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Tag: deportation

  • Illegal crossings at lowest level since 1960s in San Diego Sector, Border Patrol says

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    A Border Patrol agent drives down to the beach. (Photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego)

    The U.S. Border Patrol Monday announced a significant reduction in illegal border crossings in the San Diego Sector, but an increase in narcotics seizures.

    “Through the first two months of the new fiscal year, the sector has recorded 1,793 apprehensions,” according to a USBP statement. “This represents a 93% decrease over the same period a year ago, when the sector had already recorded 24,735 apprehensions. This low a level of activity has not been seen in the sector since the 1960s.”

    Chief Border Patrol Agent Justin De La Torre attributed the decrease to a combination of factors, most notably tougher immigration and border security policies.

    “By no longer releasing people into the U.S, we have removed the incentive for those considering illegal entry via smuggling routes,” De La Torre said. “We no longer have people illegally entering and surrendering to agents, expecting to be released, which allows Border Patrol agents to return to patrol and interdiction efforts rather than processing and releasing hundreds of illegal aliens a day. This significant reduction in illegal border crossings underscores the value of strong border security policy and a whole-of-government approach.”

    De La Torre also cited stepped-up deportation efforts nationally.

    “Less money is going to the criminal organizations that facilitate human smuggling and generate violence in Mexico,” he said. “We are now seeing far fewer people being exploited and endangering their lives by using criminal smuggling networks to illegally enter the country.”

    De La Torre said the region is also off to a strong start in narcotics seizures.

    “San Diego Sector had a record-breaking year in fiscal 2025, seizing 11,311 pounds of methamphetamine,” he said. “It looks to continue that momentum, having already taken 970 pounds of methamphetamine, 555 pounds of cocaine and 113 pounds of fentanyl off the streets in the first two months of fiscal 2026.”

    To report suspicious activity to the U.S. Border Patrol, call 911 or the San Diego Sector at 619-498-9900.


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  • Jeanette Vizguerra, detained immigrant activist, likely to be released in coming days

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    Immigrant activist Jeanette Vizguerra is on the precipice of being released from an immigration detention facility after an immigration judge ruled Sunday that she can post bail.

    Denver immigration judge Brea Burgie set Vizguerra’s bail at $5,000, but she included no other restrictions, like an ankle monitor. Her family intends to immediately post the bond, her legal team said in a statement. She likely won’t be released for at least 24 to 48 hours, said Jenn Piper, the program co-director for the American Friends Service Committee of Denver. Still, Burgie’s ruling means Vizguerra, a mother of four children, will be home by Christmas.

    The order comes two days after Vizguerra’s legal team argued that the activist, who was born in Mexico and has spent most of the last 28 years in the United States, posed no flight risk and was not a danger to the community. She has been detained in the Aurora detention center since March, when she was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at her work.

    Vizguerra’s legal team said Sunday that Burgie found that Vizguerra “does not pose a danger to the community,” nor did she pose a flight risk, given her “strong family and community ties” and her previous compliance with court proceedings.

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Thousands March in “ICE Out” rally on Minneapolis’ Lake Street corridor

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    Thousands of people braved the bitter cold Saturday morning, marching more than a mile along Minneapolis’ Lake Street corridor in a massive, coordinated anti-immigration enforcement protest.

    The event — organized by COPAL, Unidos, and local union groups — comes as the Department of Homeland Security’s Operation Metro Surge prepares to enter its third week.

    DHS says its agents have arrested more than 400 people since the operation began three weeks ago. It’s unclear how many of those 400 are still detained or have been sent elsewhere.  

    The federal agency has also touted more than one dozen arrests of individuals with criminal convictions.

    Saturday’s protest and march, however, was a chance for community members to band together, organizers say.

    “We want to make sure that everybody across the world and across the country knows that the mass deportation agenda is not good for immigrants,” said Emilia González Avalos, executive director of UNIDOS. “It’s not good for communities. It’s not good for local economies.”

    She says Operation Metro Surge has had consequences on local business.

    WCCO


    Businesses are struggling. Nobody wants to go out and shop. People are not buying basic things like toilet paper, eggs, milk, formula because they’re scared,” González Avalos said.

    Groups on hand pushed back on the idea that ICE is detaining “the worst of the worst.”

    “Most of the immigrants here are working very hard,” said Silvia Ibanez of the Immigrant Defense Network. “They are here because they are trying to find a better future for their family, and that’s not a crime.”

    Saturday’s march ended at Karmel Mall, which organizers said was symbolic of the way the city’s Latino and Somali communities have both been targets of the latest DHS enforcement.

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    Adam Duxter

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  • ‘Worst of the worst’? Data, personal accounts say otherwise

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    José Trejo López thought the immigration agent separated him from his brother Josué so the officer could ask more questions during a March check-in in New York City.

    José and Josué, 20 and 19 years old at the time, had been to dozens of Immigration and Customs Enforcement check-ins in the nearly 10 years since they fled El Salvador as children with their mother. The appointments often took all day and sometimes required missing school and final exams. José felt embarrassed to tell his teachers and classmates where he was going, but also knew he had to fulfill his immigration obligations and maintain good conduct and his arrest-free record.

    “You have to follow the law, because when you follow the law things go well, right?” José said.

    That day, José heard the rattle of handcuffs. The officer told him not to make a scene. As Josué turned and saw his older brother restrained, a different officer handcuffed him, too.

    By the time the brothers had walked into ICE’s field office for their 8 a.m. appointment, about two months into President Donald Trump’s second administration, rumors swirled that immigration agents were detaining people at routine immigration check-ins. These appointments are typically for people with pending immigration cases who aren’t considered threats to the public.

    Detaining people at check-ins became part of Trump’s effort to carry out mass deportations, one of his 2024 campaign promises. But the strategy contradicted Trump’s and his administration’s assurances that immigration agents would pursue “the worst of the worst always first.”

    “I’m talking about, in particular, starting with the criminals. These are some of the worst people anywhere in the world,” Trump said Aug. 22, 2024.

    On Oct. 31, CBS News correspondent Norah O’Donnell asked Trump about his promise “to deport the worst of the worst, violent criminals.” Trump answered, “That’s what we’re doing.”

    Neither José nor Josué have been convicted of a crime. The same is true for 73% of the more than 65,000 immigrants in ICE detention as of November, a record number of detainees. Nearly half of all immigrants in ICE detention have neither a criminal conviction nor pending criminal charges. Of the immigrants with criminal convictions, 5% have been convicted of violent crime such as murder or rape, according to the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.

    Despite what Trump said, some of the most high-profile moments during his administration’s mass deportation campaign did not lead to large-scale arrests of violent criminals.

    In March, the Department of Homeland Security sent nearly 250 Venezuelan men to a maximum security prison in El Salvador. A ProPublica investigation later found that only 32 of the men had U.S. criminal convictions, most for nonviolent offenses such as retail theft or traffic violations.

    In the first half of a months-long Chicago immigration crackdown dubbed “Operation Midway Blitz,” immigration officers arrested 1,900 people, two-thirds of whom had no criminal convictions or pending charges, according to a Chicago Tribune analysis.

    When we asked the White House whether its detention strategy was in line with what Trump and officials have said publicly, spokesperson Abigail Jackson said: “The Trump Administration’s top immigration enforcement priority is arresting and removing the dangerous violent, illegal criminal aliens that Joe Biden let flood across our Southern Border — of which there are many. Recent ICE arrests include criminal illegal aliens who are rapists, pedophiles, and murderers. But anyone who is illegally present in the country, and as a result breaking U.S. laws, is eligible for deportation if they do not take advantage of self-deportation opportunities.”

    José and Josué were applying for a legal status. They were not in hiding and had spent years appearing before ICE officers and immigration judges. 

    In May, José and Josué were deported to El Salvador, a country the rest of their family had already fled.

    “We followed the law and we were punished,” José said.

    Josué Trejo López, left, and José Trejo López, right, fled El Salvador, when they were 10 and 11 years old. They settled in Georgia where they learned English and eventually graduated high school. (Courtesy of José Trejo López)

    The brothers’ quest for legal residency

    Fleeing threats of gang violence in El Salvador, José and Josué arrived in the U.S. in summer 2016 at ages 11 and 10 with their mother, Alma López Díaz.

    U.S. officials stopped the family at the southern border and released them into the U.S. while they sought asylum. The family moved in with the boys’ aunt in Georgia.

    The brothers enrolled in school and learned English by reading books, using language-learning apps and correcting themselves after classmates teased them.

    By 2020, judges had denied the family’s asylum case and appeals because gang extortion is not generally considered a reason for asylum, said Ala Amoachi, who became the brothers’ immigration lawyer in 2024. José and Josué had received a deportation order. 

    Deportation orders are paused when people file appeals. José and Josué were appealing until 2020, when their appeals ran out, but they continued to appear at ICE check-ins. Amoachi said the government likely didn’t deport them during that time because they had no criminal records and for humanitarian considerations “such as family unity and the fact that they have a younger brother who’s a U.S. citizen and who’s disabled.”

    In 2025, when the brothers were detained, they had a viable pathway to obtaining legal status, based on a process their attorney started in 2024.

    We contacted DHS to ask why the brothers were detained and deported while they had a pending immigration case and received no reply.

    During his second term, Trump has significantly curtailed legal pathways for immigrants. In January, he ended a Biden-era program that let people schedule immigration appointments at the border and legally enter the U.S. to seek asylum. Under Trump, the Department of Homeland Security has stripped hundreds of thousands of people of temporary legal protections that let them live and work in the U.S.

    José continued to try to build what he called his American dream, but his immigration status presented obstacles to buying a car and getting a job.

    In 2024, the brothers moved to Long Island, New York, where their mother’s long-distance partner lived.

    Amoachi initiated a process for them to apply for Special Immigrant Juveniles Status, a protection for young immigrants who were abused, abandoned or neglected by a parent. The brothers’ father had abandoned them, court documents say. When approved, the status allows immigrants to eventually apply for permanent residency. The brothers’ previous lawyer in Georgia had failed to tell them this status was an option, Amoachi said.

    Under the Biden administration, immigrants granted Special Immigrant Juveniles status were protected from deportation. In June, the Trump administration ended the deportation protection program and began detaining and deporting people with Special Immigrant Juveniles status. Immigrant advocacy groups are suing the government over the changes.

