
Judge orders ICE to release mom who came to the US as an unaccompanied minor a decade ago
Antonia Aguilar Maldonado, who doesn't have a criminal record, was detained by ICE officers on July 17 and was taken to the Kandiyohi County jail in central Minnesota. Her two young children were born in the U.S. and are citizens.
A senior U.S. District Court Judge ordered the 26-year-old's release on a $10,000 bond as her immigration case progresses. She was set to be released on Wednesday, even as the Department of Homeland Security took steps to deport her.
According to Fox 9, her attorney, Gloria Contreras Edin, said, 'She wants to be reunited with her children immediately.'
"The breast milk that she's feeding her toddler is the only thing that her toddler can take,' she added. 'He is allergic to other forms of milk. And so, unfortunately, this baby has been without his mother's milk now for 26 days, and she wants to get to him right away and start nursing."
As of Monday, more than 60,000 people were in immigration detention, breaking a record set during President Donald Trump 's first stint in office, internal ICE records reveal, according to The New York Times. In January, about 39,000 people were in immigration custody. The previous spike came in August 2019, when 55,654 people were detained. Trump has made the increased crackdown on immigration one of the top priorities of his second term.
A previous ruling by an immigration judge stated that Aguilar Maldonado, who's seeking asylum and lives in Lake Elmo, Minnesota, wasn't a public safety threat, nor a flight risk. DHS appealed the ruling to keep the mother in custody.
Attorneys for Aguilar Maldonado moved the dispute to the U.S. District Court in Minnesota, requesting that a federal judge order her release via a Habeas Corpus petition on July 31. Following Tuesday's oral arguments, senior U.S. District Court Judge Susan Richard Nelson ordered that she be released on bond.
One of Aguilar Maldonado's lawyers, Hannah Brown, told Fox 9, "We are feeling very relieved that the judge made the right decision in this case.'
Brown told the court on Tuesday that Aguilar Maldonado was suffering from emotional and mental distress due to the separation from her children. She added that her client faces physical harm as she can't pump on a set schedule or in sanitary conditions.
Nelson said from the bench that ICE had violated their own policies for pregnant and nursing mothers. She noted that while ICE argues that an executive order from Trump, signed in January, revoked the rule, "nowhere in that policy is there a mention of nursing mothers." She went on to argue that agents made a 'mistake' when arresting Aguilar Maldonado, according to CBS Minnesota.
"In the court's view, the irreparable harm to separating a nursing mother and her child is self-evident," said Nelson.
A close friend of the mother, Telma Vides, said, "It is just amazing what God can do to get her out where it was not a possibility."
Vides and Aguilar Maldonado are members of St. Paul church, which helped raise $10,000 for the bond. Church members were in the federal courtroom on Tuesday and erupted into a standing ovation when the release order came down.
"These three weeks [have] been a roller coaster," Vides added. "No and then yes, and then no and yes, and tomorrow, next week, and then another court date and another court day, and then nothing. And we were like, 'What is going to happen? Is she really going to come out?' Are they really going to release her?'"
Aguilar Maldonado was set to post her $10,000 bond on Wednesday, leading to her release. Her immigration case continues next Tuesday when she's set to return to court for proceedings as the government attempts to have her deported as an illegal immigrant.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
.jpeg%3Ftrim%3D0%2C5%2C0%2C5%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)

The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Pete Hegseth does believe in a woman's right to vote, Pentagon says after video controversy
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth does believe in a woman's right to vote, the Pentagon has insisted, a week after he ignited a controversy by posting a video on X of a Christian evangelist suggesting that right should be repealed. Hegseth, 45, posted a seven-minute CNN segment on his account last Friday profiling Christian nationalist pastor Doug Wilson, who founded the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches and whose congregation the secretary belongs to, with the comment: 'All of Christ for All of Life.' The video features a brief interlude in which journalist Pamela Brown also interviews two other pastors, Toby Sumpter and Jared Longshoreman, in which the latter expresses his support for scrapping the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted American women suffrage in 1920 after a fierce campaign by contemporary feminists. 'I would support it on the basis that the atomization that comes with our current system is not good for humans,' Longshoreman states. Hegseth's post attracted a swathe of withering responses and personal attacks, one of which quoted the fourth president, James Madison's famous remark of 1803: 'The purpose of separation of church and state is to keep forever from these shores the ceaseless strife that has soaked the soil of Europe in blood for centuries.' Asked about the clip by reporters on Thursday, Pentagon spokesperson Kingsley Wilson said: 'Of course, the secretary thinks that women should have the right to vote.' She declined to be drawn on why he had felt compelled to post it. 'He appreciates many of [Pastor Wilson's] writings and teachings,' the spokesperson said. 'I'm not going to litigate every single aspect of what he may or may not believe in a certain video.' Hegseth is mentioned in the segment as an attendee at Wilson's services and over his introduction of monthly prayer sessions at the Pentagon. In the film, Brown also interviews Jennifer Butler, founder of the progressive Faith in Democracy group, who expresses disquiet about Wilson's close connection to the Donald Trump administration via the defense secretary. 'He is rapidly gaining in power,' she warned. 'He has hundreds of churches established around the country. They actually literally want to take over towns and cities and they have access to this administration.' Wilson himself is forthcoming in the film about his opinion, which he insists is based on scripture, that women should not be in certain leadership positions, and doubles down on a claim he first made in the 1990s that the relationship between masters and slaves in 19th-century America was often affectionate and not necessarily adversarial. According to The Huffington Post, Hegseth's views on women 'drove tension' while he was a student at Princeton.


