ICE

Victor Avila, a green card holder for more than 50 years, was arrested after returning from a visit to his son, a U.S. Air Force servicemember stationed in Japan.

 
US MILITARY ACTIVITY DUTY service men and women' are having to escort their own family member to immigration Court appearances

A mother was accompanied by her two sons to immigration court in Chicago amid reports that immigrants were being detained at the courthouse.

The Reyes brothers are National Guardsmen, they accompanied her in uniform for extra protection.

 
More troops could be deployed to Los Angeles and other major cities after the Pentagon chief indicated he'd ignore court orders that impeded mobilization.
I'm so glad I'm not in the military with this "leadership."
 

They are LITERALLY just grabbing brown people and arresting them if they are US Citizens or NOT and they don't care. They are treating US citizens with Illegals the SAME as Illegals.​



Pregnant US citizen detained by Border Patrol agents: ‘We didn’t do anything wrong’


(KTLA) – A pregnant U.S. citizen who was detained by federal agents approximately two weeks ago has since given birth to a healthy baby girl, but her boyfriend is now being held out of state and her problems are far from over.

Cary López Alvarado told Nexstar’s KTLA that she “tried to remain strong” during the scary ordeal, which took place outside a building where her boyfriend and cousin were doing maintenance work on June 8. She was nine months pregnant at the time.


Video taken by López depicts her struggling with a masked agent wearing a Border Patrol uniform asking to see her identification as she was protecting a truck carrying her boyfriend Brayan Nájera and cousin Alberto Sandoval — the latter of whom is also a U.S. citizen.

All three of them were eventually detained. Further footage posted on social media shows agents detaining López after they had pinned her truck between a wall.

“They had my boyfriend on the ground already, and they had tackled my cousin down … that’s when I was inside the car just banging on the door,” López said. “[I was asking] ‘What are you doing? Why are you guys treating us like this? We didn’t do anything wrong.’”

According to a statement from a Department of Homeland Security representative, López was arrested because she was obstructing agents from accessing a car containing “two Guatemalan illegal aliens” inside.

“During this incident, agents were assaulted, and an additional subject was taken into custody for pushing an officer,” the statement read.

The then-soon-to-be-mother was taken to a processing facility in San Pedro, where, according to her, the agents automatically assumed she was undocumented.

“[They said] ‘But you’re from Mexico, right?’ And I’m like ‘No, I’m from here,’” López said. “[They asked] … ‘Where’s here?’ and I’m like, ‘Here, the U.S., Los Angeles.”


“They put us in chains, so I had a chain from my hands under my belly that went all the way to my legs,” she added. “Every now and then, I would fix my hands because I felt like I would be putting too much pressure because the chain went under my belly.”

López was released after complaining of stomach pain and went straight to a hospital where she started having contractions, which she believes were caused by the stress of what she had gone through.


Four days after the incident, she gave birth to a healthy baby girl, but the stress isn’t over yet, as the baby’s father, Nájera, is said to be detained at a facility in Texas despite López saying he has a spotless record.

“He doesn’t have any criminal record or anything,” she said. “They took him while he was working, and that hurts because he didn’t do anything wrong. He was just working and taking care of his family. Why are you treating other people this way when they aren’t criminals?”


“The color doesn’t matter, the race doesn’t matter … at the end of the day, we are all human,” she continued through tears.

López’s legal team told KTLA that she has not been charged with any crime. In the meantime, she will remain at home with her new baby girl.

A GoFundMe has been set up to help López hire an immigration attorney for her boyfriend and to alleviate costs associated with childcare in his absence.
 
Trump Quotes
“They’re rough people, in many cases from jails, prisons, from mental institutions, insane asylums. You know, insane asylums, that’s ‘Silence of the Lambs’ stuff. ... Hannibal Lecter, anybody know Hannibal Lecter?”

“The Democrats say, ‘Please don’t call them animals. They’re humans.’ I said, ‘No, they’re not humans, they’re not humans. They’re animals.’

“The ones we are getting are the drug lords, we’re getting the gang members

“I think the real number is 15, 16 million people into our country. When they do that, we got a lot of work to do. They’re poisoning the blood of our country.”



ICE deports Florida pastor's wife after 30 years in US

Federal immigration authorities deported the wife of a Florida pastor who has been living in the United States for nearly 30 years.

Daniella Isidro said in a Facebook post that her mother, Maria Isidro, had been removed back to Mexico from their home in Live Oak, Florida.

"Maria Isidro, an illegal alien from Mexico, was issued a final order of removal from an immigration judge on Oct. 21, 2004, after she failed to show up for her court date. She has exhausted all due process and has no legal remedies left to pursue After failing to self-deport and leave the U.S. for more than two decades, ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] arrested her on June 3, 2025, and deported her on June 11, 2025," Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Newsweek.


Why It Matters

The case comes amid President Donald Trump's hardline crackdown on immigration. Under the Trump administration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has ramped up arrests across the country. The White House has maintained that anyone living in the country illegally is considered a "criminal."


What To Know

Maria Isidro initially came to the U.S. in 1998 to seek medical treatment for one of her children. At one point, she was subject to a removal order.

"She was also shackled by wrist, stomach and ankles, leaving bruises on her," Daniella Isidro wrote on Facebook. "This is a [woman] who is loved by a huge community, a pastor's wife, a nana, a wita and our mom."

She told ABC affiliate WCJB that her mother went to court for an update on her immigration case but was then held in an ICE detention center for over a week.

According to WCJB, after Maria Isidro was detained by ICE, her daughters received a call on June 11, informing them that she had been transferred from a detention center in Texas to Mexico.

"I had gone to work that day, and receiving the phone call that my mom had been detained was one of the hardest things I had to do," Daniella Isidro told WCJB.
 
“Americans are being forced to accept masked paramilitary forces stopping you anytime, anywhere—demanding to know where people are from,” says Chris Hayes. “It is an assault on the idea of America itself.”

 
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