    A federal agent wears an Immigration and Customs Enforcement badge while standing outside an immigration courtroom at the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building in New York, June 10, 2025. (AP)

    A sudden, unexpected outcome

    José’s dream of starting fresh in New York was short lived.

    At the March 14 appointment, an ICE officer asked whether the brothers were contesting their removal order, and when José handed over their paperwork, the officer said, “‘This doesn’t work,’” José recounted.

    Within minutes, the brothers were in handcuffs.

    There’s no data about how many people have been arrested while attending required ICE check-ins, but news stories and social media clips are rife with examples of immigrants being detained and separated from family members. Lawyers have warned clients about the tactic. In San Diego, several immigrants are suing the government following their detention at check-ins.

    Amoachi, who has worked as an immigration lawyer for 15 years, said before Trump’s second term, she had never seen a case like José’s and Josué’s — young men with deportation orders but no criminal convictions or gang affiliation and a pending application — end with detention.

    About a week after the brothers were detained, Trump’s border czar Tom Homan said the administration was prioritizing criminals.

    “We’re going to keep targeting the worst of the worst, which we’ve been doing since Day One, and deporting from the United States,” Homan said March 23.

    Homan speaks as Trump listens at a primary election night party in Nashua, New Hampshire, Jan. 23, 2024. (AP)

    Leaving everything behind

    Detention was the first leg in the two-month journey that would lead the brothers back to El Salvador.

    Hours after the brothers were detained, immigration officers shackled them and took them to a Buffalo, New York, detention center.

    In detention, José worked with a detained pastor to host weekly church services. Josué took a job in the kitchen — cleaning dishes and helping serve food — earning $1 a day. He used the money to call his mom or buy ramen, a delicacy in detention. Josué also taught English to fellow detainees and served as an unofficial translator for immigration officers.

    On March 26, a New York family court judge ruled that José and Josué had been abandoned by their father and it was not in their best interest to return to El Salvador. Even so, they remained detained.

    In early May, officers called in the brothers for processing, which would mean they’d either be deported or released, José said. Fellow detainees rooted for them.

    The outcome wasn’t as hoped. The brothers were transported to Louisiana.

    For several days, José and Josué stayed in holding cells dubbed “hieleras,” Spanish for “ice boxes,” with about 100 people in each. On May 7, their mother’s birthday, an officer called the brothers’ names to board a flight to El Salvador. Once on the plane, José said an officer entered  with a separate list of names for people who could get off the flight. That was José’s last hope. But the brothers’ names weren’t called.

    “When the plane took off, I knew I was leaving behind my mom,” José said. “Literally everything was staying behind. Our dreams. Everything.”

    Josué Trejo López, left, and José Trejo López, right, in El Salvador, a country they fled in 2016 and where they have no family. (Courtesy of José Trejo López)

    Stuck in limbo

    Nine years after fleeing their home country, José and Josué, now 21 and 20, landed in El Salvador. They had no passports; U.S. immigration authorities had taken them when they applied for asylum and never returned them.

    Authorities gave each brother a piece of paper with his name on it as a form of identification. When José and Josué arrived at an immigration processing center, they saw people waiting for U.S. deportees. No one was waiting for them.

    “I looked at my brother and said, ‘Now what? What do we do?’” José said.

    Their mother sent their grandmother’s childhood friend to pick them up. For the first few nights, the brothers couldn’t eat or sleep. They have since been diagnosed with PTSD and depression, Amoachi said. 

    A few weeks after José and Josué arrived in El Salvador, Josué’s high school in Georgia held its graduation ceremony. Rather than walking across the stage, he watched from his phone as they announced his name, and he cried in José’s arms.

    Seven months after being deported, José and Josué yearn for the possibility of reuniting with their families. Amoachi has filed several appeals on their behalf.

    José said the brothers followed the conditions: going to court, attending ICE check-ins, having good moral conduct and no criminal record.

    “So what is the legal pathway?” José asked. “There isn’t one.”

    PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

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  • Detained immigration activist Jeanette Vizguerra must get bail hearing before Christmas, judge rules

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    Immigration authorities must provide detained activist Jeanette Vizguerra with a bail hearing in the next week, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in Denver.

    The order offers an avenue for potential temporary release for Vizguerra, an immigrant without proper legal status who has spent nine months in federal immigration detention.

    The activist was arrested in March and has been fighting efforts by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain and deport her ever since. The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Nina Wang requires that authorities give Vizguerra the opportunity to seek a temporary release before an immigration judge in Aurora’s detention center by Christmas Eve.

    Her hearing is currently set for Friday morning, according to one of her attorneys, Laura Lichter.

    If granted bail, Vizguerra would be released from detention while her immigration case continues to wind its way through the courts. Because Vizguerra is fighting her deportation both in federal court and in immigration court, it will likely be “many months or even years” before her case is fully resolved, Wang said.

    The Mexico-born activist has lived in the United States for more than 30 years and has repeatedly fought attempts to deport her, though she accepted a voluntary departure in 2011. During the first Trump administration, she sought shelter in a Denver church and was named by TIME as one of the most influential people of 2017. She left the church’s sanctuary and was given reprieves by ICE.

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Young mother deported from Minnesota to Honduras without her infant

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    After being deported from Minnesota last week, a young mother says she’s back in Honduras without her 8-month-old child. 

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar, 22, lived in St. Cloud with her partner. They moved to South Dakota shortly before having a child in March.

    In a Zoom conversation translated from Spanish to English from her parents’ house in Honduras, Menjivar Aguilar told WCCO about the moment she was detained by federal agents at a September fingerprinting appointment for an approved work permit. 

    “‘Is this your baby?’ I said yes. And soon after they asked if I was breastfeeding. I said no,” said Menjivar Aguilar through a translator. “They arrested me in handcuffs behind my back.”  

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar with her child

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar


    Kelly Clark is Menjivar Aguilar’s immigration lawyer.

    “She signed something that they told her was, ‘If you are removed you can take your baby with you,’ and she signed that document, but at the end she was removed without her baby,” Clark said.

    Menjivar Aguilar explains her two-week journey to the U.S. when she was 17, crossing the Rio Grande with her younger brother, all to escape a gang who was trying to recruit them, and to be with their dad in the U.S. He’s since been deported, too.

    The assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security released this statement: “On September 29, ICE arrested Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar, an illegal alien from Honduras. She illegally entered the U.S. on April 13, 2021, near Eagle Pass, Texas, and was RELEASED into this country by the Biden administration. She received full due process and was ordered removed by an immigration judge on October 12, 2022. This administration is not going to ignore the rule of law.”

    b61215e5-abb3-435e-89fb-a5d8cf2b5648.jpg

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar with her child.

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar


    Her lawyer confirms she had the outstanding order of removal from 2022 after missing a court date, which Menjivar Aquilar says she didn’t know about as her father handled her documents and mail.

    “After that removal order happened, she was given deferred action, which is literally a ‘we’re not going to deport you,’” Clark said. “It is discretionary. It can be revoked, but it wasn’t revoked”

    “All I want is to be with my family, my baby and my partner,” Menjivar Aguilar said.

    When Menjivar Aguilar was detained in September, she was approved for a special immigrant juvenile visa. Her attorney is now working with the family to see if they can get her and her baby back together.

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    Frankie McLister

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  • Young mother deported from Minnesota to Honduras without her infant

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    After being deported from Minnesota last week, a young mother says she’s back in Honduras without her 8-month-old child. 

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjiver Aguilar, 22, lived in St. Cloud with her partner. They moved to South Dakota shortly before having a child in March.

    In a Zoom conversation translated from Spanish to English from her parents’ house in Honduras, Menjivar Aguilar told WCCO about the moment she was detained by federal agents at a September fingerprinting appointment for an approved work permit. 

    “‘Is this your baby?’ I said yes. And soon after they asked if I was breastfeeding. I said no,” said Menjivar Aguilar through a translator. “They arrested me in handcuffs behind my back.”  

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjiver Aguilar with her child

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjiver Aguilar


    Kelly Clark is Menjivar Aguilar’s immigration lawyer.

    “She signed something that they told her was, ‘If you are removed you can take your baby with you,’ and she signed that document, but at the end she was removed without her baby,” Clark said.

    Menjivar Aguilar explains her two-week journey to the U.S. when she was 17, crossing the Rio Grande with her younger brother, all to escape a gang who was trying to recruit them, and to be with their dad in the U.S. He’s since been deported, too.

    The assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security released this statement: “On September 29, ICE arrested Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjivar Aguilar, an illegal alien from Honduras. She illegally entered the U.S. on April 13, 2021, near Eagle Pass, Texas, and was RELEASED into this country by the Biden administration. She received full due process and was ordered removed by an immigration judge on October 12, 2022. This administration is not going to ignore the rule of law.”

    b61215e5-abb3-435e-89fb-a5d8cf2b5648.jpg

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjiver Aguilar with her child.

    Kimberlyn Yaritza Menjiver Aguilar


    Her lawyer confirms she had the outstanding order of removal from 2022 after missing a court date, which Menjivar Aquilar says she didn’t know about as her father handled her documents and mail.

    “After that removal order happened, she was given deferred action, which is literally a ‘we’re not going to deport you,’” Clark said. “It is discretionary. It can be revoked, but it wasn’t revoked”

    “All I want is to be with my family, my baby and my partner,” Menjivar Aguilar said.

    When Menjivar Aguilar was detained in September, she was approved for a special immigrant juvenile visa. Her attorney is now working with the family to see if they can get her and her baby back together.

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  • ‘¿Conoces a la migra?’: Fear of ICE raids creating anxiety for Arlington students – WTOP News

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    At Cardinal Elementary, volunteer Martin Moreno witnessed the fears immigrant children face about ICE raids and deportations. Many students expressed anxiety over family separation and safety.

    Martin Moreno was volunteering at Virginia’s Cardinal Elementary School on a recent Friday afternoon when he was asked a familiar series of questions.

    The two students he was working with, one from Mexico and the other from Guatemala, inquired about his favorite soccer players and where he’s from.

    Moreno and his friends help during the hourlong after-school program that allows students to interact with art. After the introductory questions, a girl he was working with asked, “¿Conoces a la migra?”

    The interaction, Moreno said, is the latest in a series of conversations he’s had with fellow students about fears and anxieties surrounding U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids and deportation efforts. Those feelings, he said, extend to his classmates who were born in the U.S., but are still worried about being bullied or having their family separated.

