The ICE deported sick baby to Mexico case raises urgent questions about detention center health standards, private prison contracts, and federal oversight affecting Latino families nationwide.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has deported 2-month-old Juan Nicolás to Mexico—along with his 16-month-old sister, mother, and father—following the infant’s hospitalization for respiratory issues and vomiting, which he suffered after spending more than three weeks in a Texas detention center run by the notorious private prison firm CoreCivic.
Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas), who has been pushing the Trump administration to release Juan and his family, confirmed late Tuesday that they were deported after speaking with the family’s attorney, who told the lawmaker that ICE removed them from the US “with only the money that they had in their commissary—a total of $190.” Castro wrote that “to unnecessarily deport a sick baby and his entire family is heinous.”
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has deported 2-month-old Juan Nicolás to Mexico—along with his 16-month-old sister, mother, and father—following the infant’s hospitalization for respiratory issues and vomiting, which he suffered after spending more than three weeks in a Texas detention center run by the notorious private prison firm CoreCivic.
Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas), who has been pushing the Trump administration to release Juan and his family, confirmed late Tuesday that they were deported after speaking with the family’s attorney, who told the lawmaker that ICE removed them from the US “with only the money that they had in their commissary—a total of $190.” Castro wrote that “to unnecessarily deport a sick baby and his entire family is heinous.”
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“My staff and I are in contact with Juan’s family,” Castro added. “We are laser-focused on tracking them down, holding ICE accountable for this monstrous action, demanding specific details on their whereabouts and well-being, and ensuring their safety.”
According to Migrant Insider’s Pablo Manríquez, Juan Nicolás “has been fighting respiratory illness in a facility where meals recently walked through the door, where mothers report struggling to get clean water for formula, where sick children cycle through ibuprofen and basic antibiotics until they deteriorate badly enough that someone finally calls an ambulance.”
“Which is what happened Monday night. An ambulance came,” Manríquez wrote. “It was, depending on how you look at it, either a rescue or an admission of guilt.”
Juan’s mother told Castro that the baby is suffering from bronchitis. “We are all deeply concerned that Juan and his mother will be deported and that Juan’s health will continue to deteriorate,” the Texas Democrat wrote Tuesday afternoon. “His life is in danger because of ICE’s monstrous cruelty.”
Univision journalist Lidia Terrazas crossed into Mexico and located Juan and his family in the hours following their deportation. The reporter later posted a photo with Juan on Instagram.
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