Need help? Call our Helpline at (475) 237-7351·6am–6pm / 7
Resources
Tools & Information

Community
Resources

Legal guides, safety plans, attorney contacts, and emergency helplines — everything you need to know and stay safe.

Emergency Helplines
🔴 URGENT

Unidad Latina en Acción

(475) 323-9413

New Haven County and beyond. Rapid response and immigrant defense.

HELPLINE

New Haven Immigrants Coalition

(854) 666-4472

Serving New Haven County immigrants and families.

🔴 URGENT

Hartford Area Immigration Emergency Helpline

(959) 204-0771

Emergency immigration response for the Hartford area.

HELPLINE

Greater Danbury Unites for Immigrants

(475) 237-7351

Immigrant support and rapid response in the Danbury region.

HELPLINE

Stamford Norwalk United for Immigrants

snuict@proton.me

Serving Stamford and Norwalk communities. Contact via encrypted email.

HELPLINE

MIRA

(203) 435-9979

Serving Middletown and Meriden immigrant communities.

Jump to What You Need

Six Ways We Can Help

Know Your Rights

What to say — and not say — if ICE comes to your door, your car, or your workplace.

At your front doorTraffic stopsAt your workplaceYour children's school

Find Legal Help

Free and low-cost immigration attorneys organized by Connecticut county. Available in multiple languages.

County-by-county directoryFree legal consultationsDeportation defenseDACA & asylum support

Safety Planning

Build your family's emergency plan step by step — documents, contacts, childcare, and legal prep.

Emergency contact listDocument preparationPower of attorneyCommunity alert networks

Digital Security

Protect your phone, messages, and data. Practical tips for staying secure in a high-surveillance environment.

Use Signal for messagingEnable disappearing messagesLock your phone & encrypt dataLimit social media exposure

Bystander Resources

Guides for community members who witness immigration enforcement — how to observe, document, and support safely.

What to do if you see ICEHow to document safelyKnow your rights as a witnessSupport community members

FAQ

Plain-language answers to the most common questions about rights, ICE encounters, legal aid, and family safety in CT.

Rights at your doorWhat to do if detainedFilming ICE activityAdministrative vs. judicial warrant

Community Resource

Danbury Helpline
Cards

Print and share the Danbury Unites for Immigrants helpline card. Call to report ICE presence, encounters, arrests, and violations of sanctuary law — available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

Danbury Unites for Immigrants

INFORMAR · RESPONDER

LÍNEA DE AYUDA

(475)

237-7351

LLAMADA PARA INFORMAR:

  • Presencia de ICE
  • Encuentros y arrestos
  • Violaciones de la ley de confianza
ENESPT

danburyunitesforimmigrants.org

Free · Confidential

What This Card Is For

  • Call to report ICE activity in your neighborhood
  • Report encounters, arrests, and detentions
  • Report violations of Danbury's sanctuary policies
  • Trigger rapid response from trained community volunteers
  • Calls are confidential — you do not need to give your name
  • Available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese

Save the number now

Don't wait until an emergency to look up the number. Save (475) 237-7351 in your phone today, and share this card with your neighbors, family, and church.

Post It Everywhere

Print a copy and post it at your church, laundromat, school, barbershop, or community center so everyone can access the number quickly.

Share Digitally

Screenshot the card and share it in your WhatsApp groups, family chats, and neighborhood apps so the number reaches as many people as possible.

Give One to Your Neighbors

Print extra copies and hand them to your neighbors — especially elderly residents or those without smartphones who may need it most.

Formularios y Documentos / Forms & Documents

Complete Sus Formularios
Fill Out Your Forms

Fill out these important legal and emergency forms online, step by step — then generate a print-ready document when you're done. No account needed.

Complete estos formularios importantes en línea, paso a paso — luego genere un documento listo para imprimir cuando termine. No necesita cuenta.

Interactive FormBilingual EN/ES

Family Emergency Preparedness Plan

Plan de Preparación Familiar

Fill out your family's complete emergency preparedness packet online — children's info, emergency contacts, weekly schedule, pet care, and more.

Complete el paquete de preparación de emergencia de su familia en línea — información de niños, contactos de emergencia, horario semanal, cuidado de mascotas y más.

What's included / Qué incluye:

  • Children's school & medical info
  • Emergency contacts & consulate
  • Weekly schedule & preferences
  • Pet information (optional)
Legal FormCT Legal Form

Standby Guardian Designation

Designación de Tutoría de Reserva

Legally designate a trusted adult to care for your children if you are detained or deported. Based on Connecticut law C.G.S. §45a-624.

