Immigration Judge Frees Mexican Activist U.S. Trying To Deport

In this photo from a video provided by the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, Claudia Rueda, front, thanks supporters after her release from the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego Friday, June 9, 2017. A j... In this photo from a video provided by the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, Claudia Rueda, front, thanks supporters after her release from the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego Friday, June 9, 2017. A judge on Friday ordered the release of Rueda while the government seeks to deport her to Mexico, rejecting arguments that two arrests while demonstrating in support of people in the United States illegally justified requiring that she wear a monitoring device. (National Day Laborer Organizing Network via AP) MORE LESS

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A Mexican woman was released from custody Friday while the U.S. government seeks to deport her after a judge rejected arguments she should wear a monitoring device because she was arrested twice while demonstrating in support of people in the country illegally.

Claudia Rueda, 22, plans to apply for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a program started in 2012 under President Barack Obama that shields immigrants who came to the U.S. as young children from being deported. Her case has drawn attention because she has no criminal record and is an immigration activist.

The immigration judge, Annie S. Garcy, said holding Rueda without bond was “unduly severe” and allowed her to be released on her own recognizance. She noted Ruedas’ academic and other achievements and was incredulous when a government attorney asked that Rueda be required to wear a monitoring device.”Wow, an ankle bracelet? Really?” said Garcy, who is on temporary assignment from Newark, New Jersey, under an administration effort to give higher priority to cases along the U.S. border with Mexico.

The government attorney, Matthew Hanson, responded that Rueda was arrested twice, once for trespassing and once for disorderly conduct.

Her attorney, Monika Langarica, said those arrests occurred during peaceful demonstrations to support people in the country illegally. She was charged in only one case and it was dismissed.

Rueda, a student at California State University, Los Angeles, was arrested on immigration charges May 18 outside a relative’s Los Angeles home in connection with what the U.S. Border Patrol said was a drug smuggling investigation.

Her mother, Teresa Vidal-Jaime, was arrested on immigration violations in April in connection with the same investigation and later released from custody. Neither Rueda nor her mother was arrested on drug charges.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said it would comply with the order to release Rueda and will consider any additional requests by her attorney.

Langarica submitted legal arguments in support of Rueda that included letters from Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and U.S. Rep. Karen Bass, a Los Angeles Democrat.

President Donald Trump has upheld Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals while expanding the scope of immigrants subject to deportation beyond people with criminal convictions.

During Trump’s first 100 days in office, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said it arrested more than 41,000 people on immigration charges, an increase of nearly 40 percent from the same period a year earlier. Nearly 75 percent had criminal convictions.

Rueda did not apply for the Obama-era program to shield young immigrants from deportation because she could not afford $465 application fee, Langarica said. A scholarship fund has since agreed to pay the fee, which is now $495.

The hearing was held under tight security at a privately-run detention facility in San Diego, where Rueda has been held.

A band played Mexican-style ranchera and dance music outside the detention center for a small crowd of supporters.

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  1. Avatar for tena tena says:

    Thank the gods and goddesses for the third branch - the courts have been really good with this immigration bullshit.

  2. The judicial branch is our only saving grace right now. I guess one silver lining is that Trump has been too inept and/or uninterested in the job to bother nominating judges for all the vacant positions out there. But if Pence gets in there no doubt he’ll start packing the courts with fundie christian RWNJs.

    And the Senate has already signaled it’s ready to push them through. That recent item about doing away with the State objection to nominees proves that. It’s just the OSG’s incompetence with nominations that is holding them back on this at the moment.

    Yet another reason why it’s hard to stomach the pace of a thorough investigation into all these folks. I know it takes time to do it right, but we don’t have any time to spare.

    edited: an errant apostrophe was bugging me! :smile:

  3. The government attorney, Matthew Hanson, responded that Rueda was arrested twice, once for trespassing and once for disorderly conduct.

    Her attorney, Monika Langarica, said those arrests occurred during peaceful demonstrations to support people in the country illegally. She was charged in only one case and it was dismissed.

    “Presumed innocent until found guilty in a court of law” is the constitutional standard, you fucking asswipe.

  4. We must get this dangerous woman out of our country immediately! She is a threat to fine law-abiding citizens like Jefferson Beauregard Sessions and the entire Trump family! Just reading this article probably forced Vice President Pence to seek comfort from his mother! Damn activist judge!

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