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

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
30 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Ice used Marriott chain to detain immigrants, despite hotel's 2019 pledge not to cooperate
A Sheraton hotel in Louisiana has been used by immigration officials to hold people who are being deported, in what appears to be a contradiction of a position Sheraton's parent company, Marriott, took in 2019 when it said its properties would not be used in cooperation with Ice. The Intercept first reported that the hotel, located on MacArthur Drive in Alexandria, Louisiana, near a major deportation hub and airport used by Ice, had been used by immigration officials earlier this month to hold a father and his teenage son for four days after their arrest in New York. They were then deported to Ecuador. The Intercept cited phone-tracking evidence that had been shared with the publication and was later seen by the Guardian. The evidence corroborates the account of a source with knowledge of hotel operations in Alexandria, who told the Guardian that they believed the venue had been used to detain immigrant families and unaccompanied children since it was renovated in late 2023. The source observed Ice contractors known to assist in the transfer of unaccompanied minors operating at the Sheraton as recently as June of this year. The source added that other hotels in the area have also been used to hold immigrant families. It is not clear whether Marriott has a formal contract with Ice or what the company knows about Ice's use of the Sheraton in Alexandria. In one case that emerged last year, Marriott sued a New York-based franchise after the hotel entered a partnership with the city for it to be used as an immigrant shelter, saying it had done so without Marriott's consent. Marriott did not respond to several requests for comment. 'It would be highly unfortunate if major hotel chains are facilitating the Trump administration's cruel policy of deporting families,' said Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project. In 2019, during Donald Trump's first term, Marriott rejected the idea that any of its hotels or properties – which include Sheraton and Courtyard hotels – would be used by Ice to detain immigrants. It made the statement at a time when the Trump administration was calling for a mass roundup of undocumented immigrants. Citing anonymous sources, ABC News reported at the time that administration officials had internally discussed the possibility that they might need hotel rooms because of limited capacity at Ice detention centers. 'Our hotels are not configured to be detention facilities, but to be open to guests and community members as well. While we have no particular insights into whether the US government is considering the use of hotels to aid in the situation at the border, Marriott has made the decision to decline any requests to use our hotels as detention facilities,' a company spokesperson said in July 2019, according to ABC News. The company's position won it plaudits at the time, such as public recognition by the American Historical Association, an association of professional historians, which announced in a public statement that it appreciated Marriott's 'principled stand' and noted the importance of immigrants to the hotel and related industries. It is well-documented that Ice does use hotels to house immigrant families who are being deported from the US or being transferred to other detention centers. In a case that attracted national attention in April, Ice detained two families in Louisiana with three of their US citizen children and held them incommunicado and under guard at a hotel for days on end, despite multiple attempts by family members and lawyers to contact them. The families, along with their US citizen children, were deported in the early hours of 25 April and, according to legal filings, had been held at a location in Alexandria. Filings in that case reviewed by the Guardian include a short, handwritten submission by one of the mothers written on paper that closely matches images of branded Sheraton notepads posted online. The Guardian could not independently confirm whether the families had been detained at the Sheraton in Alexandria. Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion The Intercept's reporting focused on the story of Edison Iza and his 15-year-old son, Roger, who were reportedly arrested by Ice at an immigration check-in New York on 9 August. The pair were then reportedly flown to Louisiana and 'locked up' in the Sheraton hotel, where they stayed for four days without access to their phones or the internet. 'We couldn't call or go on the web to ask for help,' Roger told the Intercept. 'Without our phones, we didn't know any names or phone numbers.' Ice did not immediately respond to the Guardian's questions about the agency's use of the Sheraton, including whether it has a contract with the hotel or uses it on an ad hoc basis. The hospitality industry is especially vulnerable to Ice raids and the Trump administration's deportation program, given the high percentage of workers in the industry who are undocumented. While the Department of Homeland Security issued guidance earlier this year that Ice agents were not to conduct raids at hotels, restaurants and farms, that guidance was later reversed, according to a June report in the Washington Post. About 34% of housekeepers, 24% of cooks and 20% of waitstaff employed by the US hotel industry is undocumented, according to the 2023 census. Additional reporting by Maanvi Singh Do you have a tip on this story? Please contact a Guardian reporter on Signal at 646-886-8761


ITV News
an hour ago
- ITV News
'Treat us fairly': Family of Filipino man who died in Jersey accommodation fire lament inquiry delay
