I love the loved ones after the detention of the mother of southern California and his deportation after a routine migration session.
Maria Valeriano Perez, 52, is the mother of three children who lived in the United States for 35 years. She was working as a guard in Ventura for years.
Her family said that she had attended a deadline for immigration on June 4, and instead of updating her case, she was immediately assigned to maintenance and was detained by the United States for Migration and Customs (ICE).
It was transferred to a federal detention center in the center of Los Angeles and was eventually deported to Oxaka, Mexico.
Maria’s daughter, Erika Perez, said that she was not shocking due to her mother’s detention, but also through the tragic circumstances that her mother witnessed.
“She told me about women inside the striking doors and begging for food,” said Erika Sandra Mitchell from KTLA. “They were so hungry that they were pretending that they were drinking wine [and eating.]”
Erika said that her mother described the conditions of the detention facility as dark – a place where men, women and children were crowded in one room for treatment.
“The women were plating under the seats and started crying just to escape the nightmare they were going through,” said Erika.
Camilla Bons, whose uncle was also detained by ICE, said he had not been provided with a lot of information during the operation.
“They did not even ask whether they had leaves, if they were documented or have evidence of identity, they just gathered them all,” Bons said.
Her uncle, Rudolfo Bons Flores, was detained during a raid in the clothing area in the center of Los Angeles on June 6. She said in just a few days, it was transferred to at least three different facilities across three different provinces in Socal.
“We tried to go to his vision, but they said,” No. “they did not allow anyone to enter, not even lawyers.”
Although Erika said that her mother accepted her fate that she may never acquire the nationality of the United States, she does not change the influence of her absence on her friends, loved ones and members of society.
“She told me to take care of my brothers and that he would be well,” Erika said about her last conversation with her mother before she was deported. “I just destroyed. I have now gone. You left me alone to raise my other brothers.”
Under a new policy from the Trump administration, Maria will not be able to apply for re -admission in the United States for another 10 years.
Gofundme page to help the Perez family It can be found here. Campaign to help Bons It can be found here.