logo
ICE releases health worker arrested at airport despite living in the U.S. legally for 50 years

ICE releases health worker arrested at airport despite living in the U.S. legally for 50 years

NBC News3 days ago

After three months in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, a Filipino green-card holder who had been arrested at Seattle-Tacoma Airport has finally gone home.
Lewelyn Dixon, a 64-year-old University of Washington lab technician, was released on Thursday from the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, Washington, after a judge ruled that she does not qualify for deportation.
Dixon, who's had legal permanent status in the U.S. for 50 years, had been in ICE custody since late February, when she was detained after coming back from a visit to the Philippines.
Outside the detention facility, Dixon thanked a crowd of supporters and spoke about her experience and the conditions in the facility.
'It was horrific; it was awful, it is crowded -- super crowded, they release maybe nine, bring back seven, release one, they bring three,' she said, according to local NBC affiliate King5.
Dixon's niece Lani Madriaga told NBC News that in the hours since her release, she's been spending time with loved ones.
'Last night, we had dinner together as a family and just chatted,' Madriaga said on Friday. 'She's just getting readjusted.'
Benjamin Osorio, Dixon's attorney, previously told NBC News that a decades-old embezzlement conviction likely caught the attention of U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the airport, triggering her detention.
Dixon had been a vault teller and operations supervisor at Washington Mutual Bank at the time and 'removed cash from the vault on eight separate occasions' without the bank's authorization, according to her plea agreement. She removed a total of $6,460.
While Dixon pleaded guilty to the nonviolent offense in 2000, she was ordered to pay restitution and spend 30 days in a halfway house, court documents show. By 2019, she completed her payments.
Dixon has been in the U.S. since she was a teenager and has long been eligible for citizenship, but she promised her father that she would maintain her Filipino nationality so that she could retain property in her native country. However, Osorio said, Dixon likely did not understand the risk involved with staying on a green card.
Madriaga said the ordeal has been emotional for her aunt, but it's also given her a renewed purpose in helping detainees. During her time in ICE custody, Dixon attempted to help others navigate the immigration and court system, Madriaga said. Dixon plans on staying in touch with the detainees at the Tacoma facility, with whom she said she grew close.
'I don't think it's going to stop her from helping others, even though she's been out,' the niece said.
The case has been shocking for her family, particularly because Dixon had kept her conviction a secret from them.
'We don't think her any different after we found out about her conviction,' Madriaga said. 'She turned it all around and … she really worked hard and really focused on health care, where it's really about helping the community.'
In fact, Madriaga said, Dixon plans to head back to work soon. In the meantime, Dixon's first priority is obtaining her citizenship.
Dixon is among several other green-card holders who have been detained amid the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration. Earlier this month, Maximo Londonio, 42, was also detained at an airport in Seattle after coming back from vacation with his family. Londonio, a green-card holder, was likely detained due to previous nonviolent convictions, his family members believe.
Another legal permanent resident, Fabian Schmidt, was detained in March after being arrested at the Boston Logan International Airport. The German national, who had a previous misdemeanor marijuana conviction, was released in May, after he filed a motion to terminate the immigration proceedings.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Immigration crackdown leads to chaotic scenes as ICE touts arrests
Immigration crackdown leads to chaotic scenes as ICE touts arrests

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Immigration crackdown leads to chaotic scenes as ICE touts arrests

