ICE confirms immigration rights activist Jeanette Vizguerra is set for deportation
Federal immigration enforcement officials confirmed Wednesday they intend to remove Colorado immigration rights activist Jeanette Vizguerra from the United States.
The 53-year-old Denver resident will remain in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody until that removal.
Vizguerra was arrested during a break outside her job at Target on Monday. The well known Denver activist, who is originally from Mexico, has lived in the United States since 1997 and became a symbol of the sanctuary movement during the first Trump administration when she took refuge in a Denver church in 2017.
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In a statement, ICE called Vizguerra a 'convicted criminal alien' and included a photo of her arrest, in which her hands are restrained behind her back and a chain is secured around her waist.
Vizguerra was pulled over in 2009 in Arapahoe County and was arrested for having a fake ID and driving without insurance, federal immigration officials say. She was convicted on those charges and was ordered to pay fines.
A federal judge denied her application to remain in the country in 2011 and granted her a 'voluntary departure.' She left the country in 2012 and was arrested in Texas when she came back in 2013. She spent about one month in custody.
In the decade since, she has been granted a handful of stays of removal to delay deportation efforts as she sought a visa. Her last stay expired in February 2024.
Following her arrest, Vizguerra's lawyers filed a writ of habeas corpus to request that authorities bring her to a hearing. The filing alleges that Vizguerra's detention violates the constitutional right to due process, according to Denverite.
ICE maintained in its statement that she has 'received legal due process in U.S. immigration court' and has a final order of deportation issued by a federal immigration judge.
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