Designe legalmente a un adulto de confianza para cuidar a sus hijos si es detenido o deportado. Basado en la ley de Connecticut C.G.S. §45a-624.

What's included / Qué incluye:

  • Parent & guardian information
  • Children's names & birthdates
  • Triggering events & witnesses
  • Review & print legal document
Downloadable PDFs / PDFs Descargables

Your data stays private / Sus datos son privados

All forms save progress locally on your device only. Nothing is sent to any server. Todo se guarda solo en su dispositivo. Nada se envía a ningún servidor.

Resource Library

Guides & Materials

Know Your Rights

PDF Guide
ENESPT

Know Your Rights: If ICE Comes to Your Door

Step-by-step guide on what to do if immigration officers come to your home. In English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

DOWNLOAD
PDF Guide
ENES

Know Your Rights at a Traffic Stop

What to say and what not to say if stopped by police or immigration agents while driving.

DOWNLOAD
PDF Guide
ENES

Know Your Rights at Your Workplace

Your legal rights if ICE comes to your workplace, including what employers can and cannot do.

DOWNLOAD
PDF Guide
ENESPT

Judicial Warrant vs. Administrative Warrant

Understand the critical difference between a judicial warrant signed by a judge and an ICE administrative warrant — and what each means for your rights at home.

DOWNLOAD

Free Printable

Know Your Rights Card

Print this wallet-sized card and keep it with you at all times. Share it with neighbors, family, and coworkers — it could make all the difference in a moment of crisis.

Danbury Unites for Immigrants

Know Your Rights Card

  • You have the right to remain silent. You do not have to answer questions.

  • You do NOT have to open the door. ICE cannot enter your home without a judicial warrant signed by a judge.

  • If stopped in public, say: "I am exercising my right to remain silent." You may ask if you are free to go.

  • Do not sign any documents without speaking to a lawyer first.

⚠ An ICE administrative warrant is NOT the same as a judicial warrant. You do NOT have to open the door.

danburyunitesforimmigrants.org

(475) 237-7351

Wallet-sized · Double-sided · Available in English, Spanish & Portuguese

Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC) · Official materials, free to distribute

Printable Resource

Family Safety Plan
Download & Print

A complete, one-page guide your family can fill out, keep on hand, and bring to any community meeting. Available in English and Spanish.

Danbury Unites for Immigrants

Family Safety Plan

Version

2025

Family Meeting Points

  • Primary: nearest school or community center
  • Secondary: trusted neighbor or relative
  • Out-of-area contact person & phone number

Essential Documents

  • Copies of IDs, passports & birth certificates
  • Immigration documents (kept securely)
  • Medical records & insurance cards

Emergency Contacts

  • Trusted family contacts outside CT
  • Attorney or legal aid number
  • Coalition rapid-response hotline

danburyunitesforimmigrants.org

(475) 237-7351

What's Included

  • Family meeting points & out-of-area contacts
  • Essential documents checklist
  • Emergency phone numbers & legal hotlines
  • Know Your Rights quick-reference reminders
  • Plan for children at school or childcare
  • Power of attorney & caregiver authorization notes
Emergency Preparedness

Family Safety Plan

Complete this checklist now — before an emergency happens. Check off each step with your family.

0 / 16 steps completed0%

Prepare Now

Before any emergency happens

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Secure Your Documents

Gather, copy, and store safely

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Know Your Rights

Practice these out loud with your family

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If It Happens

Step-by-step response in the moment

0/4

Emergency Preparedness

The Red Folder
Project

A Red Folder is a physical binder — kept in a safe, accessible place — that holds certified copies of every critical document your family might need in an emergency. If you are detained, your family and attorney can act immediately without searching for paperwork.

The folder is called "red" so it's easy to spot in a hurry. The goal is simple: prepare once, be protected always. Use the checklist below to build yours today.

Your Red Folder

Document Checklist

Keep one copy here · Store originals safely

Passports & IDs
A-Number & Immigration Docs
Attorney Contact & POA
Caregiver Authorization
Bank & Insurance Info
Proof of Community Ties

danburyunitesforimmigrants.org

(475) 237-7351

Why the Red Folder matters

When someone is detained, the first 24–48 hours are critical. An attorney who has your A-Number and document copies can file an emergency motion, request a bond hearing, and locate you in the system far faster. Without these documents, delays can mean weeks or months of additional detention.

Time-Critical

What to Include in Your Red Folder

Printable Resource

Download & Print
The Checklist

The ILRC (Immigrant Legal Resource Center) publishes a free Red Folder checklist you can fill in, print, and keep at home. Available in English and Spanish — share it with your family and neighbors.

