Hi, I'm Ruby Kramer.
This is Post Reports Weekend.
It's Saturday, August 23rd.
I'm a national narrative enterprise reporter,
and what you're going to hear in a moment is a story I wrote about an immigration lawyer who mostly represents people who have been detained by ICE and sent to rural Louisiana.
I'll be narrating it.
This reporting is part of a Washington Post series called Deep Reads.
It's part of our commitment to narrative journalism.
I wanted to tell a story in part about what actually happens after someone has been detained by ICE.
For some detainees, they end up in Louisiana, which is home to nine ICE detention facilities.
Many of these detainees never get legal representation.
Some of them find Chris Kinison,
who is an immigration lawyer at the center of this story, based in Alexandria, Louisiana.
He heard from family after family whose loved ones had ended up in the state's detention system.
And I got a sense of day-to-day life inside the actual facilities where his clients were being held.
More than anything,
I saw an overwhelmed immigration lawyer who was struggling to understand what his work was really becoming under this new administration.
Okay, here's the story.
Christopher Kinison tried to find his client on the computer screen,
but the video feed was too grainy to make out faces.