Woman detained hours after admitting fear of deportation on TV under Trump administration

Lawyers claims authorities followed Vargas from the event

Daniela Vargas. PHOTO: FACEBOOK

A young woman who migrated to the US from Argentina when she was seven-year-old was detained by the Immigration authorities on Wednesday in Jackson, Mississippi, according to her lawyer.

Daniela Vargas was returning from a news conference organised by lawyers, church leaders and the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance to raise awareness about US President Trump’s immigration orders.

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Peterson believes her client was followed by the authorities from the news event where she had spoken about how her parents’ decision to move to the US had given her a ‘better life’, her fear of deportation and the dream of becoming a math teacher.

According to the 22-year-old’s lawyer, Abigail Peterson, the officers arrested her shortly after the event at City Hall. “You know what we are here for,” the officer told Vargas according to Peterson. She has been transferred to a detention centre in Louisiana where she is being held without bond.

The Immigration authorities have told Peterson that Vargas will be processed under ‘visa waiver overstay’ – a programme that deports immigrants without a hearing. Vargas currently has two applications pending, one for the renewal of her Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) status and another of work permit.

A non-profit organisation that calls for fair treatment of immigrants, United We Dream, issued a statement that explained that Vargas’s DACA status had expired while she was trying to save money for the renewal fee, adding that she is a manager at a small store.

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The DACA programme was started by former President Obama which granted immigrant children who had grown up in the US to be eligible for work permits and allowed permission to stay temporarily. His successor, however, has remained unclear about the future of the progamme – which he had termed as ‘illegal amnesty’ during the presidential campaign.

Vargas' detention has been highlighted on social media with lawmakers, journalists taking an interest in her detention.













This article originally appeared on the New York Times.
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