Immigration advocates, lawmakers and people detained and released by ICE took part in a conversation in Boston about recent ICE raids.Among them were Massachusetts U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley and the attorney for Any Lopez Belloca, the Babson College student deported to her native Honduras while trying to fly home to surprise her family for Thanksgiving.Now, Lopez Belloca’s lawyer says her family is being targeted, after her father had an interaction with immigration agents outside his home in Texas.”When he turned his back, this person was chasing after him, not in a uniform or anything. he did not know who it was,” Pomerleau said. “He thought he was getting kidnapped. He went into his home to see what the hell was going on, and then they looked out the back window because they heard noise, and somebody was trying to break into the backyard of their house.”Pomerleau said the agents didn’t have a warrant.”These are people who are part of a lawful immigration process, having their rights trampled upon,” Pomerleau said.ICE says she was in the country illegally and had been ordered to leave years ago when she was a child.”She gets deported and taken away from her opportunity to seek her education, separated from her sisters, separated from her mom and dad,” Pomerleau said. “She now learns that they’re trying to hunt her parents down and violate their rights, too.”Pomerleau says the government violated a federal judge’s order saying Lopez Belloca should not be removed while her case moved forward.”The government is acknowledging that a judge told them not to do this,” Pomerleau said. “It’s saying it did it anyway because it thought the judge didn’t have the power to do this.”Lopez Belloca is living with her grandparents in Honduras, who she says she barely knows and hasn’t seen in 12 years. Sisters Clarissa and Heidy wiped away tears as they recounted the terrifying moments when they were swept up by ICE in November while working their jobs at the Allston Car Wash. They are two of the nine employees who described how they were thrown into a van, triple shackled and shipped to ICE facilities in various states, cut off from their families and legal counsel. “What was shared here today was deeply alarming. A senior denied their medication, a young woman unable to shower or eat for days,” Pressley said. “The inhumanity, the indignity, the cruelty of it all.”ICE officials have told NewsCenter 5 that the Nov. 4 raid was targeted. They described the nine people arrested as illegal aliens. “Not one of them has a criminal record and the government lost seven cases in a row in federal court and before an immigration judge; not one lawyer from the Department of Homeland Security claimed that any of them had a criminal record despite the rhetoric,” said Pomerleau, who is also representing the nine employees.Pomerleau said none of his clients are criminals and several have legal status and valid documentation that ICE refused to let them produce on scene.”It’s an abuse of government power — taking people, depriving them of access to attorneys, access to medication and just sheltering them away and hiding them from society, hoping nobody is going to do anything about it and we’re all going to look the other way,” Pomerleau said.
BOSTON —
Immigration advocates, lawmakers and people detained and released by ICE took part in a conversation in Boston about recent ICE raids.
Among them were Massachusetts U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley and the attorney for Any Lopez Belloca, the Babson College student deported to her native Honduras while trying to fly home to surprise her family for Thanksgiving.
Now, Lopez Belloca’s lawyer says her family is being targeted, after her father had an interaction with immigration agents outside his home in Texas.
“When he turned his back, this person was chasing after him, not in a uniform or anything. he did not know who it was,” Pomerleau said. “He thought he was getting kidnapped. He went into his home to see what the hell was going on, and then they looked out the back window because they heard noise, and somebody was trying to break into the backyard of their house.”
Pomerleau said the agents didn’t have a warrant.
“These are people who are part of a lawful immigration process, having their rights trampled upon,” Pomerleau said.
ICE says she was in the country illegally and had been ordered to leave years ago when she was a child.
“She gets deported and taken away from her opportunity to seek her education, separated from her sisters, separated from her mom and dad,” Pomerleau said. “She now learns that they’re trying to hunt her parents down and violate their rights, too.”
Pomerleau says the government violated a federal judge’s order saying Lopez Belloca should not be removed while her case moved forward.
“The government is acknowledging that a judge told them not to do this,” Pomerleau said. “It’s saying it did it anyway because it thought the judge didn’t have the power to do this.”
Lopez Belloca is living with her grandparents in Honduras, who she says she barely knows and hasn’t seen in 12 years.
Sisters Clarissa and Heidy wiped away tears as they recounted the terrifying moments when they were swept up by ICE in November while working their jobs at the Allston Car Wash.
They are two of the nine employees who described how they were thrown into a van, triple shackled and shipped to ICE facilities in various states, cut off from their families and legal counsel.
“What was shared here today was deeply alarming. A senior denied their medication, a young woman unable to shower or eat for days,” Pressley said. “The inhumanity, the indignity, the cruelty of it all.”
ICE officials have told NewsCenter 5 that the Nov. 4 raid was targeted. They described the nine people arrested as illegal aliens.
“Not one of them has a criminal record and the government lost seven cases in a row in federal court and before an immigration judge; not one lawyer from the Department of Homeland Security claimed that any of them had a criminal record despite the rhetoric,” said Pomerleau, who is also representing the nine employees.
Pomerleau said none of his clients are criminals and several have legal status and valid documentation that ICE refused to let them produce on scene.
“It’s an abuse of government power — taking people, depriving them of access to attorneys, access to medication and just sheltering them away and hiding them from society, hoping nobody is going to do anything about it and we’re all going to look the other way,” Pomerleau said.