    Moreno attends Yorktown High School in Arlington.

    “It’s terrifying hearing the stories … including people in my grade and younger kids, talk about ICE, the fear they have, and how they don’t want to be deported,” Moreno said. “All these sort of things are traumatizing. For the past few months, it’s just been terrible.”

    The interaction with the elementary schoolers caught Moreno off guard. But with the kids seemingly enjoying the art exercises, he didn’t want to ask them any follow-up questions.

    When the students finished the activity, Moreno asked them whether they felt safe where they are.

    “These kids are 8 years old,” Moreno said. “They do know about the fear of being deported, and not just being deported, but ICE and all these sorts of things. They’re really interesting, the way they talk about it and the things they know.”

    According to statistics from the Department of Homeland Security, over 520,000 people have been deported as of October of this year. It’s all part of the Donald Trump administration’s efforts to expel millions of individuals who are in the U.S. without legal permission.

    Though it’s difficult to pinpoint how many children have been separated from families that have been deported, migrant children and children of parents without legal status can be sent to shelters for nearly a year.

    Moreno said he has spoken to teachers about the anxieties he’s heard about, but in most cases, educators aren’t “allowed to talk about personal things with students. Therefore, they can’t really help with that.”

    When he hears directly from someone about a similar worry, he recommends a distraction and urges them not think about it.

    “But it seems like they’ll always have this trauma and they can’t stop talking about it,” Moreno said.

    The conversation at Cardinal Elementary motivated Moreno to write a story about his experience.

    “It’s not just about the immigrants itself, it’s also about how the U.S. has always been a place for people to come, and now it feels like it’s not our place anymore,” Moreno said. “We’re seeing this a lot with kids. Kids don’t even feel safe, or they don’t feel welcome in their own country.”

    “As a country, it’s really devastating to see these things happening,” Moreno said.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • Video: How to Make Sense of Law Enforcement in the Streets

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    new video loaded: How to Make Sense of Law Enforcement in the Streets

    The variety of federal forces deployed to support President Trump’s mass deportation campaign and anticrime efforts continues to expand. Often, it can be difficult for the public to tell them apart, or to understand what powers each agency has.

    By Bora Erden, Claire Hogan, Laura Salaberry and Alexandra Ostasiewicz

    November 15, 2025

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    Bora Erden, Claire Hogan, Laura Salaberry and Alexandra Ostasiewicz

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  • Gregory Bovino and CBP are headed next to Charlotte, North Carolina. That was news to city officials

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    Charlotte (CNN) — Before he got a call this week from CNN about reports US Border Patrol agents might be headed to Charlotte, North Carolina, City Councilmember Malcolm Graham had no idea such a plan was even in the cards.

    None of the Charlotte officials CNN reached out to Tuesday or Wednesday about the reported move said they were aware of any plan for Gregory Bovino, the top Border Patrol official in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Democratic-led cities, and his officers to head to Charlotte, then New Orleans, according to two US officials familiar with the planning.

    As of Thursday morning, Bovino has left Chicago with his agents and is headed to Charlotte, according to a source familiar with the planning.

    “As of right now, there has been no coordination, no confirmation, no conversation from anybody. So we’re just kind of watching and waiting,” Graham, a Democrat, told CNN on Wednesday. “It’s just part and parcel of how this administration conducts itself. You learn things through tweets and media reports, no direct communication from anyone in authority. That, for me, is frustrating.”

    It wasn’t until Thursday afternoon that a Charlotte official confirmed for the first time they had spoken with federal officials about the plans.

    Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden – who initially was unaware of the operation – has been “contacted by two separate federal officials confirming US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel will be arriving in the Charlotte area as early as this Saturday or the beginning of next week,” the sheriff’s office told CNN.

    The sheriff’s office said details on the federal operation have not been shared with them and they have not been asked to assist with any enforcement actions.

    The plans have put Charlotte on edge, as local officials seek to reassure residents they will be protected, even as they hold their breath, waiting to see whether they’ll be the next target in the White House’s high-profile, visibly aggressive push to send federal agents into blue cities as part of its immigration crackdown.

    US Rep. Alma Adams, whose district includes much of Charlotte, wrote she was “extremely concerned about the deployment of U.S. Border Patrol and ICE agents to Charlotte” in a post on X.

    “Everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and what we have seen border patrol and ICE agents do in places like Chicago and Los Angeles – using excessive force in their operations and tear gassing peaceful protesters – threatens the wellbeing of the communities they enter,” Adams said.

    In response, Bovino wrote, “Immigrants rest assured, we have your back like we did in Chicago and Los Angeles,” and urged undocumented immigrants to self-deport.

    “Every day, DHS enforces the laws of the nation across the country. We do not discuss future or potential operations,” Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told CNN in a statement Thursday.

    On Tuesday, McLaughlin had told CNN, “We aren’t leaving Chicago.”

    Charlotte-Mecklenburg police are not involved in planning federal operations, nor have they been in contact with federal officials regarding the reported move.

    Charlotte’s city police department doesn’t participate in federal immigration operations and would only get involved when there are warrants or criminal behavior under its jurisdiction, so “people who need local law enforcement services should feel secure calling 911,” said Mayor Vi Lyles, a Democrat, in a social media statement.

    “We still don’t know any details on where they may be operating and to what extent,” Lyles said Thursday. “I understand this news will create uncertainty and anxiety for many people in our community.”

    Lyles asked residents to refrain from sharing unverified information about enforcement activities, which create “more fear and uncertainty when we need to be standing together.”

    Residents are already on edge

    Officials in other cities have described Bovino as leading a law enforcement agency which deploys tactics that are frighteningly authoritarian and used by the president as a cudgel against Democrat-led localities and the people — citizens and noncitizens alike — who live in them.

    Heavy-handed tactics, including immigration sweeps in parking lots and smashing car windows, have fueled alarm, including some among some in the Trump administration, while also garnering praise from senior Homeland Security officials.

    Even though the federal government has not confirmed Bovino’s operation in the city, just the possibility has a community already on edge spooked.

    The Carolina Migrant Network, a nonprofit that offers legal counsel to immigrants, told CNN Wednesday it is already receiving reports from frightened residents who believe they may have spotted Border Patrol in the city, though the organization said it has not verified any of those sightings.

    “We’re getting ready. We’re retraining our ICE verifiers and uplifting our ICE verification network right now,” said Stefania Arteaga, the organization’s co-executive director.

    “The fear is there. People are seeing viral videos of children getting pepper sprayed,” said Arteaga. “These are images that are going viral in our communities. There is fear that this could come to Charlotte.”

    The sometimes violent, viral images from other cities, coupled with an increased immigration enforcement locally this year, have created a chilling effect in Charlotte, City Councilmember Dimple Ajmera said.

    North Carolina’s foreign-born population has increased eightfold since 1990, according to state data.

    “We have more than 150,000 foreign-born residents who call our city their home,” Ajmera told CNN. “Real anxiety and fear are in our communities. Bakeries and coffee shops are empty. Children are not being sent to school.”

    On Friday, North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein encouraged residents who see inappropriate behavior to record it on their phones and notify local law enforcement.

    “We should all focus on and arrest violent criminals and drug traffickers. Unfortunately, that’s not always what we have seen with ICE and Border Patrol Agents in Chicago and elsewhere around the country,” the governor said in a statement. “The vast majority of people they have detained have no criminal convictions, and some are American citizens.”

    Local officials were in the dark

    Ajmera also told CNN that federal officials hadn’t yet coordinated with the city, saying, “We are probably going to find out at the same time the community finds out.”

    Stein, a Democrat, told reporters after an unrelated event in Charlotte on Wednesday afternoon that he’d reached out to the White House after seeing reports in the media, but “we have not heard from them, so we don’t know what their plans are.”

    The governor acknowledged he was concerned by some of the images that came out of the operation in Chicago.

    “We don’t know what their plans are here for Charlotte. If they come in and they are targeted in what they do, we will thank them. If they come in and wreak havoc and cause chaos and fear, we will be very concerned,” he said.

    State Sen. Caleb Theodros, a Democrat representing Charlotte, called the potential operation in his city “political theater.”

    The lone Republican who will sit on the city council next year, after Democrats flipped a GOP seat in this month’s election, told CNN undocumented immigrants who commit crimes should be deported, and the country needs a process to identify illegal immigrants who have not committed crimes and “where appropriate, establish a legal basis for their presence in this country.”

    “CBP operations in any community should be coordinated with state and local authorities to avoid anxiety and disruption among legal residents,” Ed Driggs told CNN.

    Why would CBP head to Charlotte?

    Charlotte hasn’t been previously publicly singled out as an enhanced immigration enforcement target by the Trump administration in the same way as other cities like Chicago, Los Angeles or even New Orleans.

    And while other cities Trump has targeted with his immigration crackdown are closer to US borders, Charlotte is hundreds of miles away from both the northern and southern edges of the country.

    But it is one of the places that Trump has focused on in recent months as part of his crusade against crime in populous, Democratic-run cities.

    Intense public outrage swept across the country earlier this year after chilling surveillance video was released showing a young Ukrainian refugee, Iryna Zarutska, being stabbed to death on the city’s light rail train by a suspect who had a lengthy criminal history and documented mental health struggles.

    Trump posted about the stabbing on Truth Social, criticizing Democratic policies and promoting a Republican candidate in next year’s closely watched Senate race.

    “North Carolina, and every State, needs LAW AND ORDER, and only Republicans will deliver it!” he wrote.

    Though the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department has said data shows the city has seen a reduction in violent crime this year, three Republican members of Congress representing districts around the Charlotte area asked the governor just this month to send the National Guard to Charlotte to help curb crime, highlighting a spike in homicides in the city’s uptown area.

    And Bovino himself will be in familiar ground if he finds himself in Charlotte: He is originally from western North Carolina, graduated from Watauga High School and has degrees from Western Carolina University and Appalachian State University.

    On October 14, Bovino responded to an account on X that said they hoped Bovino’s team would visit the North Carolina city.

    “We’ll put Charlotte on the list!!!” Bovino wrote.

    Asked by CNN last month where he planned to go next, Bovino said any decision would be based on intelligence.

    “We’ve got a great leadership team that we work for that we look to for leadership and that would be President Trump, (Homeland Security Secretary) Kristi Noem, and all of those folks,” he said. “We pay attention to what they say, and we pay attention to what our intelligence says. We marry those up, and we hit it hard.”

