Trump Admin Deports Cancer-Stricken Child and U.S. Citizen Kids, Tearing Them From Their Mother
Amid the Trump administration's ongoing mass deportation efforts, The Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has carried out deportations. A mother from Cuba, whose 1-year-old daughter was separated from her permanently, as well as three children aged 2, 4, and 7 who hold U.S. citizenship alongside their mothers from Honduras were discussed by their attorneys on Saturday.
These recent developments raise significant doubts about Who is getting caught up in these widespread deportation initiatives? And why, and appear during a legal dispute in federal courts about whether the President should Donald Trump The immigration crackdown has become excessive and rapid, coming at the cost of basic rights.
In these latest cases, lawyers explain that their clients were apprehended during regular meetings with ICE officers, denied access to legal counsel or contact with relatives, and expelled from the nation in as little as three days.
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The American Civil Liberties Union, along with the National Immigration Project and various other organizations, stated that the manner in which ICE removed children who are U.S. citizens and their moms is an "alarming — though progressively more frequent — misuse of authority."
Gracie Willis from the National Immigration Project stated that the mothers were not afforded a proper chance to make an informed decision about whether their children should remain in the United States.
We have no clue about the information provided by ICE to them, and what we've discovered is that ICE did not offer them any additional options," Willis stated during an interview. "ICE didn't provide them with a choice; these mothers could only bring their children along, even though there were affectionate caretakers ready to look after them in the U.S.
The 4-year-old child battling a rare type of cancer and the 7-year-old were expelled to Honduras just one day after they were apprehended alongside their mother, according to Willis.
Regarding the case with the 2-year-old child, a federal judge from Louisiana expressed doubts concerning the girl’s deportation, stating that the administration failed to demonstrate they had handled the process correctly.
Attorneys representing the father of the 2-year-old argued that he wished to maintain custody of his daughter in the United States. However, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) maintained that the child’s mother desired for the girl to return with her to Honduras. These assertions were not thoroughly scrutinized by U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty based in Louisiana.
In a Friday directive, Doughty set a hearing for May 16 "to address our significant concern that the government may have deported a U.S. citizen without adequate due process," he stated.
The woman, who was born in Honduras and is expecting a child, was taken into custody alongside her 2-year-old daughter and 11-year-old sister on Tuesday. They were detained due to an existing deportation order when they visited an ICE facility in New Orleans for a regular check-in; this information comes from their attorneys. The family resided in Baton Rouge.
On Friday, Doughty contacted government attorneys when the woman was aboard a deportation flight mid-air. However, he received a call back within the hour stating that communication was not possible as she had "just been released in Honduras."
In a court document submitted on Thursday, attorneys representing the father stated that ICE suggested they were detaining the 2-year-old girl as leverage to encourage him to surrender. The legal representatives did not disclose details about his immigration standing; however, they mentioned that he had lawfully granted custodial rights over his daughters to his sister-in-law, an American citizen residing in Baton Rouge.
Meanwhile in Florida A Cuban-born woman, who has a 1-year-old daughter and is married to a U.S. citizen, was taken into custody during a routine check-in with immigration authorities at an ICE office in Tampa, according to her attorney on Saturday.
Heidy Sánchez was held without any communication and flown to Cuba two days later. She is still breastfeeding her daughter, who suffers from seizures, her lawyer, Claudia Cañizares, said.
Cañizares said she tried to file paperwork contesting the deportation on Thursday before her client was removed from the country, but ICE rejected it, saying Sánchez was already gone, although Cañizares said she doesn’t think that was true.
Cañizares said she told ICE that she was planning to reopen Sánchez’s case to help her remain in the U.S. legally, but ICE told her that Sánchez can pursue the case while she’s in Cuba.
"I believe they're carrying out instructions that require them to eliminate a specific number of individuals each day, and frankly, they couldn't be less concerned," Cañizares stated.

She mentioned that Sanchez should not be considered a criminal and has compelling humanitarian reasons that support permitting her to remain in the U.S. However, ICE is failing to take this into account as they must adhere to deportation targets set by the attorney.
Sánchez had an active deportation order due to missing a hearing in 2019, resulting in her detention for nine months, according to Cañizares. At that time, Cuba reportedly declined to accept Sánchez back into the country. Consequently, she was released in 2020 and required to regularly report to ICE as per their instructions, Cañizares mentioned.
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