California officials are calling for the return of a deaf 6-year-old student and his family after they were detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents this week and deported to Colombia.

The boy, his 5-year-old sibling and his mother, Lesly Rodriguez Gutierrez, were asylum seekers from Colombia who had been in the U.S. for four years. They were living in Hayward until ICE agents detained them at ICE’s Intensive Supervision Appearance Program (ISAP) office in San Francisco.

Now state leaders are calling on the Trump administration to bring him and his family home.

Deaf boy deported family

Lesly Rodriguez Gutierrez and her two children from Hayward, California are pictured in a family photo.

Deaf boy deported

A 6-year-old deaf student from Hayward, California, who was deported with his family to Colombia is pictured.

California Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond made the announcement during a news conference on Friday, demanding that Department of Homeland Security officials help find the family and return them to California.

Thurmond said the 6-year-old boy attends the California School for the Deaf in Fremont and was home sick from school this week when he was detained and deported without critical medical devices – and without due process.

Thurmond said, “This innocent child is being deprived of both education and basic, essential communication.” He added, “This cruelty must end.”

Gutierrez works in childcare and was checking in at the immigration office when agents arrested her and her children, KTLA sister station KRON4 reports.

“I’m sick to my stomach that someone would abduct a 6-year-old child who has a disability and his family when his mother was reporting to a center and doing what she’s supposed to do,” Thurmond said.

The DHS website says that the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program oversees undocumented immigrants’ compliance with release conditions while on ICE’s non-detained docket. “ISAP enables aliens to remain in their communities — contributing to their families and community organizations and, as appropriate, concluding their affairs in the U.S. — as they move through immigration proceedings or prepare for departure,” officials wrote.

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The mother had followed her ISAP supervision orders fully, according to immigration attorney Niko De Bremaeker of Centro Legal de la Raza, but reportedly had an order of removal, despite having no criminal record and a legal right to be notified prior to deportation.

According to KRON4, De Bremaeker said he was able to speak to Gutierrez Friday, who said her children were traumatized from being ripped away from their home.

A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said in a statement to KTLA: “On March 3, ICE arrested Lesly Rodriguez Gutierrez, an illegal alien from Colombia. She illegally entered the United States in 2022 and was RELEASED into our country under the Biden administration. She received full due process and was issued a final order of removal by an immigration judge on November 25, 2024.

“ICE does NOT separate families. Parents are given a choice: They can be removed with their children or place them with a safe person they designate. This is consistent with past administration’s immigration enforcement. Gutierrez chose to be removed with her children, and they returned to their home on March 5.

“Being in detention and in the country illegally is a choice. Parents can avoid detention and receive a free flight and $2,600 with the CBP Home app. By using the CBP Home app illegal aliens reserve the chance to come back the right legal way and live the American dream.”

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