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Unclassified detections recorded differently in different sectors
Continued from Page A3 by agents to record data. “Unclassifiable detection” means the same thing, but the officers, for a range of reasons, couldn’t determine citizenship.
No-violations are “deemed to have committed no infraction and don’t affect GotAway statistics,” according to the tracking system definition. The categories of no- violations, no arrests and unclassifiable detection should actually be categorized as got-aways, the BP officer said, assuming all non-arrests were of non-citizens. However, each sector also uses unclassified detection differently, the officer added, so how the numbers are categorized isn’t actually uniform.
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If the categories of unclassified detection and no-violations were included with the gotaway numbers, the total number of gotaways for January would be closer to
ELIAS, Elvia Limón
Elvia Limón Elias, was born to Jose G. Limón and Maria Guadalupe Limón on March 30, 1957, in Yahualica, Jalisco, Mexico. She passed away peacefully at her home with her family by her side on February 7, 2023, in Santa Barbara CA.
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Elvia came to Santa Barbara at the young age of 4. She attended local schools and graduated a proud Santa Barbara High School Don in 1975.
While in high school, Elvia began working as a dedicated caregiver and companion to her client, Kathy, who became a beloved friend. Elvia started her lifelong career at the DMV in 1976, retiring in 2016. Throughout her DMV career, she met people from all walks of life. She helped everyone with open arms, touching many lives with her kindness and patience.
Elvia was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, daughter, sister, aunt, cousin, godmother, and faithful friend to many. Elvia enjoyed spending time with her family and friends. She particularly loved family gatherings where she could show off her dance moves with her favorite dance partner, her brother, Pancho. Her love for dancing is where she found the love of her life, Francisco, at a local dance in 1976. A year later they were married and started their 45 years of life together building a beautiful family. Throughout the years Elvia got to enjoy many family trips with all her siblings. Nobody was ever excluded. It was a true family reunion every time.
Elvia is preceded in death by her infant daughter, Eliana Marisol Elias, her brother, Joe “Pancho” Limón, and her mother, Maria Guadalupe Limón.
She is survived by her husband, Francisco Elias, daughters, Monica Rodriguez (Misa. Sr.), Vanessa Trejo (Anthony), and Teresa Elias (Rosendo Garcia). Her pride and joy were her grandchildren, Gabriel, Misael Jr, Bella, Eliana, Daisy, James, Laila, Ruby, Analise, Anthony II, Katherine, Davina, a new baby boy on his way, and her only greatgrandchild, Aubrey Alexis.
Elvia is also survived by her father, Jose G. Limón, siblings, Raudel Limón (Silbia), Jaime Limón (Elizabeth), Maria Wasserman (David), Javier Limón, and Hortensia Cruz (Frank). Also surviving are numerous nephews, nieces, primos, primas, godchildren, extended family, friends, and her best friend since 2nd grade, Sally.
The family would like to thank the staff at Fresenius Kidney Care, Sansum Clinic, and Ridley-Tree Cancer Center for the amazing care they provided Elvia throughout her journey.
The Rosary Service will be held on Wednesday, February 15, 2023, at 7:00 pm and the Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Thursday, February 16, at 10:00 am, at Our Lady of Sorrows Church. The graveside service at Calvary Cemetery will be scheduled for a later date.
Arrangements entrusted to Pueblo del Rey Funeral Services.
60,483.
However, these numbers still don’t represent the real picture, those in law enforcement have explained to The Center Square, because they don’t include those who are unknown and unrecorded. Not all gotaways are recorded because the agents and law enforcement officers on the ground don’t spot them all, meaning the number of those entering the U.S. illegally is expected to be much greater than is reported.
Obituary notices are published daily in the Santa Barbara News-Press and also appear on our website www.newspress.com during her childhood.
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“I’ve done it my entire life,” said Miss Ally, who earned her bachelor’s in political science and French at Amherst College in Amherst, Mass. She directed, wrote and starred in “The Hater,” a 2022 film that was released in theaters. She played a liberal speech writer in a U.S. Senate campaign. She loses her job for a protest gone wrong and returns to her conservative Texas hometown.
“It’s the one thing that made use of my political science degree,” she said. “I was very fortunate. It had an amazing cast.”
You can see “The Hater,” which also stars Bruce Dern and Meredith Hagner, on Hulu.
In other highlights of the Santa Barbara International Film Festival:
• The Variety Artisans Awards were presented Monday night at the Arlington Theatre to M. M. Keeravaani, songwriter for “RRR”; Frank Kruse, sound designer for “All Quiet on the Western Front”; Son Lux, composer for “Everything Everywhere All at Once”; Catherine Martin, costume designer for “Elvis”; Florencia Martin, production designer on “Babylon”; Claudio Miranda, cinematography for “Top Gun: Maverick”; Adrien Morot, hairstyling/make up (“The Whale”); Paul Rogers, editing (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”) and Eric Saindon, visual effects (Avatar: The Way of
Water”).
• UCSB graduate Matthew Mishory’s documentary “Who Are the Marcuses?” screened Monday and will screen again at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Metro 4. The movie is about Holocaust refugees Lottie and Howard Marcus, a Long Island couple who gave a billion-dollar gift to Ben-Gurlon University in Israel.
• World champion surfer Shaun Tomson will appear in the movie “Waves Apart,” which is the true story of a Jewish surfer confronting the sport’s antiSemitic history. The film will air at 7:40 p.m. Thursday at Fiesta 5.
• There’s free admission for movies screening at 2 p.m. daily at the Arlington Theatre. They include “Soul for the Ocean” today, “Elvis” on Wednesday, “Patrick and the Whale” on Thursday, “To Leslie” on Friday and “10-10-10 Student Shorts” on Saturday.
• The closing night film is, appropriately enough, the U.S. premiere of “I Like Movies” at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Arlington Theatre. Written and directed by Chandler Levack, the film is about a teenage movie enthusiast and his dream of attending New York University’s Tisch School. To pay for his tuition, he gets a job at Sequels, a video store.
The film stars Isaiah Lehtinen, Romina D’Ugo, Krista Bridges and Percy Hynes White. email: dmason@newspress.com