    What have local officials said about federal immigration enforcement previously?

    State Republican leadership has long targeted Charlotte and Mecklenburg County’s approach to immigration enforcement. Though Charlotte is not a “sanctuary city,” it does claim it is a “Certified Welcoming City,” a formal designation for cities with commitments to immigrant inclusion.

    Shortly after taking office in 2018, Mecklenburg County Sheriff McFadden ended the county’s decade-long 287(g) partnership with ICE, which allows local and state law enforcement to perform some immigration enforcement duties. McFadden was also an outspoken opponent of a new state law that expanded ICE authorities over people detained in local jails and required sheriffs to work more closely with ICE officials. That law went into effect in October after the Republican-controlled General Assembly overrode Stein’s veto.

    A few weeks ago, McFadden announced that he’d had a “productive” meeting with ICE officials where they discussed how to “establish a better working relationship” and improve communications, along with courthouse procedures.

    “I don’t want to stop ICE from doing their job, but I do want them to do it safely, responsibly, and with proper coordination by notifying our agency ahead of time,” McFadden said in a statement.

    Arteaga, of the Carolina Migrant Network, said her organization has observed a significant spike in ICE activity around the Charlotte area since the start of the year and a further increase in activity since the new law went into effect last month.

    Charlotte’s local officials weren’t the only ones caught off guard

    Charlotte isn’t the only city where officials say they’ve been kept in the dark before an operation like this might begin. The situation in Charlotte right now mirrors, in a more muted manner, the reaction from local officials in Chicago before “Operation Midway Blitz” began there.

    In August, CNN reported that Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said the administration had failed to contact his office or the mayor, ahead of what was then the reported deployment, and he slammed the lack of coordination.

    The New Orleans Mayor’s Office has not responded to CNN’s outreach about possible future Border Patrol operations there.

    Stein noted that Border Patrol “has national jurisdiction so there is nothing that we could do, even if we were to want to, to stop them from coming. We’re just going to have to see what their plans are. We want to hear from them so we can plan accordingly.”

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    Dianne Gallagher, Priscilla Alvarez and CNN

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  • Venezuelan migrants deported to El Salvador’s CECOT were subject to “constant beatings,” report says

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    A Human Rights Watch and Cristosal report details the alleged abuse that Venezuelan migrants were subjected to while detained at El Salvador’s CECOT mega prison. CBS News’ Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports.

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  • ICE is lawlessly detaining Coloradans, the judicial branch is our only hope (Editorial)

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    Federal immigration officials are out of control, and America’s third branch of government needs to rein in the gross abuse of power on display in Colorado and across the nation.

    Gregory Davies, a high-level federal official overseeing deportation arrests in Colorado, told a judge last month that Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials did not have a warrant to arrest Fernando Jaramillo-Solano. But the agents arrested Jaramillo-Solano anyway after mistakenly pulling the Durango man over while he was on his way to drop off his 12-year-old and 15-year-old children at school. ICE officials detained all three, and they spent weeks in Durango before they were shipped to Dilley, Texas.

    This is no simple mistake that is easily rectified.

    ICE is causing real harm to contributing members of our community  — teachers, nurses, mothers and fathers. And children are traumatized in the wake of these unjustified detainments.

    President Donald Trump has upended the mission at ICE, a part of Homeland Security that was once dedicated to keeping Americans safe by deporting criminals. The president has said he plans to deport the more than 13 million people who live in the United States without legal immigration status, regardless of whether they have committed other crimes. But he has gone farther than that, and his agents are now detaining people who do have legal status. The intent is clear — push out immigrants even who are doing everything right.

    Trump’s intent is that the people his agents wrongfully detain will either self-deport becasue conditions are so poor in the federal facilities or that if a judge orders their release, they will be silenced by their fear of reprisal, after all, they were detained once; who can protect these individuals from being detained again?

    But Trump has calculated wrong. These brave victims of Trump’s mass deportation policy are speaking out, and have filed a lawsuit together to try and prevent ICE from terrorizing people.

    Caroline Dias Goncalves, the 19-year-old college student who was detained in Grand Junction and held for almost three weeks in a detention center in Aurora because a sheriff’s deputy thought her perfect English was broken by an accent, testified that her detainment has dramatically affected her life.

    She lost her driver’s license, moved back home and has reduced her course load at the University of Utah.

    To Davies she might be “collateral” damage, but to us she is an injured kid trying to rebuild her life. Her arrest was completely unnecessary and likely illegal. If people like Davies don’t step up to make sure that ICE agents are doing their jobs – targeting and arresting criminals for deportation – then who will?

    The answer of course is that the judicial branch must act as a strong check on the abuses of the executive branch.

    Trump’s immigration enforcement squad cannot just smash and grab Coloradans because they suspect someone might be here illegally. And if these agents do, there must be legal consequences for them and their bosses, no matter how high the orders have come from.

    Gonclaves was lucky. She was released.

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    The Denver Post Editorial Board

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  • The U.S. was a leader in cultural heritage investigations. Now those agents are working immigration enforcement.

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    The Trump administration has disbanded its federal cultural property investigations team and reassigned the agents to immigration enforcement, delivering a blow to one of the world’s leaders in heritage protection and calling into question the future of America’s role in repatriating looted relics, according to multiple people familiar with the changes.

    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security established the Cultural Property, Art and Antiquities program in 2017 to “conduct training on the preservation, protection and investigation of cultural heritage and property; to coordinate and support investigations involving the illicit trafficking of cultural property around the world; and to facilitate the repatriation of illicit cultural items seized as a result of (federal) investigations to the objects and artifacts’ lawful and rightful owners.”

    Looted: Stolen relics, laundered art and a Colorado scholar’s role in the illicit antiquities trade

    Homeland Security Investigations, the department’s investigative arm, once had as many as eight agents in its New York office investigating cultural property cases. A select number of additional agents around the country also worked these cases, including a nationwide investigation into looted Thai objects.

    The Denver Art Museum has previously acknowledged that two relics from Thailand in its collection are part of that federal investigation.

    Since 2007, HSI says it has repatriated over 20,000 items to more than 40 countries.

    But the Trump administration, as part of its unprecedented mass-deportation agenda, earlier this year dissolved the cultural property program and moved the agents to immigration enforcement, multiple people with knowledge of the change told The Denver Post.

    Homeland Security officials did not respond to requests for comment.

    A few months after Trump took office, a Homeland Security staffer with knowledge of the antiquities field told The Post that they received an email from their bosses. The message, according to their recollection: “The way of the world is immigration. Bring your cases to a reasonable conclusion and understand that the priority is immigration operations.”

    This individual, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said they were given no time frame for the new assignment. Leadership, though, was clear that there would be no new cultural property cases.

    Instead of conducting these investigations, this individual said they have been driving detainees between detention facilities and the airport for their deportation.

    “I just spent almost a month cuffing guys up, throwing them in a van from one jail to another,” this person said, adding that the work doesn’t take advantage of their specialized training.

    It’s frustrating, the individual said, because cultural property cases don’t require a lot of agents or resources. They don’t need all types of fancy electronic equipment.

    “The juice from the squeeze on these cases is a lot more than people wanna give it credit,” this person said.

    Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post

    The Bunker Gallery section of the Denver Art Museum’s Southeast Asian art galleries at the Martin Building is pictured on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2022. Emma C. Bunker’s name was removed from the gallery in the wake of an investigation by The Denver Post. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    Thai objects in Denver under investigation

    For years, HSI has been investigating two Thai relics in the Denver Art Museum’s collection after officials in Thailand raised issues with their provenance, or ownership history.

    The pieces — part of the so-called “Prakhon Chai hoard” — were looted in the 1960s from a secret vault at a temple near the Cambodian border, The Post found in a three-part investigation in 2022. Villagers told the newspaper that they recall dredging the vault for these prized objects and selling them to a British collector named Douglas Latchford.

    A federal grand jury decades later indicted Latchford for conspiring to sell plundered Southeast Asian antiquities around the world. He died before he could stand trial.

    Latchford funneled some of his stolen antiquities through the Denver Art Museum due to his close personal relationship with one of the museum’s trustees and volunteers, Emma C. Bunker, The Post found.

    The museum told The Post last week it hasn’t received any communication from the federal government since December, before Trump took office.

    High-profile cases in New York and Denver are proceeding despite the reallocation of resources, one agent said.

    With the federal government mostly out of the game, cultural heritage investigations will be largely left to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in New York City, which has an Antiquities Trafficking Unit.

    But the DA’s office relies heavily on its partnership with HSI, which has federal jurisdiction and can serve warrants and issue summonses across the country. The Manhattan DA’s office only has authority over New York.

    “The future for the DA’s office and the (antiquities trafficking) unit is in jeopardy,” said an individual familiar with the Manhattan unit’s dealings, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. “It’s unclear who’s going to be swearing out warrants going forward.”

    A spokesperson for the Manhattan DA declined to comment for this story.

    Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents join Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conduct traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
    Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents join Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conduct traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    ‘Doing the right thing still has power’

    These changes in enforcement priorities mean countries seeking the repatriation of their cultural items have fewer partners in the U.S. who can help them deal with museums and private collectors.

    “A few years ago, the United States led the world in restoring stolen history — and it mattered,” said Bradley Gordon, an American attorney who for years has represented the Cambodian government in its quest to reclaim its pillaged history from art museums, including Denver’s.

    It’s a shame, he said, that federal agencies have stepped back, even as the Manhattan DA continues its work.

    “This work isn’t just about art; it’s about security, diplomacy and restoring dignity,” Gordon said. “These looted objects were never meant to be hidden in mansions or displayed in museum glass cases far from their origins. When they are returned, entire communities celebrate with sincere happiness. It’s a reminder that doing the right thing still has power in the world.”

    Representatives from Thailand’s government, meanwhile, said they haven’t gotten an update on the Prakhon Chai investigation since Trump returned to office this year.

    Cultural heritage experts say these investigations can serve as an important diplomatic tool and use of soft power — a way for the U.S. to strengthen connections to allies or thaw fraught relations with longtime adversaries.

    In 2013, for example, President Barack Obama’s administration returned a ceremonial drinking vessel from the seventh century B.C. to Iran. For years, American officials said they couldn’t return the million-dollar relic until relations between the two countries normalized. The move — which NBC News titled “archaeo-diplomacy” — represented a small but important gesture as the U.S. sought a nuclear deal with the Middle Eastern power.

