Student Deportation: 'Horror Show' ICE Arrests 19-Year-Old at Boston Airport
A young Honduran woman was detained by US immigration authorities at a Boston airport while trying to surprise her family with Thanksgiving plans, and then deported to her native country just two days later. Lucia López Belloza, a 19-year-old business student, had been in the US for only a few months before being arrested and taken into custody.
According to her lawyer, Todd Pomerleau, López was handcuffed and shackled at her wrists and ankles when she arrived at the airport, despite having no criminal record or reason for detention. "She wasn't told why she was detained," said Pomerleau. "She was treated like a hardened criminal."
The US government claims that López entered the country without permission and had been ordered removed 10 years earlier, but her lawyer disputes this, saying that the removal order was not shown to them and that the 90-day window for deportation has expired.
López's case highlights concerns about the US immigration system's treatment of undocumented immigrants. Honduras is one of the main routes for drug trafficking between South America and Mexico, and the country has a high homicide rate, with gang violence a major driver of femicides.
The student's lawyer described her detention as an "unconstitutional horror show" and vowed to fight for her client's return. López herself remains optimistic, saying she is trying to stay positive and focused on her future plans, including completing her studies in the US or returning to Honduras.
A young Honduran woman was detained by US immigration authorities at a Boston airport while trying to surprise her family with Thanksgiving plans, and then deported to her native country just two days later. Lucia López Belloza, a 19-year-old business student, had been in the US for only a few months before being arrested and taken into custody.
According to her lawyer, Todd Pomerleau, López was handcuffed and shackled at her wrists and ankles when she arrived at the airport, despite having no criminal record or reason for detention. "She wasn't told why she was detained," said Pomerleau. "She was treated like a hardened criminal."
The US government claims that López entered the country without permission and had been ordered removed 10 years earlier, but her lawyer disputes this, saying that the removal order was not shown to them and that the 90-day window for deportation has expired.
López's case highlights concerns about the US immigration system's treatment of undocumented immigrants. Honduras is one of the main routes for drug trafficking between South America and Mexico, and the country has a high homicide rate, with gang violence a major driver of femicides.
The student's lawyer described her detention as an "unconstitutional horror show" and vowed to fight for her client's return. López herself remains optimistic, saying she is trying to stay positive and focused on her future plans, including completing her studies in the US or returning to Honduras.