I didn’t live in a police state!” Byrd once told me that all her ancestors were either warriors or preachers. These include Admiral Byrd of polar fame and R. E. B. Baylor, founder of the Baptist school in Texas, Baylor University. Byrd got the best of both sides.

Byrd is the author of 15 children’s books, and has received 4 Caldecott Honors from the American Library Association. Her wonderful novel, “Yes is Better than No”, is now back in print (available online and at Antigone Books, as are most of her children’s books). She is working on a new book of essays, currently titled “Good Women Who Love Bad Trucks”. I’ll end with a quote from the bio at the back of her first book, “Amigo”, published in 1963. It says: Byrd Baylor lives in the Southwest. Her eloquent lyric prose reflects a philosophy as special and lovely as the lands she writes about. For her it is the spirit – not material things – that is necessary for personal development. “Once you make that decision, your whole life opens up and you begin to know what matters and what doesn’t.” We are so glad she made that decision so many years ago. Happy 90th (now 96th) Birthday! Byrd, WE LOVE YOU.




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post 29

3/10/2020

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 Dear Friends,
Those of you who have read my book, NO MORE DEATHS, will know that the No More Deaths organization has been reporting on Border Patrol abuses since 2008. Below you will find the announcement by the National Immigration Law Center organization that they have won a five-year old case against CPB in the Tucson Sector. We hope this will have a significant effect on the  behavior of Border Patrol in the field.

Dear Sue's bloggers:

We scored a huge victory in February fighting for safe, sanitary conditions in Border Patrol facilities in its Tucson Sector!

For decades, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has gone to great lengths to deny and keep secret the abuses migrants endure in its facilities. 

On Wednesday, February 19, a federal court ruled in favor of justice in our longstanding case Doe v. Wolf, declaring the cruel ways CBP detains people in its Tucson Sector unconstitutional.

The court ordered CBP to overhaul its practices.

We first began working on this case over five years ago. We couldn't have achieved this victory without NILC's committed supporters.

National Immigration Law Center attorneys, along with our great partners at the American Immigration Council, the ACLU of Arizona, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area, and Morrison & Foerster LLP, have been working since 2015 to shed light on the cruelty and culture of impunity that permeates CBP. 

Though CBP’s problems go back decades, the Trump administration has shown a relentless commitment to infusing more cruelty into our immigration system, with the aim of discouraging people in impossible situations from seeking safety and a better life here. All sorts of people,  but especially immigrants, communities of color, refugees, Muslims, and anyone who is not wealthy, are feeling the harmful impact of this administration’s extremist anti-immigrant policies.

If the government appeals the court’s decision in Doe v. Wolf, NILC will continue the legal fight to uphold the court’s ruling.

NILC will continue fighting alongside our communities and partners in the courts, the halls of Congress, and our communities — for a system that upholds the dignity of all people and honors the Constitution and the law.

Thank you for your support.
-National Immigration Law Center

 
National Immigration Law Center attorneys, along with our great partners at the American Immigration Council, the ACLU of Arizona, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area, and Morrison & Foerster LLP, have been working since 2015 to shed light on the cruelty and culture of impunity that permeates CBP. 
Though CBP’s problems go back decades, the Trump administration has shown a relentless commitment to infusing more cruelty into our immigration system, with the aim of discouraging people in impossible situations from seeking safety and a better life here. All sorts of people,  but especially immigrants, communities of color, refugees, Muslims, and anyone who is not wealthy, are feeling the harmful impact of this administration’s extremist anti-immigrant policies.
If the government appeals the court’s decision in Doe v. Wolf, NILC will continue the legal fight to uphold the court’s ruling.
Will you contribute today to make sure we’re ready for any upcoming battles to maintain this important win and for the many more critical legal cases to come? 
NILC will continue fighting alongside our communities and partners in the courts, the halls of Congress, and our communities — for a system that upholds the dignity of all people and honors the Constitution and the law.
Thank you for your support.
-National Immigration Law Center
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    Author

    Sue Lefebvre is a former early childhood educator . Since the passage of NAFTA in 2004, she has been very interested in immigration issues--joining her husband, Gene, in Tucson, AZ volunteering with the humanitarian group No More Deaths/No Mas Muertes in Southern Arizona.

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