    “The return of the artifact reflects the strong respect the United States has for cultural heritage property — in this case, cultural heritage property that was likely looted from Iran and is important to the patrimony of the Iranian people,” the U.S. State Department said at the time. “It also reflects the strong respect the United States has for the Iranian people.”

    A lack of law enforcement activity in this space could also mean that museums and private collectors will be less inclined to return stolen pieces, said Erin Thompson, an art crime professor at New York’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Museums, instead, will maintain the status quo.

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    Sam Tabachnik

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  • A Queens mom and her young family try to find ‘the strength to survive’ after ICE took their husband and father away | amNewYork

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    Ecuadorian native Jessica Supliguicha sat inside her Queens apartment, cradling her month-old baby. She wept as she thought of her husband, Jorge, who had never met the girl she held in her arms; he had been deported to Ecuador three days before their baby was born.

    “I don’t know where I get the strength to survive,” Supliguicha said with tears welling in her eyes.

    The tot’s father was taken into custody by ICE agents inside 26 Federal Plaza on Sept. 6; meanwhile, his eight-month pregnant wife was outside of the building waiting to reunite with him. Although other families emerged, Jorge never came out. A lawyer called Supliguicha frantically, stating that Jorge had been detained.

    It was a moment that not only left her traumatized, with only a month post-partum, she would now be unable to provide for her family. Hearing his mother sob softly, her 9-year-old son Dylan sidled over to her and embraced her.

    How Jorge and Jessica met

    Photo by Dean Moses
    Ecuadorian native Jessica Supliguicha sat inside her Queens apartment, cradling her month-old baby. She wept as she thought of her husband, Jorge, who had never met the girl she held in her arms. Heartbreakingly for Supliguicha, Jorge was deported to Ecuador three days before their baby was born.Photo by Dean Moses

    amNewYork followed Supliguicha as she went about her daily life — preparing food for the newborn and folding laundry while Dylan watched YouTube videos and took his Halloween costume for a test spin.

    “It’s Huggy Wuggy!” the boy exclaimed, disappearing into a blue fury costume. Dylan also explained that he was preparing for the Big Halloween dance at school, something he was brimming with excitement over.

    “It’s Huggy Wuggy!” the boy exclaimed, disappearing into a blue fury costume. Dylan also explained that he was preparing for the Big Halloween dance at school, something he was brimming with excitement over.Photo by Dean Moses

    Despite both of them attempting to put on a brave face, a sense of sadness and despair clung to the walls and ceilings of the home, a pressure that felt as though it added weight to each movement.

    Dylan was born out of a previous marriage, but Jorge was, for all intents and purposes, his father — serving as the patriarch he did not have.

    “Jorge came to fill up that emptiness that Dylan needed,” Supliguicha said.

    Now, Dylan is left without a father figure and feels that the only friend he has is his cat.

    For Jorge and Supliguicha, it was a time-old romance of two friends who just never got the timing right. They had known each other since they were just 15 years old, but it wasn’t until 20 years later that fate struck when they reconnected in 2023.

    Both already had families and kids, but something changed this time. Supliguicha saw Jorge with different eyes.

    Both still feared the violence that continued to brew in their motherland. While Supliguicha became a citizen in 2023 after ten years of residency, Jorge had fled stateside after one of his brothers was killed in Ecuador by a gang. When they both found each other in New York, they also discovered comfort in one another and fell in love.Photo by Dean Moses

    Both still feared the violence that continued to brew in their motherland. While Supliguicha became a citizen in 2023 after 10 years of residency, Jorge had fled stateside after one of his brothers was killed in Ecuador by a gang.

    When they met in New York, they also discovered comfort in each other and fell in love.

    Jorge was attempting to resolve the situation with his papers since he had a deportation order that had to be amended because he was marrying a US citizen and his wife was pregnant. They fitted him with an ankle monitor without explanation; he wore the monitor when they tied the knot.

    After four days of marriage, Jorge received a letter stating that he had to appear in court on Sept. 6. He complied with the order, and was subsequently taken into custody by ICE. Supliguicha has not seen him since.

    “I felt that the world was coming to an end,” Supliguicha said. “They change your life overnight.”

    Photo by Dean Moses
    Photo by Dean Moses

    She was shocked from the moment she lost Jorge in the hands of ICE, and as the days passed, she entered the final month of her pregnancy and fell into a depressive state.

    “I became anemic. She (her baby) was underweight,” Supliguicha said.

    Between tears, Supliguicha remembered how she felt the moment they gave her her child, Maite Cristina, after giving birth on Oct. 5. She explains how her pregnancy was an at-risk one, since she had miscarried in the past.

    Photo by Dean Moses
    Photo by Dean Moses

    “She was a girl that I was going to lose from the beginning. She overcame many things(during the pregnancy). But, I never thought that at eight months she would also have to overcome the absence of her father,” Supliguicha said.

    Still, something was missing: Jorge.

    Currently, Jorge is hiding in Ecuador, where he could be persecuted and killed. Supliguicha fears for her husband’s life, with the continued violence on the streets and his brother being murdered by gang members, Jorge is in hiding to survive.

    The dread for her husband’s life and whether her family will ever see him again is an unbearable weight Supliguicha must carry while caring for her family alone.

    “A former sister in law got involved with that gang of robberies and drugs. His family was harmed.” Supliguicha explains why her husband is in danger in Ecuador. “He couldn’t prove here with facts that he was in danger. Right now, he is in danger. He’s always hiding. He doesn’t go out much.”

    Both are waiting for the I-130 form, a petition used by U.S. citizens to bring a non-citizen relative who wants to come to the U.S, to be approved.

    In the meantime, Supliguicha plans to return to work in three weeks because she is struggling to make ends meet and cannot afford the rent.

    Despite both of them attempting to put on a brave face, a sense of sadness and despair clung to the walls and ceilings of the home, a pressure that felt as though it added weight to each movement.Photo by Dean Moses

    Supliguicha created a GoFundMe account to help support her family. She hopes for the future to reunify the family and wishes her daughter to be able to grow with her father.

    “All I can do is move forward and find a way to do things the way they’re supposed to be. Hoping that the paperwork will one day be approved,” she said. 

    At the same time, she emphasizes that her situation is not unique, but rather one of many.

    “I would like them to stop and give them the opportunity for the people who were deported to be reunited, to be together again. Experiencing family separation is awful. My daughter is very young; she can’t understand, but there are older children who can. My husband’s daughters, who were also left without a father,” Supliguichia said.

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    By Dean Moses, Amanda Moses, and Florencia Arozarena

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  • Citing AP investigation, senators demand answers on use of full-body restraints during deportations – WTOP News

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    A “near-total secrecy” surrounding deportation flights and the use of full-body restraints onboard is raising “serious human rights concerns,” a group of 11 Democratic U.S. senators wrote in a letter Thursday to top immigration officials.

    WASHINGTON (AP) — A “near-total secrecy” surrounding deportation flights and the use of full-body restraints onboard is raising “serious human rights concerns,” a group of 11 Democratic U.S. senators wrote in a letter Thursday to top immigration officials.

    U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland called upon U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to provide a full accounting of its air operations and to stop using the black and yellow restraints known as the WRAP until the agency explains its policies for the device and resolves other questions about its use on immigration detainees.

    “I think it’s very problematic,” Van Hollen told The Associated Press. “They want to keep the public in the dark.”

    The senators’ letter cites an AP investigation this month that revealed several examples of ICE using the device on people — sometimes for hours — on deportation flights dating to 2020. Van Hollen was joined by U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Alex Padilla of California, Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, and six others.

    The WRAP is the subject of several federal lawsuits likening incorrect usage of the device to punishment and even torture. Advocates have expressed concern that ICE is not tracking the WRAP’s use as required by federal law when officers use force, making it difficult to discern exactly how many people are being subjected to the restraints.

    “When an organization like DHS doesn’t want transparency, it’s because they don’t want people to know what they’re doing,” Van Hollen said, referring to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s parent agency.

    In addition to the letter, U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Ill., told AP in a statement that she is working on a bill to rein in the agency’s use of the WRAP.

    “ICE’s use of full-body restraints to immobilize detained individuals raises serious concerns about the safety, dignity, and human rights of those under their jurisdiction,” Ramirez said.

    DHS has not answered detailed questions from the AP about the use of the WRAP and did not respond to a request for comment Thursday. DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin previously said that ICE’s practices “align with those followed by other relevant authorities and is fully in line with established legal standards.”

    The manufacturer of the WRAP, Safe Restraints Inc., said in a statement to AP that the device “was specifically designed to prevent pain and injury.”

    “Our priority is preserving life and preventing harm,” the company said. “We strongly oppose any misuse or untrained use of this equipment.”

    The AP found that DHS has paid Safe Restraints Inc. $268,523 since it started purchasing the devices in late 2015, during the Obama administration. Government purchasing records show the two Trump administrations have been responsible for about 91% of that spending.

    ICE would not provide AP with records documenting its use of the WRAP despite multiple requests, and it’s not clear how frequently it has been used in the current and prior administrations.

    In addition to reporting on ICE’s use of the device, the AP identified a dozen fatal cases in the last decade where local police or jailers around the U.S. used the WRAP and autopsies determined “restraint” played a role in the death.

    “The brutal, inhumane tactics of ICE continue to jeopardize people’s lives across the country,” Ramirez said. “ICE is acting outside of oversight or accountability. That can’t go on.”

    ___

    Mustian reported from Washington and New York and Dearen reported from Los Angeles.

    ___

    Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org or https://www.ap.org/tips/.

    Copyright
    © 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • A major ICE shake-up is reportedly underway affecting at least half of the agency’s top leadership positions | Fortune

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is reassigning at least half the top leadership at Immigration and Customs Enforcement offices around the country in a major shake-up of the agency responsible for carrying out the president’s vision for mass deportations, according to one current and one former U.S. government official.

    The current official, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity, said 12 ICE field office directors — the officers who run the network of field offices around the country responsible for immigration enforcement — were being reassigned.

    Half are to be replaced by existing or retired Customs and Border Protection staff, while the other half would be replaced by ICE officers, both the current and former officials said. The changes were initiated by the Homeland Security Department, the current official said, without specifying which cities were impacted.

