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Women's Rights Group Launches Unwanted in Miami Campaign Against Tate Brothers Amid International Charges

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Published on March 22, 2025
Women's Rights Group Launches Unwanted in Miami Campaign Against Tate Brothers Amid International ChargesSource: Wikipedia/Anything Goes With James English, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

A women's rights organization has taken to the streets of Miami's Wynwood neighborhood with a pointed message targeting the Tate brothers, Andrew and Tristan, plastering the area with "Unwanted in Miami" posters. These posters, launched by UltraViolet, a gender-justice organization, also feature a QR code that links to accusations the brothers are facing internationally, including human trafficking charges in Romania and separate charges in the United Kingdom. As reported by NBC Miami, this campaign is also a direct challenge to previous decisions made under the Trump administration, which the group alleges facilitated the brothers' return to the U.S.

According to a Miami Herald interview, Andrew Tate claimed that his bail conditions required him to return to Romania tomorrow. "I am going back. I’m going to fly back and obey my bail conditions. I’m not running from anything, because I’m not a coward," Tate said. Rosa Valderrama, the South Florida-based director of UltraViolet's campaign, stated, "Survivors deserve justice. The Tates have to face their accusers in a court of law. That is our primary goal." The campaign aims to pressure officials to take action and to alert the public of the potential danger posed by the Tate brothers.

As UltraViolet ramps up its efforts to raise awareness and seek justice, the group also demands that President Donald Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi reevaluate their position. Valderrama remarked to NBC Miami, "We want the Trump administration, we want Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is a Floridian herself, to come to their senses, to do what they claim they do, and to protect women by extraditing these men to face their day in court."

Furthermore, the posters in Wynwood seek to warn the local community, with the message "Ojo: Peligro en Miami," cautioning of a potential threat in the city, according to Miami Herald.

In a striking contrast to UltraViolet's perspective, the Tates' attorney, Joseph McBride, unleashed sharp criticism towards the feminist movement and those opposing his clients. McBride told the Miami Herald, "Feminism is a cancer that is responsible for the breakdown of the natural family, the rearing of pathetic men, and the genocide of children in the womb." He continued, "The fact these losers want to jail Andrew and Tristan Tate for preaching their version of traditional masculinity highlights the fact that these fascist feminists are fragile weaklings incapable of defending their position in the free marketplace of ideas. Long live the First Amendment."

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