  • All four document categories covered
  • Fillable fields for names, numbers & contacts
  • Available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese
  • Free to print and distribute
  • Backed by ILRC — a nationally trusted legal org

Keep Originals Safe

Your Red Folder holds certified copies only. Store original documents in a locked fireproof box at home — never carry originals on you.

Update Every 6 Months

Immigration documents expire, addresses change, and attorneys move. Set a calendar reminder to review and update your Red Folder twice a year.

Give a Copy to Someone Trusted

Give a complete second copy to your designated trusted contact outside your home. They should know where it is and how to use it.

For the Community

Resources for Bystanders

If you witness immigration enforcement in your community, you have a role to play. These guides help you document safely, protect others, and know your own rights as a witness.

Bystander community solidarity

Free PDF Guide

New York Immigration Coalition

PDF Guide · EnglishFree Download

What to do if you see immigration enforcement

A practical, printable guide from the New York Immigration Coalition outlining how bystanders can safely observe and document immigration enforcement encounters, support community members, and what actions are — and aren't — legal in the moment.

Know your role as a witness
How to document safely
Do not interfere — but do observe
Share info with legal teams

Source: New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC) · Official materials, free to distribute

Web Resource · English

Immigrant Defense Project

Know Your Rights

Understand common ICE tactics

ICE agents commonly use deception, intimidation, and false claims to gain entry or compliance. Learn to recognize and respond to them.

How ICE uses deception
False claims of authority
Warrant vs. administrative order
What you can legally refuse
Read the Full Guide

Immigrant Defense Project · Official materials, free to distribute

Web Resource · English

Our City Our Rights

Know Your Rights

Know your rights in encounters with law enforcement agents

A clear breakdown of your constitutional rights during encounters with local police, federal agents, and immigration enforcement.

Right to remain silent
Right to refuse searches
Stops, arrests & detentions
What to do & say
Read the Full Guide

Our City Our Rights · Official materials, free to distribute

Community Tool · Action

Bystander Alert System

Take Action

Grab a Whistle

A simple whistle is one of the most effective bystander tools — alerting neighbors when immigration enforcement is spotted nearby.

Alert neighbors instantly
No app or signal needed
Carry one, share one
Safe & legal to use
Read the Full Guide

Bystander Alert System · Official materials, free to distribute

Digital Security

Protect Your Digital Life

Your phone and online activity can be monitored. Use encrypted tools to protect yourself and your community. Signal is the most trusted app for secure communication.

MORE DIGITAL SECURITY TIPS

Use Signal for all sensitive conversations

Signal is end-to-end encrypted — no one can read your messages, not even Signal. It's free and works like a regular texting app.

Enable disappearing messages

Set messages to automatically delete after 1 week or less. Less data stored means less risk if your phone is ever seized.

Use a screen lock & strong PIN

Protect your phone with a 6+ digit PIN. You have the right to refuse to unlock your phone without a warrant.

Be careful what you share online

Avoid posting locations of community meetings, events, or people's immigration status on public social media.

Use a VPN on public Wi-Fi

Public networks at libraries, coffee shops, or community centers can be monitored. A VPN encrypts your traffic.

Printable Resource

Digital Security Guide
Download & Print

A one-page printable guide covering encrypted messaging, device security, privacy settings, and what to do if you are detained. Available in English and Spanish.

Danbury Unites for Immigrants

Digital Security Guide

Version

2025

Encrypted Messaging

  • Use Signal for all sensitive conversations
  • Enable disappearing messages (1–7 days)
  • Never discuss immigration status over regular SMS

Device Security

  • Use a strong PIN (6+ digits) — not fingerprint alone
  • Enable full-disk encryption on your phone
  • Turn off Face ID / Touch ID before protests or raids

Privacy Settings

  • Turn off location services for all apps
  • Use a VPN on public Wi-Fi networks
  • Review and limit app permissions regularly

If Detained or Stopped

  • Power off your phone immediately — don't just lock it
  • You have the right to refuse to unlock your device
  • Do not use biometrics — agents can compel fingerprints

danburyunitesforimmigrants.org

(475) 237-7351

What's Included

  • Signal & encrypted messaging setup tips
  • Device security: PIN, encryption & biometrics
  • Disappearing messages & data minimization
  • Location off, VPN tips & app permission guide
  • What to do if detained — phone shut-off protocol
  • Emergency contacts fill-in section

Don't have Signal yet?

Download it free at signal.org — the most trusted encrypted messenger.

Get Signal
Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions
Answered

Clear, plain-language answers to the most common questions about immigrant rights, ICE encounters, legal aid, and family safety in Connecticut.

Still have questions?

Our network can connect you with a legal aid attorney in Connecticut.