    The former official, who has direct knowledge of the changes and spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss information that was not intended for public release, said on top of the 12 reassignments, leaders in another four cities were being swapped out through retirements or other circumstances. He said the cities include major immigration enforcement targets such as Chicago, Los Angeles and Washington.

    He added that ICE leadership has been discussing the changes with other Trump administration officials for some time as part of a broad review of the agency.

    The reason for the personnel changes wasn’t immediately clear. But they indicate a greater integration of Border Patrol agents in ICE at a time when Customs and Border Protection has been accused of using heavy-handed tactics in its immigration enforcement.

    A major shakeup in Trump’s immigration enforcement leadership

    With a total of 25 field offices around the country, the reassignments amount to turnover of about half or more of the top staffers carrying out the president’s hardline immigration enforcement plans, which has seen a major deployment of law enforcement in major American cities, thousands of arrests and surging fear among residents, especially in immigrant communities.

    Homeland Security and the White House did not comment on the reassignments and each instead highlighted that all elements of immigration enforcement were working as one team.

    Putting Customs and Border Protection officers into top positions within Immigration and Customs Enforcement would create an expanded role for an agency that is already at the forefront of many of the aggressive tactics seen in both Los Angeles and now in Chicago.

    CBP officers — specifically Border Patrol agents — have carried out some of the most controversial operations as part of immigration crackdowns in both of those cities, including a recent raid in Chicago where officers rappelled down onto a building in an apartment complex from a helicopter. Border Patrol agents have also popped out of a moving truck and chased after people and conducted patrols through downtown Chicago.

    Border Patrol agents protect the land and water between the official border crossings to prevent human trafficking, drug smuggling or other types of contraband from entering the U.S. ICE, since its creation in 2003, is the main agency responsible for immigration enforcement inside the country.

    But during the Trump administration, Border Patrol agents have been taking part in immigration enforcement operations around the country, far from their more traditional duties.

    Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol sector chief from California who has been heading the Border Patrol’s operations in both cities, is himself accused of throwing tear gas canisters at protesters and took the stand Tuesday as a defendant in a federal lawsuit about whether federal officials are using excessive force in Chicago.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement says its agents carry out “targeted enforcement operations,” which often involve hours of time staking out people they’re trying to remove from the country.

    It’s the latest in a series of personnel changes

    This is the third shake-up at ICE since Trump took office, reflecting the importance of the agency’s role in executing the president’s vision.

    In February, Homeland Security reassigned Caleb Vitello, the acting director of ICE, to another position. Todd Lyons, a veteran ICE agent, was later announced as the new acting head of the agency, a position he still holds.

    Then in May, ICE announced the reassignment of the two top officials heading the agency’s main branches.

    A spokesperson for Homeland Security, Tricia McLaughlin, did not comment Tuesday on the personnel changes but said in a statement that the department remained “laser focused on RESULTS and we will deliver.”

    “This is one team, one fight,” she said. “President (Donald) Trump has a brilliant, tenacious team led by Secretary (Kristi) Noem to deliver on the American people’s mandate to remove criminal illegal aliens from this country.”

    White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in an e-mailed statement: “The President’s entire team is working in lockstep to implement the President’s policy agenda, and the tremendous results from securing the border to deporting criminal illegal aliens speak for themselves.”

    ___

    Spagat reported from Chicago.

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    Rebecca Santana, Elliot Spagat, The Associated Press

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  • DHS to soon deport Abrego Garcia to African nation after illegal alien’s return from El Salvador, filing says

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    The Trump administration said it could soon deport Salvadoran illegal immigrant Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to the African nation of Liberia after reaching an agreement with that country, according to a Department of Homeland Security filing Friday.

    The court filing said that Abrego Garcia could be sent to the West African nation as soon as Oct. 31 to fulfill a standing deportation order against him.

    Abrego Garcia was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March despite a 2019 protection finding and a court order barring his removal to his home country. His case has become a focal point in the clash between Trump’s hardline deportation agenda and Democratic efforts to block removals.

    ABREGO GARCIA RELEASED FROM JAIL, WILL RETURN TO MARYLAND TO AWAIT TRIAL

    Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office in Baltimore on Monday, Aug. 25, 2025 (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The filing noted that Abrego Garcia’s attorneys cited more than 20 countries he allegedly fears would prosecute or torture him if he were removed there and that Liberia is not on that list.

    “Liberia is a thriving democracy and one of the United States’s closest partners on the African continent,” the filing said.

    The filing said the country’s national language is English, its constitution “provides robust protections for human rights,” and Liberia is “committed to the humane treatment of refugees.”

    DHS said in the filing that it has received diplomatic assurances from Liberia about the humane treatment of people removed there.

    Attorneys for Abrego Garcia blasted the administration’s latest move as political retribution, arguing the latest deportation plan is part of a pattern of punitive deportation tactics.

    “After failed attempts with Uganda, Eswatini, and Ghana, ICE now seeks to deport our client, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, to Liberia, a country with which he has no connection, thousands of miles from his family and home in Maryland,” attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg said in a statement, according to The Associated Press.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife Jennifer Vasquez Sura attend a prayer vigil before he enters a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office on Aug. 25, 2025, in Baltimore. ( Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    ABREGO GARCIA RENEWS PUSH FOR ASYLUM IN US, REVEALS NEW COUNTRY WILLING TO ACCEPT HIM

    “Costa Rica stands ready to accept him as a refugee, a viable and lawful option,” the lawyer added. “Yet the government has chosen a course calculated to inflict maximum hardship. These actions are punitive, cruel and unconstitutional.”

    Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., a staunch supporter of Abrego Garcia, condemned the latest filing on Friday. Van Hollen flew to El Salvador in April in a publicized visit to meet Abrego Garcia in prison and has led the effort to get him released.

    “The Trump Administration has been desperately shopping for faraway countries they can ship Kilmar Abrego Garcia to in order to deny his constitutional due process right to defend himself against the charges they have brought,” Van Hollen said in a statement.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia meets with Sen. Van Hollen

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia meets with Sen. Van Hollen, D-Md., in El Salvador. (X / @ChrisVanHollen)

    “Clearly, Trump’s cronies want to avoid answering for the claim that they are engaged in a vindictive prosecution against Abrego Garcia, after a federal judge concluded earlier this month that his prosecution ‘may stem from retaliation by the DOJ and DHS due to Abrego’s successful challenge of his unlawful deportation in Maryland.’ Kilmar must be allowed his day in court to fight for his rights,” the senator said.

    Abrego Garcia entered the U.S. illegally in 2011 and was issued a deportation order in 2019. Two previous judges found he was likely affiliated with MS-13.

    Trump administration officials acknowledged in court that his deportation had been an administrative error, although some top Trump officials said he was correctly removed and contended he’s a member of the notorious MS-13 gang.

    READ THE FILING. APP USERS CLICK HERE

    One immigration judge in 2019 found that Garcia had not sufficiently refuted evidence of MS-13 affiliation and was thus removable to anywhere other than El Salvador because of a threat from a rival gang.

    The latest move to deport him comes as Abrego Garcia remains in immigration detention in Pennsylvania. A federal judge in Maryland previously barred his immediate deportation while reviewing claims that the government is retaliating against him for successfully challenging his wrongful removal earlier this year.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    The same judge wrote in an October order that his prosecution “may stem from retaliation by the DOJ and DHS,” while a separate case in Tennessee over human smuggling charges is still pending.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Justice Dept. seeks to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia – WTOP News

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    In a filing with a federal judge in Maryland, the Justice Department said Friday the Trump administration is seeking to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the man who was mistakenly deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador, continues to fight in court against his potential deportation to a third country. CBS News’ Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports.

    ▶ Watch Video: Kilmar Abrego Garcia fight deportations plans

    Washington — The Justice Department said Friday that the Trump administration is seeking to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia and said the West African nation has agreed to accept him.

    In a filing with a federal judge in Maryland, Justice Department lawyers said that immigration officials expect to formally notify Abrego Garcia later Friday that Liberia has been designated as the new country of removal. They said the Trump administration expects to be able to deport Abrego Garcia as soon as Oct. 31.

    The administration has “received diplomatic assurances regarding the treatment of third-country individuals removed to Liberia from the United States and are making the final necessary arrangements for [Abrego Garcia’s] removal,” they wrote.

    In the court filing, the Justice Department said that Abrego Garcia had identified more than 20 countries that he fears would persecute or torture him if he were removed there, and Liberia is not on the list.

    “Liberia is a thriving democracy and one of the United States’s closest partners on the African continent,” they wrote.

    Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, Abrego Garcia’s attorney, said the administration “has chosen yet another path that feels designed to inflict maximum hardship.”

    “Their actions are punitive, cruel and unconstitutional,” Sandoval-Moshenberg said. “Unless Liberia guarantees that it will not re-deport Mr. Abrego Garcia to El Salvador, then sending him to Liberia is no less unlawful than sending him directly to El Salvador a second time.”

    The Trump administration’s plan to remove Abrego Garcia to Liberia comes as the Maryland judge, Paula Xinis, is weighing whether to release the Salvadoran man from immigration custody while a challenge to the Department of Homeland Security’s ongoing efforts to deport him for a second time moves forward.

    Abrego Garcia was removed to his home country of El Salvador in March and imprisoned there despite having been granted a legal status in 2019 that prohibited the Department of Homeland Security from removing him there because of possible persecution by local gangs. An immigration official with the Trump administration admitted that Abrego Garcia’s removal to El Salvador was an error, and Xinis ordered the Department of Homeland Security to facilitate his return to the U.S.

    But immigration officials resisted doing so for months. Abrego Garcia was brought back to the U.S. in June, but only after a federal grand jury in Tennessee indicted him on two charges of human smuggling stemming from a November 2022 traffic stop.

    Abrego Garcia pleaded not guilty to the charges, and a judge in Tennessee said he should be released on bail ahead of the criminal trial, which is set to begin in January. But he remained in criminal confinement for several more weeks because his lawyers were concerned that the Trump administration would arrest him again upon his release and deport him.

    Abrego Garcia was released from the Putnam County Jail in Tennessee in August and returned to Maryland, where he has lived since coming to the U.S. illegally in 2011. Days later, he was taken into custody by immigration authorities after being summoned for an interview at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Baltimore. The Trump administration notified Abrego Garcia’s lawyers he may be deported to Uganda, though Abrego Garcia expressed fear of persecution and torture, as well as a concern that the Ugandan government would send him back to El Salvador.

