After a Pandemic Pause, ICE Resumes Deportation Arrests
LOS ANGELES For Alicia Flores Gonzalez, Aug. 4 began like any other day. She dropped her little girl at day care and drove to work at a winery in the Sonoma Valley. But as she was parking her white Toyota Tacoma, she found herself surrounded by several armed men. What happened? What did I do? Ms. Flores recalled asking them.
Hands up! Turn around, ordered one of the men, who shackled her and escorted her to a van.
Six agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement in three unmarked vehicles had been deployed to arrest her. Within 24 hours, the 43-year-old single mother of four U.S.-born children had been deported to Mexico. She had lived without legal permission in the United States for 27 years.
Ms. Flores was seized during a new nationwide enforcement operation announced this month, the first large-scale arrests and deportations in the interior of the country since the coronavirus pandemic halted field operations for several months. Since mid-July, immigration agents have taken more than 2,000 people into custody from their homes, workplaces and other sites, including a post office, often after staking them out for days.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/after-a-pandemic-pause-ice-resumes-deportation-arrests/ar-BB18XvZG?ocid=NL_ENUS_D1_20200914_7_3