In The News: William S. Boyd School of Law

El Heraldo de Mexico

During President-elect Trump's candidacy, he spoke about mass deportations almost at every rally. But the topic of mass deportations barely got any coverage in the U.S. media. After he won both the popular vote and the electoral college, people are now paying attention to what exactly mass deportation might mean.

Bloomberg

Finra, the financial industry鈥檚 self-regulator, is likely to avoid bringing expedited expulsion proceedings against members without SEC input after the D.C. Circuit said that doing so would probably exceed its authority.

Nevada Independent

Elias Benjelloun鈥檚 parents were issued their deportation orders quickly after President-elect Donald Trump first stepped into office in 2016. For the family, Benjelloun said, the deportation order felt somewhat like a betrayal. Originally from the Netherlands, the family鈥檚 asylum case had been pending for decades before the FBI had granted them assistance after Benjelloun鈥檚 father 鈥 owner of a popular Las Vegas hookah lounge 鈥 reported information.

Mass Live

Before we ask if Donald Trump can deport millions, remember this: Barack Obama already showed us how. His administration deported 3 million people without military help 鈥 just U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, buses, and a ruthless efficiency that earned him the name 鈥楧eporter-in-Chief.鈥 Parents like Andres Jimenez were sent away for driving without a license, leaving five American children behind. Trump鈥檚 first term saw fewer deportations, but now he鈥檚 promising to add military muscle.

WealthManagement.com

While FINRA decides whether to appeal a circuit court panel鈥檚 ruling that it cannot speedily expel reps without SEC oversight, the regulator believes it can 鈥渋mplement measures鈥 to meet the judges鈥 demands, according to a FINRA spokesperson.

USA Today

After years of Texas being the first stop for people illegally crossing the border, Lone Star State officials are volunteering to let President-elect Donald Trump use a state ranch as the last place immigrants set foot on American soil before being forcibly deported.On Tuesday, Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham offered Trump a 1,400-acre ranch near the border in South Texas to host a mass deportation facility. Buckingham bought the ranch earlier this year, she said, because the previous owner refused to let Texas build a border wall across it.

Nevada Current

Nevada鈥檚 captains of industry and political leaders are doing little, if anything, to prepare for the potential economic hit as well as the human toll of President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 vow to deport at least 11 million undocumented immigrants, including 189,000 who live in Nevada.

Las Vegas Weekly

With Donald Trump in line to be the next president of the United States, immigrant communities across Nevada and the nation are bracing for his promise to carry out the 鈥渓argest deportation in the history of our country,鈥 removing millions of immigrants in mass roundups and raids. Among the most immediate effects of such a move would be to tear Nevada families apart, experts predict.

Las Vegas Weekly

With Donald Trump in line to be the next president of the United States, immigrant communities across Nevada and the nation are bracing for his promise to carry out the 鈥渓argest deportation in the history of our country,鈥 removing millions of immigrants in mass roundups and raids. Among the most immediate effects of such a move would be to tear Nevada families apart, experts predict.

USA Today

Giddel Contreras lives in the Bronx, works as a chef at a hotel-resort in Queens and is as much a New Yorker as the next guy. But the Honduran native's decision to illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border back in 1995 means he may now be a target for deportation 鈥 despite being married more than a decade to a U.S. citizen, living and working legally in the U.S. for more than 25 years and having a child who's a U.S. citizen.

Citywire RIA

This presidential election is putting bonds front and centre and that's not necessarily a good thing.

Las Vegas Review Journal

As Hate Crimes Awareness Month comes to a close, the reason behind the month rings louder than ever before.