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
University of Alaska dorms to host up to 750 Russian delegates in town for Trump-Putin summit
The University of Alaska Anchorage is expecting hundreds of Russian delegates who are in the city for the summit between President Trump and President Vladimir Putin to stay in student dorms. 'There may be up to 750 people staying on campus between the U.S. and Russian delegations,' vice chancellor Ryan Buchholdt said in an email to the Alaskan newspaper, Anchorage Daily News. The school can house around 12,000 people. This week marks the start of the school calendar for those returning from the summer break. The summit is going to be held at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, about a 10-minute drive from Anchorage, reports Alaska's News Source. The meeting will mark the first time Trump and Putin have met in person since 2018. 'In addition to the dorms, we do have the Alaska Airlines Center [a sports arena that has a 5,000-seat capacity] that has been set up with beds, meeting most of the need, mostly from the Russian delegation side,' Buchholdt also told Alaska's News Source. University police are working closely with state and federal law agencies to monitor security, Buchholdt added. 'Our main concern is making sure anyone who is staying on campus, whether they are from the United States or Russia or any other locality, is safe,' Buchholdt said, 'and is able to do the mission that they're here to do and go back home safely.' On Thursday, some of the delegates had already arrived as of Thursday afternoon, according to university spokesperson Katie Bender. Flight tracking data showed that at least one flight from Moscow had touched down in Anchorage that afternoon. 'The delegations are in separate locations. For security purposes, we are not able to share where the delegations are located,' Bender added. Alyeska resort, located about 40 miles south of Anchorage, informed local press that they were fully booked for the weekend, and the website of the local hotel, Captain Cook, was also fully booked. The hotel site showed one remaining room in a hostel, at a staggeringly raised price of $150 a night on Friday. Town mayor Suzanne LaFrance explained that finding accommodation at the height of the tourist season is hard enough as it is, let alone with a significant political event taking center stage. 'I know that people are looking at creative solutions. I don't have any specific details about that [housing delegations in UOA], but I know that the university is engaged in those conversations, and I'm optimistic that we'll come up with some options for folks,' she said to Alaska's News Source. At the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, news and camera crews were seen rolling in on Thursday morning. Locals watched on as officials gathered in the vicinity. 'It's kind of a big deal, I mean, do we all want World War III?' one man told Alaska's News Source. The two leaders will hold peace talks regarding the future of Russia and Ukraine, amid a deadly war that has killed hundreds of thousands of soldiers on both sides. Earlier on Thursday, Putin praised Trump's 'energetic and sincere efforts to stop' the war in Ukraine. More than a million Russian troops have been killed or injured since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began on 24 February 2022, reports the British Ministry of Defense. Meanwhile, Ukrainian personnel fatalities and casualties have amounted to around 400,000, says the US-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies. Ahead of the summit, Trump vowed that as he hopes to secure a ceasefire deal.


The Guardian
41 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Seth Meyers on Donald Trump's DC police takeover: ‘This is all just theater'
With several late-night hosts on holiday, Seth Meyers took a closer look at the Trump administration's deployment of the national guard in Washington DC as a playbook for other cities. 'Donald Trump is always laser-focused on the important stuff – no, not inflation, not healthcare, not jobs,' said Seth Meyers on Wednesday evening. 'He's focused on giving himself an award.' On Wednesday, Trump gave a typically rambling speech at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the formerly prestigious performance hall that he took over early in his term, purging the board and replacing it with loyalists. Presenting the center's annual honorees, the president said: 'I always wanted one, I was never able to get one … I would've taken it, if they would've called me. I waited, and waited, and waited, and then said, 'To hell with it, I'll become chairman and I'll give myself an honor.' Next year we'll honor Trump, OK?' 'I like how everyone laughs at him, and then he says, 'No, it's true, actually,'' the Late Night host responded. 'Second, he's definitely not joking about giving himself an award. This is the guy who made a fake Time magazine cover for himself to hang on his wall. 'I have no trouble believing that he'd give himself a made-up award called the 'Kennedy Center Lifetime Achievement Nobel Prize EGOT Award for Most Everything',' Meyers added. Trump also announced that he would host the annual Kennedy Center Honors, and claimed he had to be talked into it by his team because he has better things to do as president. 'Well, I think you deserve the award for best original screenplay, because that's definitely a fake conversation that did not happen,' Meyers laughed. Meyers then turned to the other major political story this week: Trump taking over the Washington DC Metropolitan police and deploying the national guard to combat a made-up crime wave in the city. Meyers noted that Republicans see this action as a playbook for other cities, despite the fact that, in truth, violent crime rates are down in most major cities. The states with the highest crime rates, such as Louisiana and Mississippi, are largely controlled by Republicans. 'The right has created this myth about crime in big cities that isn't true,' Meyers said. 'It's a playbook that Republicans have used for decades, and Trump repeated it in 2024. 'In a clear sign that this is all just theater, Trump is threatening to only send the national guard to cities controlled by Democrats,' calling the DC action a 'beacon for New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and other places all over the country'. 'The myth of urban crime is central to the right's worldview,' Meyers noted. 'For years, they basically made it their whole thing to be afraid of cities.' He pointed to the example of the US transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, on Fox News, complaining about crime rates on the New York City subway and also taking a shot at its cleanliness. Meyers got defensive. 'Only New Yorkers are allowed to shit on the New York City subway. I mean that figuratively and sadly sometimes literally,' he said. 'Trump doesn't want to fix problems in big cities, because he loves problems in big cities,' he concluded. 'He loves problems anywhere that can distract from his problems. And he definitely has problems – his polling numbers are not great, his Maga base is questioning his ties to Jeffrey Epstein and voters are starting to suspect that the Trump administration might be,' to quote Trump himself, 'a crime pot.'