United States

Mexican Man Who Sought Refuge in US Church Detained Despite Being Told He Wasn't a Priority for Deportation

His detention comes as the Trump administration charts a more aggressive approach to deportation than its predecessor

A Mexican man who once sought sanctuary from deportation in a Colorado church was detained by federal immigration agents Wednesday morning as he went to a warehouse to get tile to install on a job, his wife said Wednesday. 

Arturo Hernandez has one daughter who is a U.S. citizen and a second protected from deportation under an Obama administration program for people brought to the country illegally as children. His detention comes as the Trump administration charts a more aggressive approach to deportation than its predecessor. 

Hernandez spent nine months living in the basement of Denver's First Unitarian Church starting in October of 2014 after the Obama administration tried to deport him. 

Hernandez came to the attention of immigration agents after being charged with assault for a workplace incident, even though he was acquitted at trial of criminal wrongdoing. Hernandez left the church and resumed working after the Obama administration assured him his case would no longer be a deportation priority. 

Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Carl Rusnoff noted in a statement that Hernandez has an active deportation order from that case. He said that while the Trump administration has made deportation of criminal offenders a top priority, "all of those in violation of the immigration laws may be subject to immigration arrest, detention and, if found removable by final order, removal from the United States." 

Ana Sauzameda, Hernandez's wife, said her husband went to a warehouse in suburban Denver Wednesday morning to pick up tile for a job. He was met by two plainclothes agents. She said he reached out his hand to shake theirs and the men identified themselves as federal immigration agents and detained him. 

Sauzameda said her brother witnessed the detention but that he could not film it because agents took his phone. 

In an interview, She called Hernandez "the pillar of our family." 

"His oldest daughter is about to graduate. She has plans to go to university," she said. "If he were to be deported our world would fall apart. Living apart would be very difficult. All our dreams would be gone." 

Hernandez, his wife and their daughter came legally from the Mexican city of Chihuahua to the U.S. on visas. Hernandez's family said their initial entry was in 1999 but ICE in its statement said records show them arriving in 2003. 

They opted to stay past the visas' expiration. Hernandez's oldest daughter Mariana, now 17, is due to graduate from high school next month. His youngest daughter Andrea, 11 was born in the United States. 

Another immigrant in the country illegally, Jeanette Vizguerra, is currently seeking refuge from deportation in the same Denver church basement. She was recently named one of Time Magazine's 100 most influential people of the year. 

Activists held a demonstration in support for Hernandez outside the local federal immigration office after Hernandez' detention. Sauzameda said Hernandez's immigration attorney will try to get the deportation order thrown out.  

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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