Los Angeles Times

U.S. citizen held by ICE settles case for $55,000

Woman was released when daughter brought in her passport

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com Twitter: @AleneTchek

The government has agreed to pay $55,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by a San Bernardino woman who was detained by immigratio­n authoritie­s last year despite repeatedly saying that she was a U.S. citizen.

Civil rights attorneys said Guadalupe Plascencia, a citizen for two decades, spent a night in jail last year before she was detained by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t for at least an hour and a half, part of the time in handcuffs, and threatened with deportatio­n. Plascencia eventually was released when her daughter showed ICE agents her passport.

The settlement agreement calls for San Bernardino County to pay $35,000 and the federal government $20,000.

“The government should be held accountabl­e when it violates people’s rights,” Adrienna Wong, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, said in a statement. “San Bernardino County residents like Ms. Plascencia have the right to live, work and raise their families in peace, without fear that ICE may unfairly arrest them without cause.”

James Thebeau, an attorney representi­ng San Bernardino County, said the agreement did not include an admission of wrongdoing and declined to comment further.

An attorney for the federal government did not immediatel­y return a call for comment.

Plascencia’s ordeal began in March 2017, when she visited the Ontario Police Department to recover a gun, which she legally owned, that had been seized after her daughter was involved in a car accident. As she waited in the police station, officers told her she was going to be arrested on a warrant for allegedly failing to testify in a decade-old court case.

During her night in jail, Plascencia said a deputy asked her to sign documents acknowledg­ing that ICE had inquired about her. She was arrested by immigratio­n agents as she left jail the next day.

“I felt helpless, like I was no one,” Plascencia told The Times last year. “Here, they talk about rights … in that moment, I realized, we don’t have rights.”

Plascencia, a mother of five with 16 grandchild­ren, eventually was able to speak with her daughter, who brought her passport to prove her citizenshi­p, her attorneys said.

“This settlement sends a strong message that her entire ordeal could have been prevented had law enforcemen­t taken a moment to properly investigat­e Ms. Plascencia’s citizenshi­p before arresting her,” Alexandria Ruiz, another attorney representi­ng Plascencia, said in a statement. “The Constituti­on requires no less.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? GUADALUPE PLASCENCIA of San Bernardino, a U.S. citizen for two decades, is consoled by daughter Mahria in May 2017 as she describes her arrest two months earlier. She was threatened with deportatio­n.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times GUADALUPE PLASCENCIA of San Bernardino, a U.S. citizen for two decades, is consoled by daughter Mahria in May 2017 as she describes her arrest two months earlier. She was threatened with deportatio­n.

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