Immigration authorities raided a popular San Diego Italian restaurant before the Friday dinner rush, arresting several kitchen workers, while community members confronted agents, according to video shared by a local CBS station. As heavily armed agents entered the restaurant, local residents screamed at them and filmed the scene. The agents wore tactical gear, including bulletproof vests emblazoned with the Homeland Security Investigations logo. "The agents fired sound grenades, flash-bang grenades, at the crowd," Pedro Rios, director of the Quaker American Friends Service Committee's U.S.-Mexico Border Program, told CBS. Todd Lyons, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told FOX News that agents were doing their law enforcement duty during the raid. "We should be supported, not being called Nazis, not being villainized," he said. Immigrants arrested at scheduled hearings Earlier last week, ICE agents were seen arresting immigrants directly after their scheduled immigration hearings at a San Antonio, Texas, courthouse - doubling down on a tactic that has caused an outcry among immigrant advocates. "Families are being targeted at their most vulnerable time - attending their scheduled immigration hearings for what they believe to be progress in their cases," according to a statement by the Immigrant Legal Resource Center. The statement links to a video that appears to show ICE agents arresting a mother alongside four children inside the courthouse, including a minor with his hands zip-tied behind his back. Another video outside the same courthouse, undated but posted Friday, May 30, by advocacy group Unidos Podemos, showed the emotional scene of two mothers and a child being loaded by plainclothes agents into the narrow chamber of a vehicle outfitted to carry prisoners. The child stands on the bumper, his arms outstretched. He says in Spanish, "It's OK, Mom, I'm here. It's OK." ICE publicizes criminal arrests during crackdown ICE, which has a significant social media presence, has largely refrained from sharing emotional or chaotic arrest videos and instead posts mugshots of arrested immigrants with serious criminal records. The agency publicized its recent arrests of a Honduran man facing burglary and sexual battery charges, a convicted sex offender from El Salvador and a Venezuelan woman convicted of felonies in California and wanted on other charges in New York.

The business of Trump pardons and Ukraine claims massive drone strike in Russia: Weekend Rundown
The business of Trump pardons and Ukraine claims massive drone strike in Russia: Weekend Rundown

NBC News

time9 hours ago

  • NBC News

The business of Trump pardons and Ukraine claims massive drone strike in Russia: Weekend Rundown

Seeking a pardon from President Donald Trump has become big business for lobbying and consulting firms close to the administration, with wealthy hopefuls willing to spend millions. Two people directly familiar with proposals to lobbying firms said they knew of a client's offer of $5 million to help get a case in front of Trump. And while such high numbers do not seem to be standard, they speak to a burgeoning pardon economy. Many clemency recipients have been people with the means to elevate their case — allies, donors, celebrities and former politicians. In his second term, Trump is looking and sounding insulated even from the voters who put him back in the White House, and risks looking oblivious to people's day-to-day concerns. 'He needs to talk to more regular people and listen to them,' said one Trump voter in Ohio. 'He needs to be talking to people who aren't just his inner circle.' Ukraine claims massive drone strike Ukraine claims to have struck dozens of Russian bombers deep inside Russian territory, in what would be one of the largest and most audacious attacks on Russian territory in the yearslong conflict. A source within the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) told NBC News that the country targeted '41 strategic Russian aircraft' in an offensive operation code-named 'Spiderweb.' The remarkable attack was in the works for over a year and a half, the source said. The attack followed a night of bombardment, with Russia launching 472 drones, Ukraine's air force said. Earlier Sunday, Ukraine's army said a Russian missile strike on an army training unit killed at least 12 Ukrainian service members and injured 60. The latest escalation comes just a day before Russia and Ukraine are scheduled to meet for a second round of direct talks in Istanbul. Veterans upset over VA handling of $1B in overpayments In 2019, Christopher Praino signed a waiver relinquishing his disability compensation from the VA after he was ordered to active duty, because, by law, he could not receive both VA benefits and active-duty pay at the same time. But despite confirming his waiver in a letter, the agency did not fully halt the payments. Instead, it sent various monthly amounts over the next three years, ranging from $0 to over $2,000, Praino's records show. In 2023, the VA said he owed nearly $68,000 and started automatically clawing money out of his military paychecks. In a recent congressional oversight hearing, agency officials partially blamed veterans for exorbitant errors, saying they've been failing to report eligibility changes. But Praino isn't the only veteran who told NBC News they notified the VA in a timely manner. The long-delayed adjustments may indicate another operational shortfall at the VA. Agency press secretary Peter Kasperowicz said the agency, under new leadership, is 'working hard to fix longstanding problems, such as billions of dollars per year in overpayments.' 'Meet the Press' Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., spoke to NBC News' 'Meet the Press' about the Trump administration's 'One Big Beautiful Bill' package that passed along party lines in the House last month. Johnson defended cuts to Medicaid in the budget bill, telling Kristen Welker, '4.8 million people will not lose their Medicaid unless they choose to do so.' The speaker said he's 'not buying' the argument that the requirements, which would require able-bodied Medicaid recipients to work, participate in job training programs or volunteer for 80 hours a month, are too 'cumbersome.' The bill now heads to the Senate, where some Republicans have voiced concerns about the Medicaid impact. Politics in brief Hailey Bieber has inked a billion-dollar deal. For Justin, things are going less well. Hailey Bieber has had a career-making month after securing a billion-dollar deal to sell her beauty empire and landing a Vogue cover. The milestones have renewed the public's obsessive interest in her husband, Justin Bieber, whose erratic behavior and sometimes jaw-dropping online activity have long fueled rumors about his declining health and marriage. 'What's going on right now with Justin Bieber is not a full-blown crisis, but the early-warning system lights are definitely flashing,' said Evan Nierman, founder and CEO of a global PR firm that handles reputation management. 'The contrast between them now is glaring and jarring, and that's why there is so much public discussion about him.' Nabeela Aysen, a New York-based crisis communications expert, noted a slapdash Instagram post from Justin congratulating his wife. 'As someone who works in crisis communications, I would've loved for his team to review that post before he hit publish,' she said. Notable quote Well, we are all going to die. When pressed about cuts to Medicaid in the House's budget bill, Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, pushed back after a town hall attendee said the cuts would lead to deaths. In case you missed it Dozens are feared dead after Israeli forces opened fire on a group receiving aid in Gaza, according to hospital officials and witnesses on the ground. The organization charged with distributing aid vigorously denied the reports. One person was killed and 11 others were wounded in a shooting in North Carolina, officials said. Can AI have survival instincts? Recent tests show some advanced models will act to ensure their self-preservation if threatened with demise. The remains of 19 African American people whose skulls had been sent to Germany for racist research practices in the 1800s have been buried after their return to New Orleans. The badly burned body of a young man was found in Georgia's Stone Mountain Park, authorities say. Actor Devin Harjes, known for his roles in 'Boardwalk Empire' and 'Daredevil,' died on Tuesday at 41. The Indiana Pacers advanced to the NBA Finals on Saturday, defeating the New York Knicks 125-108 in Game 6 of their conference finals matchup. The founder of New Hampshire's largest network of addiction centers has been arrested after federal prosecutors say he orchestrated a conspiracy to stalk and harass local journalists in retaliation for unfavorable reporting.