    Since then, the Trump administration has searched for countries to accept Abrego Garcia and has sought to remove him to the African nations of Eswatini and Ghana. Neither of those two countries nor Uganda have agreed to take him. Abrego Garcia has said he would go to Costa Rica and designated it as his preferred country of removal. While Costa Rica has indicated it would provide him refugee status or residency, a Justice Department lawyer said during a hearing earlier this month there had not been discussions about deporting him there.

    Sandoval-Moshenberg, his lawyer, reiterated on Friday that Costa Rica “remains a viable and lawful option.”

    Xinis has forbidden the Trump administration from deporting Abrego Garcia while she considers his challenge to his ongoing detention by immigration officials and the efforts to remove him again.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • ICE arrests Chicago man whose teenage daughter is fighting cancer: ‘He belongs with her’

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    Ofelia Torres has spent almost every day of the past month at Lurie Children’s Hospital, where the 16-year-old Lake View High School student is fighting cancer.

    After a tough few weeks where the disease spread through her body and doctors inserted a drain in her abdomen to relieve fluid, the Torres family worked with her oncologist to arrange a short getaway over the weekend, where she and three of her closest friends could enjoy a Saturday of simple pleasures and normalcy before a scheduled return to the hospital and chemotherapy.

    The girls were getting their nails done as Ofelia’s father, Ruben Torres Maldonado, was at work. 

    Hours later, he called his wife Sandibell Hidalgo from a number that came up on caller ID as “prison / jail.”

    “It’s me,” he said. “They got me.”

    In that moment, the Torres family experienced the pain of separation gripping hundreds of immigrant families across Chicago and the suburbs since Donald Trump’s administration last month launched “Operation Midway Blitz,” the president’s aggressive deportation plan.

    Now they’re fighting cancer and the United States government. Their attorney, Kalman Resnick, filed a petition in federal court to have him freed while Torres’ deportation case proceeds.

    His family needs him, they say.

    A photo of Ofelia Torres and her father, Ruben Torres Maldonado, on display in the family’s living room in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2025. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

    Ruben Torres and Sandibell Hidalgo are parents of not only Ofelia, but also a 4-year-old son, Nathan. The father, a 40-year-old painter and home renovator, is the primary breadwinner in a household with carefully balanced child care responsibilities in their Portage Park bungalow. The mother often sleeps at the hospital while he takes care of their preschooler.

    “He will take Nathan to school every morning and make sure he leaves from work in time to pick him up and then comes home, gives him dinner and takes him to see us,” Hidalgo said in an interview at her home. “Every day, he was doing the same thing. I’m like, how am I going to be able to do this?”

    Resnick said he will try to prevent Torres’ deportation “on account of his many years of residence in the U.S., his good moral character, and the exceptional and extremely (unusual) hardships his children will experience if he were removed from the United States,” he wrote.

    In a statement, Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin accused Maldonado of “habitual driving offenses” and said he backed into a government vehicle while attempting to flee. She called his legal filing “nothing more than a desperate Hail Mary attempt” to keep him in the country.

    Meanwhile, his wife sat in the living room of the family home Monday. Her husband renovated their bungalow basement. Medical instructions from Lurie on how to care for their daughter sat on a table nearby.

    “We came because this is a great country, because our lives were gonna be better,” Hidalgo said. “He belongs with her, and especially in this portion, because we don’t know if she’s gonna make it. She has Stage 4 cancer, she has it all over her bones. The treatment is so aggressive, that it will put her down for days. Her mental and spirit, it’s amazing, but her body is sometimes getting tired. Who knows how long the body’s gonna take it? So he deserves to be with her.”

    Ofelia told the Tribune her father instilled in her the value of independence. For her 15th birthday, he took her to the Chicago Cultural Center for traditional quinceanera photos but instead of spending money on a big party, he bought her a car.

    Torres carefully searched Facebook Marketplace listings looking for the perfect vehicle. When he saw a candidate, he meticulously inspected the vehicle and took it on test drives. 

    “He would examine every little corner of this car. Under the car, the wheels, this and that,” Ofelia said. “He’s like, this car, this car’s not good, this car’s not good. It wasn’t taken care of.”

    Eventually, they found a 2006 Ford Mustang with 39,000 miles on it that had been well cared for and largely kept in a garage.

    “My dad test drove it. He was like, this car, this is your car,” Ofelia said. “On my birthday, the day of my birthday, he bought me my car.”

    One day, Ofelia drove home with the top down as her dad was sitting on the stairs. He stared at her quietly and intently, she recalled. She asked if there was something on her face and he said no.

    Later, he told her, “that day that you came home with your car, I felt like I had done it. I made it in life. Everything I had done, everything I worked for, everything I sacrificed, everything I suffered, was worth it because that’s what I wanted to see.” 

    Growing up, he took Ofelia to boxing and karate classes. He would coach her on how to fight. “It just made me stronger and that was our bonding,” she said. 

    “His number one goal with raising at least me, was making sure that I never had to rely on anyone,” she said. “That once I moved out of the house, that I grew up, that I knew how to take care of myself. He wanted me to be an independent person.”

    While the family is close-knit and supports one another, Hidalgo said the father has taken his daughter’s health problems hard.

    “One thing he always says, especially when things don’t go right with the treatment or she has to go through a procedure and he sees all the pain that she’s going through. He says, why us? We’re not bad people. We don’t kill, we don’t steal. We’re just hard workers,” Hidalgo said. “We just came to this country to make our lives better and there’s people out there that do so bad in this world and nothing happens to them. Why us? Why are we going through this? My answer was, like, ‘God only knows.’”

    The family is well-known and beloved in their pockets of Chicago. Ofelia’s teacher, Valerie Wadycki, described her as a girl who donated nutrition shakes she didn’t like to a food pantry rather than throwing them away.

    Earlier this year, Ofelia did a research project for Wadycki about the cost of health care that spread her story further.

    Impressed by Ofelia’s interest in the subject, Wadycki introduced her to her friend, state Rep. Laura Faver Dias from Grayslake, who had an hourlong discussion with the teenager.

    “She is smart, funny, inquisitive, engaging. We just talked about state health care policy. We talked about her fears, our shared fears about what happens to Medicaid for her and her family as she is navigating cancer,” Dias recalled in an interview. “The hoops her mom has had to jump through to make sure they get the best care possible because they’re on Medicaid.”

    Dias introduced Torres to the family’s state representative, Will Guzzardi, who was inspired by the girl’s sharp mind.

    “This family is going through so much. They’re so strong,” Guzzardi said. “Ophelia is so brave.”

    Ald. Matt Martin, 47th, whose ward includes the high school, noted cancer patients need an ironclad support network.

    “As a father, I find it nearly impossible to put into words how horrific this situation is,” Martin said. “At a time when Ofelia and her family need their father the most, ICE has torn their family apart.”

    Over the weekend, Ofelia took to work fighting for her father. She made a video that has since been published on a GoFundMe page by her teacher about the situation.

    “I find it so unfair that hardworking immigrant families are being targeted because they were not born here,” Ofelia said in the recording.

    Speaking to the world, Ofelia said she was making the video “to spread awareness and remind the public that immigrants are humans with families and deserve to be treated with love and respect like anyone else.”

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    Gregory Royal Pratt

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  • ICE’s use of full-body restraints during immigration deportations raises concerns

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    The Nigerian man described being roused with other detainees in September in the middle of the night. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers clasped shackles on their hands and feet, he said, and told them they were being sent to Ghana, even though none of them was from there.

    When they asked to speak to their attorney, he said, the officers refused and straitjacketed the already-shackled men in full-body restraint suits called the WRAP, then loaded them onto a plane for the 16-hour-flight to West Africa.

    Referred to as “the burrito” or “the bag,” the WRAP has become a harrowing part of deportations for some immigrants.

    “It was just like a kidnapping,” the Nigerian man, who’s part of a federal lawsuit, told The Associated Press in an interview from the detainment camp in which he and other deportees were being held in Ghana. Like others placed in the restraints interviewed by the AP, he spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

    The AP identified multiple examples of ICE using the black-and-yellow full-body restraint device, the WRAP, in deportations. Its use was described to the AP by five people who said they were restrained in the device, sometimes for hours, on ICE deportation flights dating to 2020. And witnesses and family members in four countries told the AP about its use on at least seven other people this year.

    The AP found ICE has used the device despite internal concerns voiced in a 2023 report by the civil rights division of its parent agency, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, in part due to reports of deaths involving use of the WRAP by local law enforcement. And the AP has identified a dozen fatal cases in the last decade where local police or jailers around the U.S. used the WRAP and autopsies determined “restraint” played a role in the death.

    The WRAP is the subject of a growing number of federal lawsuits likening incorrect usage of the device to punishment and even torture, whether used in a jail or by immigration authorities during international flights. Among advocates’ concerns is that ICE is not tracking the WRAP’s use as required by federal law when officers use force.

    DHS has paid Safe Restraints Inc., the WRAP’s California-based maker, $268,523 since it started purchasing the devices in late 2015 during the Obama administration. Government purchasing records show the two Trump administrations have been responsible for about 91% of that spending. ICE would not provide AP with records documenting its use of the WRAP despite multiple requests, and it’s not clear how frequently it has been used in the current and prior administrations.

    The WRAP’s manufacturer says it intended the device is intended to be a lifesaver for law enforcement confronting erratic people who were physically attacking officers or harming themselves.

    But ICE officials have a much lower threshold for deploying the WRAP than the manufacturer advises, the AP found. Detainees interviewed by the AP said ICE officers used the restraints on them after they had been shackled. They said this was done to intimidate or punish them for asking to speak to their attorneys or expressing fear at being deported, often to places they fled due to violence and torture.

    The West African deportee described a terrifying, hourslong experience that left his legs swollen to the point where he walked with a limp.

    “They bundled me and my colleagues,” he said, “tied us up in a straitjacket.”

    ICE and DHS would not answer detailed questions from the AP and refused a request for the government’s policy for when and how to use the WRAP.

    “The use of restraints on detainees during deportation flights has been long standing, standard ICE protocol and an essential measure to ensure the safety and well-being of both detainees and the officers/agents accompanying them,” Tricia McLaughlin, DHS’ spokesperson, said in an email to AP. “Our practices align with those followed by other relevant authorities and is fully in line with established legal standards.”

