From The Texas Tribune:
On a February afternoon, after pumping breast milk, Stephanie Villarreal sent her husband Juan Chavez Velasco to the hospital to drop off the milk at the neonatal intensive care unit for their 12-day-old daughter, who was born 10 weeks prematurely.
As Chavez, 35, drove from his home in Weslaco, black and white SUVs flashing police lights surrounded his car. He pulled to the curb, thinking they were after someone else. Then four U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents got out and one of them opened Chavez’s door.
After confirming his name, the agent said, “Yeah, that’s our target.”
For the past 14 years, Chavez, whose family immigrated from Colombia to the U.S. in 1999, has been a recipient of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, referred to as DACA. The Obama-era immigration program allows qualifying young immigrants to receive renewable work permits and protection from deportation as long as they don’t commit any crimes.
He said he told agents he had DACA, and that he was a father of three young children, including a baby in the hospital who he still had not held since she was born.
“That doesn’t matter,” Chavez said an agent told him.