Former Charles Manson follower is recommended for parole
Former Charles Manson follower is recommended for parole

NBC News

time12 hours ago

  • NBC News

Former Charles Manson follower is recommended for parole

A California state parole board recommended parole for Patricia Krenwinkel, a follower of the cult leader Charles Manson, on Friday for the second time. The decision will now have to be approved by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who denied Krenwinkel's first parole recommendation. The governor's review process can take up to 150 days following a parole hearing. The 77-year-old is serving a life sentence in the California Institution for Women for her role in the killings of pregnant actor Sharon Tate and four others in August 1969, as well as grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, the following night in what prosecutors have called Manson's attempt to start a race war. Krenwinkel was recommended for parole for the first time in May 2022, but Newsom denied clemency five months later, according to Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation inmate records. She was previously denied parole 14 times before then. Krenwinkel was 19 and working as a secretary when she met a 33-year-old Manson at a party, leaving her life behind to follow him because she believed they could have a romantic relationship, she said in 2016 testimony. Instead, she was abused by Manson and tried to flee, but was brought back each time and was often under the influence of drugs. Krenwinkel admitted to stabbing an heiress to a coffee fortune, Abigail Folger, multiple times on the night of Aug. 9, 1969, as well as participating in the killings of the LaBiancas the following night. During the LaBianca murders, she infamously wrote 'Helter Skelter' and other phrases on the wall in her victims' blood. She, along with other participants including Manson, were convicted and sentenced to death. However, their sentences were commuted to life with the possibility parole in 1972, after the death penalty was briefly ruled unconstitutional in California. Krenwinkel is now the state's longest-serving inmate. The California governor's office and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation did not immediately respond to NBC News' requests for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store