    The agency would not specify those authorities or describe its practices.

    “The use of these devices is inhumane and incompatible with our nation’s fundamental values,” said Noah Baron, an attorney for the West African deportees.

    Charles Hammond, CEO of Safe Restraints Inc., said his Walnut Creek company has made a modified version of the device for ICE, with changes meant to allow people to be kept in it during flights and long bus trips.

    ICE’s version includes a ring on the front of the suit that allows a subject’s cuffed hands to be attached while still allowing for limited use to eat and drink, he said. In addition, the ICE version has “soft elbow cuffs,” Hammond said, which connect in the back so a person can move for proper circulation but can’t flip an elbow out to hit someone.

    An AP reporter recounted for Hammond some of the allegations made by people who had been placed in the WRAP for long flights. All of those interviewed by AP said their hands and feet were already restrained by chains. All denied fighting with officers, saying they were either crying or pleading against their deportation to countries they deemed dangerous.

    Hammond said that, if true that some people were not being violent and simply protesting verbally, putting them in the WRAP could be improper use.

    “That’s not the purpose of the WRAP. If (the deportee) is a current or potential risk to themselves, to officers, to staff, to the plane, restraints are justified. If it’s not, then restraints aren’t.”

    ‘Please help me’

    Juan Antonio Pineda said he was put into “a bag” in late September and driven by immigration officers to the Mexico border. It was black with yellow stripes and had straps that immobilized his body and connected over his shoulders — the WRAP.

    Pineda, who is from El Salvador, was in the U.S. legally, he said in a video from an ICE detention center in Arizona. On Sept. 3, he went to an appointment in Maryland to get permission for another year, his wife, Xiomara Ochoa, said in an interview from El Salvador. Instead, he was detained by ICE and told he’d be deported to Mexico, but the documents he was shown had someone else’s name, he said. Even so, he was sent to the Florence Service Processing Center detention facility in Arizona.

    Early morning on Wednesday, Sept. 24, he said officers tied his hands and legs, placed him into the “bag” and drove him four hours to the border. When he refused to sign the deportation papers, Pineda alleges officers broke his right arm and gave him a black eye before driving him back another four hours in the “bag.” The AP was unable to independently confirm how he was injured. Pineda’s video shows him with a cast on his arm and bruising on his face.

    The next day, Thursday, Sept. 25, they tied him up again, put him in the bag and drove him to the border, where Mexican immigration officials turned him away, he said.

    “Eight hours there and back and they don’t give me food or water or anything,” he said in the video, which his wife shared with the AP. “Please help me.”

    He was ultimately deported to Mexico, Ochoa said.

    ICE did not respond to multiple requests for comment from the AP regarding Pineda’s case.

    In addition to the Nigerian man flown to Ghana, four others interviewed by AP said they were placed in the WRAP and carried onto deportation flights since the first Trump administration.

    As U.S. immigration officials move aggressively to meet the president’s deportation goals, advocates and attorneys for immigrants are echoing the concerns of the government’s own civil rights inquiry that ICE officers aren’t trained on how to use the restraints.

    “This should be a last resort type of restraint after they’ve already tried other things,” said Fatma Marouf, a Texas A&M law professor who has sued ICE over its use of the device. “Just being bound up like that can inflict a lot of psychological harm.”

    Some deportees said they were left in the WRAP for an entire fight. A lawsuit filed on behalf of the Nigerian man and four others currently detained in Dema Camp, Ghana, included the allegation from one that ICE left the restraint suit on him for 16 hours, only once undoing the lower part so he could use the bathroom.

    “No one should be put into a WRAP. I don’t even think they strap animals like that,” recalled a man who said he suffered a concussion and dislocated jaw being placed into the device in 2023 before a deportation flight to Cape Verde, an African island nation. AP’s review of his medical records confirmed he suffered those injuries in 2023.

    “It was the most painful thing I’ve been through,” said the man, adding he was restrained most of the 10-hour flight. “Forget the assault, forget the broken jaw. Just the WRAP itself was hurtful.”

    Also, the man said, the metal ring his cuffed hands were attached to — one of the ICE modifications to the WRAP designed to increase comfort — injured him. “When they slammed me face forward on the floor, that metal ring dug into my chest causing me bruising and pain, which was part of my injuries that I complained about.”

    ICE’s current use of the WRAP comes amid an unprecedented wave of masked federal immigration officers grabbing suspected immigrants off the street, and mounting accusations that the Trump administration has dehumanized them, including by subjecting them to cruel and unusual detention conditions.

    ICE’s use of the WRAP has continued despite a 2023 report by DHS’ Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, or CRCL, that raised serious concerns over the lack of policies governing its use.

    ICE agreed with the internal findings on some points, a then-DHS official involved in the review said, but challenged the notion that the WRAP should be classified as a “four-point restraint,” a designation that would place more limitations on its use. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the inquiry.

    DHS largely dismantled the office that produced the 2023 report earlier this year amid widespread government firings, calling it a roadblock to enforcement operations.

    “Without changes to the current training, and the lack of policy, CRCL has serious concerns about ICE’s continued use of the WRAP,” wrote the report’s authors, who cited a news article mentioning lawsuits claiming the device had led to deaths.

    Use by police and in jails

    Last year police officers in Virginia Beach, Virginia, placed Rolin Hill in the WRAP, saying he was being combative during an arrest at a convenience store. The officers left Hill in the device when they dropped him at the jail.

    Video from the jail shows deputies punching the WRAP-immobilized Hill in the head and back. He died in a hospital, and while the WRAP’s exact role is unknown, Hill’s death was ruled a homicide by “positional and mechanical asphyxia due to restraint with neck and torso compression.” Three deputies are now charged with murder, and five others were removed from their jobs.

    Also last year, in Missouri, prosecutors charged five jailers in the death of Othel Moore Jr., who according to an autopsy, asphyxiated in the WRAP. Jailhouse footage showed Moore, who’d also been sprayed with tear gas and placed in a “spit mask” covering his face, repeatedly told officers he couldn’t breathe.

    AP identified many of the other non-ICE cases involving the WRAP during an investigation into deaths after police subdued people with common tactics that, unlike guns, are meant to stop someone without killing them.

    While Hammond insists the WRAP has never been determined as the cause of death when used properly, the AP identified 43 times in which the WRAP was used by police or correctional officers in a case in which someone died. In 12 of those cases, the official autopsy determined that “restraint” played some role in the death.

    It was often impossible to determine the exact role the WRAP may have played, as deaths often involved the use of other potentially dangerous force on people who in several cases were high on methamphetamine.

    The WRAP first appeared in law enforcement in the late 1990s, presented as an alternative to tying a subject’s hands and feet together in a practice known as “hog-tying.” It first found widespread use in California jails and today is used by more than 1,800 departments and facilities around the country, according to the manufacturer, which says it has sold more than 10,000 devices.

    Many of these cases have drawn little media attention, such as the 2020 case of Alberto Pena, who was jailed on a misdemeanor criminal mischief charge after getting drunk and damaging the walls and doors at his parents’ home outside Rio Grande City, Texas. The 30-year-old became erratic on the way to the Starr County Jail, beating his own head against the inside of the patrol unit and, later, the wall of his cell.

    Deputies placed Pena in the WRAP for more than two hours, where he repeatedly cried out for help and complained he could not breathe. But he was left unattended in the device for significant periods of time, court records show, and no medical attention was provided for his self-inflicted head injuries.

    An autopsy ruled Pena’s death “accidental,” but a forensic pathologist hired by the family attributed Pena’s death in part to the WRAP’s “prolonged restraint” and said it “could have been averted” with proper medical care.

    “The WRAP should have never been used in this situation. It was a medical emergency, and he should have been taken to the hospital,” said Natasha Powers-Marakis, a former police officer and use of force expert who reviewed the case on behalf of Pena’s family as part of their wrongful death lawsuit against the county and officers who placed him in the device. The arresting officers had been told Pena suffered from bipolar disorder.

    The Starr County Sheriff’s Office has denied wrongdoing and maintained Pena did not require medical care. Robert Drinkard, an attorney for the county, told AP the use of the WRAP “was neither improper nor caused Mr. Pena’s tragic death.” He added that each deputy involved in placing Pena in the WRAP had been trained in its application.

    A federal judge recently dismissed the Pena family’s lawsuit, ruling the deputies were shielded from liability.

    ‘Carrying me like a corpse’

    In the context of an ICE deportation flight, the use of restraints like the WRAP can be justified, Hammond, the manufacturer’s CEO, argues.

    ICE officers have to ensure that they secure anyone who could pose a fight risk on a long flight, he said. Given the high stakes of a violent confrontation on an airplane, Hammond believes cases like those described to the AP can warrant the WRAP’s use, even if the person is already in chains.

    However, properly trained agents are supposed to loosen the straps and allow enough movement so the subject can eat and drink, as well as use the bathroom.

    “With the WRAP, when it is used properly, it’s a shorter fight, which is good for everybody. It prioritizes breathing, which is good for everybody. And you have no more fight and can provide medical care or mental health care or de-escalation efforts,” Hammond said.

    Those placed in one of Hammond’s restraint suits, however, recount the experience as traumatic.

    One of these people was first put into five-point shackles when he became dizzy and tripped while ascending the stairs to board the ICE flight to Cameroon in November 2020. The officer mistook his stumbling as resistance, he said. Immediately, camouflage-clad ICE officers quickly pushed him to the tarmac and onto a WRAP device, he said.

    Soon, he felt the straps cinching around his legs and upper body.

    “They bundled me like a log of wood from all the sides, and they were just carrying me like a corpse,” he said.

    Another man interviewed by the AP said ICE officers put him in the WRAP after he initially resisted efforts to move him onto a deportation flight in Alexandria, Louisiana, in 2020. He’d fled political violence and persecution in his native Cameroon, and was afraid to go back. He said officers took him out of his cell in front of the other detainees and put him in the WRAP, leaving him for hours in view of the others as a warning to them not to speak up.

    “I told him, ‘I can’t breathe,’ ” the man said. “He responded, ‘I don’t care; I’m doing my job.’ ”


    Dearen and Pineda reported from Los Angeles and Mustian from New York. AP journalists Ope Adetayo in Abuja, Ghana; Obed Lamy in Indianapolis; and Ryan J. Foley in Iowa City, Iowa, contributed to this report. Dan Lawton also contributed.


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