Border Patrol Arrest Undocumented Woman 137 Miles Away From Border
U.S. Border Patrol agents arrested a 22-year-old undocumented student in Boyle Heights, a neighborhood just east of Downtown Los Angeles, on Thursday morning.
The arrest of Claudia Rueda-Vidal has left immigrant rights groups asking why Border Patrol agents targeted the young student some 137 miles away from the U.S.-Mexico border.
“It’s something that’s caught a lot of us off guard,” Monika Langarica, an immigration attorney that focuses on representing immigrants facing deportation, told Fusion.
“I practice in San Diego and beyond the border we don’t feel as heavy of a Border Patrol presence as there has been in LA in the past few weeks,” said Langarica, who is representing Rueda-Vidal.
In 1953, The Department of Justice adopted the 100-mile border zone policy that allows U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents to conduct operations anywhere within 100 miles of a port of entry. But with Customs and Border Protection officials currently reporting illegal border crossings at a 17-year low, the agents may be moving far past the 100-mile border zone. A Border Patrol official told Fusion agents can operate in LA County during investigations.
Rueda-Vidal is currently a student at California State University, Los Angeles. She is active in the immigrant rights movement and part of a group called the Immigrant Youth Coalition. Hundreds of students are expected to graduate at the commencement ceremony on Saturday, but Rueda-Vidal’s arrest has sparked enough anxiety and questions on campus that the university president emailed students a statement denouncing the practice of targeting students based on their immigration status.
Rueda-Vidal, Langarica told Fusion, stepped outside of her home in Boyle Heights on Thursday morning to move her car to the opposite side of the street. It’s a routine practice many Angelenos have to deal with on street cleaning days to avoid a parking ticket. But before Rueda-Vidal could get out of the car, three vehicles surrounded her and agents arrested her.
Langarica says no one bothered to tell the Rueda-Vidal’s family they had arrested her, so for hours, they searched frantically.
Rueda-Vidal’s mother was supporting her education and paying for school fees with her “very meager wages working at a local bakery,” her attorney said. The family was saving up to pay for the more than $500 application processing fee so Rueda-Vidal could apply for DACA, the federal program that provides young immigrants a temporary work permit and protection from deportation.