The family of a Filipino man who died working on a farm in Jersey say they are desperate for answers after the inquiry into his death has been adjourned. George Michael Monte De Ramos Castrudes died in January after the flames from a fire he started got out of control and engulfed his accommodation. His family have since raised concerns about there being no set date for the continuation of the inquiry, after raising concerns about the standard of his accommodation. The inquest opened at the end of January, with Castrudes' family remotely dialling in from the Philippines. Andrew Woodward, the coroner, confirmed the provisional cause of death was carbon monoxide poisoning. The inquiry into his death was adjourned for July, but this has since been delayed. Speaking exclusively to ITV, Grace Monte De Ramos Castrudes - George's sister - is calling for answers around the circumstances of his death. She explains: "We have a lot of difficulties, thinking about how my brother got to that point. No one can explain to us what really happened to my brother. His body was repatriated to the Philippines in March. "We were relieved that we saw my brother's body, but at the same time, our hearts have really shattered by thinking that my brother worked so hard in a different country to give a better life for his children, but came home with nothing. "Even though we have to accept that my brother is gone now, we still need an explanation." Video footage from Raffy Tuffo in Action The repatriation of George's body was aided by the Filipino government, and they have offered financial support to his family. However, the family said they received limited support from the Government of Jersey, and have been saddened by the lack of progress on the inquiry. Grace says: "We were very disappointed because we had the confidence and the trust that the government in Jersey had the equal application of law, and it is better than the Philippines, but we never heard anything. "We were expecting that they would dutifully have the inquest in July, but now it is mid-August already and they haven't given us any day or any update regarding the second inquest or the progress of the case of my brother. "It's a big help to us if it gives any closure or any clearer information about my brother's death. Especially to my parents and to his children, at least we would have peace of mind. "We are hoping that they will dutifully serve the equal justice for my brother. As humans, we are still hoping that they will treat us fairly." Grace now says she is concerned for other Filipino workers in Jersey, saying: "It's not about the earnings, it's about life. "The Filipino has the capacity of mind to work hard to support their family, no matter what; they risk everything, even their life, just to give a better future for their family, especially for their children. "But, I just want to tell Filipinos that it's not worth the risk. Their family will lose their loved one just for the sake of money. "My family now have to help each other to accept that George is really gone." ITV News has received a response from the Viscount's Department, which states: "The Viscount's Department cannot comment on the status of an ongoing coronial investigation. "However, the coroner's officers are in contact with Mr Castrudes' family, and arrangements are being made for a further hearing in relation to his death later this year. "We once again offer our condolences to Mr Castrudes' family and friends for their loss.' ITV News understands that there is a backlog of inquests in Jersey, and this timeline isn't unusual.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. is JAILED in his native Mexico after Trump's ICE arrested him on LA streets
Boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. has been deported and imprisoned in his native Mexico, according to arrest documents from the country's National Detention Registry. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed the news Tuesday. 'I understand he was deported. I don't know if it was yesterday or this morning, but we're informed that he was going to arrive in Mexico,' Sheinbaum told reporters. It's unclear where Chavez Jr. has been held since being taken into ICE custody in Los Angeles ' Studio City last month. He has since been transferred to a border checkpoint and jailed in Sonora, Mexico. The son and namesake of Mexico's greatest boxer, the younger Chavez was arrested by ICE for overstaying his visa and lying on a green-card application. In Mexico, however, he was on allegations of drug and gun trafficking. His arrest came just a week after his unanimous-decision defeat to influencer-boxer Jake Paul. Chavez was picked up July 2 by ICE agents while riding his scooter in the upscale LA neighborhood of Studio City. 'Do you have anything in your shoes,' one agent is heard asking Chavez in Spanish in the clip recorded by Fox LA's Matthew Seedorff. 'No,' Chavez replied, before asking: 'Do you inform my lawyer when I have a warrant?' In its statement, DHS explained Chavez Jr's warrant related to 'his involvement in organized crime and trafficking firearms, ammunition, and explosives'. Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said: 'This Sinaloa Cartel affiliate with an active arrest warrant for trafficking guns, ammunition, and explosives was arrested by ICE. Chavez spent considerable time in his native Mexico and the US in recent years, but according to the Department of Homeland Security, his tourist visa expired in February of 2024. The agency further claimed Chavez filed several fraudulent statements while applying for permanent residence in April of 2024 after marrying Frida Muñoz, who is related to imprisoned Sinaloa cartel kingpin Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman. Chavez's father has openly spoken about his own relationships with the Sinaloa Cartel and, in particular, 'El Chapo.' In a podcast with journalist Javier Alarcon in 2021, Chavez revealed: 'Not just El Chapo, I've met all the most wanted drug traffickers, like Amado Carrillo, El Azul [Esparragoza], and El Mayo [Zambada]. 'I know them all, and they've all been my friends, but that's about it. Those people, if you know them, are good people.' Donald Trump's DHS has accused the Biden White House of allowing Chavez to re-enter the US illegally. 'It is shocking the previous administration flagged this criminal illegal alien as a public safety threat, but chose to not prioritize his removal and let him leave and COME BACK into our country,' assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.