Federal Judge Orders Immediate Release of Immigrant Detained at Daycare Amid Claims of Unlawful Holding.
A federal judge in the US has ruled that the detention of a woman taken into custody at an Illinois day care center by immigration agents was "unlawful" due to lack of access to a preliminary hearing. Diana Santillana Galeano, who had been pulled from the Rayito de Sol Spanish Immersion Early Learning Center on November 5th, remains in custody in Indiana until a bond hearing can take place.
Galeano's attorney claims that her client was being held without due process and faces "indefinite detention" under a policy of the Department of Homeland Security. According to sources close to the case, Galeano had been taken into custody by immigration agents who claimed she was at risk of deportation despite having documentation with her.
The court has previously ruled that this policy violates the rights of people detained by federal immigration agents, citing lack of access to due process. The ruling also came after an amicus brief filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and 19 other attorneys general called for a strike down on the DHS policy.
Judge Jeremy C. Daniel ordered Galeano's bond hearing to take place within the next week and has set a deadline for the government to provide an update on her release. The judge also expressed that Galeano should not be kept in custody "indefinitely" and is taking steps towards returning her to her home state, Illinois.
Galeano had previously told immigration agents that she had documentation with her but was still taken into custody. Her lawyer believes this action by the agents was a desperate attempt to stop her from being deported. The government has accused Galeano of "reportedly facilitating" the smuggling of her children into the country.
The court's decision comes after an incident captured on video, where immigration agents were seen dragging Galeano out of the day care center without warrants and entering classrooms while children were present.
A federal judge in the US has ruled that the detention of a woman taken into custody at an Illinois day care center by immigration agents was "unlawful" due to lack of access to a preliminary hearing. Diana Santillana Galeano, who had been pulled from the Rayito de Sol Spanish Immersion Early Learning Center on November 5th, remains in custody in Indiana until a bond hearing can take place.
Galeano's attorney claims that her client was being held without due process and faces "indefinite detention" under a policy of the Department of Homeland Security. According to sources close to the case, Galeano had been taken into custody by immigration agents who claimed she was at risk of deportation despite having documentation with her.
The court has previously ruled that this policy violates the rights of people detained by federal immigration agents, citing lack of access to due process. The ruling also came after an amicus brief filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and 19 other attorneys general called for a strike down on the DHS policy.
Judge Jeremy C. Daniel ordered Galeano's bond hearing to take place within the next week and has set a deadline for the government to provide an update on her release. The judge also expressed that Galeano should not be kept in custody "indefinitely" and is taking steps towards returning her to her home state, Illinois.
Galeano had previously told immigration agents that she had documentation with her but was still taken into custody. Her lawyer believes this action by the agents was a desperate attempt to stop her from being deported. The government has accused Galeano of "reportedly facilitating" the smuggling of her children into the country.
The court's decision comes after an incident captured on video, where immigration agents were seen dragging Galeano out of the day care center without warrants and entering classrooms while children were present.