US
immigration agents detain two-year-old Minnesota girl: ‘depravity beyond words’
DHS
detain a toddler and her father on Thursday and fly them to Texas before
returning child on judge’s order
Sam Levin
Sat 24
Jan 2026 02.38 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/23/us-immigration-two-year-old-minnesota-girl
Federal
immigration agents detained a two-year-old girl and her father in Minneapolis
on Thursday and transported them to Texas, according to court records and the
family’s lawyers.
The
father, identified in court filings as Elvis Joel TE, and his daughter were
stopped and detained by officers around 1pm when they were returning home from
the store. By the evening, a federal judge had ordered the girl be released by
9.30pm. But federal officials instead put both of them on a plane heading to a
Texas detention center.
Irina
Vaynerman, one of the family’s lawyers, told the Guardian late Friday afternoon
that immigration officials had since flown both of them back to Minnesota and
released the two-year-old into the custody of her mother. The father remains
detained in Minnesota, she said.
“The
horror is truly unimaginable,” Vaynerman said. “The depravity of all of this is
beyond words.”
Court
records and the attorney’s accounts paint a harrowing picture of the toddler
and father’s detention and the frantic efforts that followed to get her
released from custody and reunited with her mother. The detention came two days
after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained five-year-old Liam
Ramos in Minnesota, in a case that has prompted international backlash and
increased scrutiny of the Trump administration’s aggressive crackdown in the
region.
As the
father and daughter were arriving home on Thursday, agents entered their
backyard and driveway area, Kira Kelley, one of the family’s lawyers, wrote in
a filing. The officers did not have a warrant, the attorney said. One agent
then allegedly broke the glass window of the father’s car while the girl was
inside.
The
mother was by the door and stepped inside the house as the agents approached,
Kelley wrote. The agents refused to allow the father to bring his daughter to
the mother or other family members “waiting terrified inside the home”.
The
two-year-old and her father were then placed in an immigration agent’s vehicle,
which Kelley wrote did not have a car seat.
Lawyers
filed an emergency petition, first reported by the Minnesota Star Tribune,
demanding that ICE release Elvis Joel TE and his daughter. A Minnesota-based
federal judge issued an order around 8.10pm prohibiting the government from
transferring them outside of Minnesota, and soon after issued a second order
that the government immediately release the girl into the custody of Kelley,
her attorney.
Kelley
had obtained permission from the girl’s mother to be a temporary guardian “for
the purpose of retrieving the infant from immigration detention”.
The
federal judge said the release of the girl was necessary due to the “risk of
irreparable harm”, saying it was highly likely the underlying petition would
succeed on the merits.
“Needless
to say, she has no criminal history,” the judge wrote, of the toddler.
But the
government, the family’s lawyers wrote, placed the father and daughter on a
flight to Texas around 8.30pm.
The
father, originally from Ecuador, has a pending asylum application and no final
order of removal, according to his attorneys. The girl, the lawyers wrote, has
lived in Minneapolis “since her arrival in the United States as a newborn”.
The
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not respond to questions on Friday
about why the father and daughter were taken to Texas and what steps the
government took to comply with the judge’s order.
In a
statement, a DHS spokesperson said border patrol had been conducting a
“targeted enforcement operation” on Thursday when agents “identified” Elvis
Joel TE. DHS called him an “illegal immigrant”, alleging he had unlawfully
reentered the US and claiming he was “driving erratically with a child”.
DHS
alleged that the father refused to open his door or lower his window and said
agents “attempted to give the child to the mother who was in the area, but she
refused”. “DHS law enforcement took care of the child who the mother would not
take,” the statement said.
Vaynerman,
the family’s lawyer, said the claim that the mother “refused” to take her
daughter was false, saying agents would not let the father return his daughter
to the home to be with her mother.
During
the arrest, a crowd gathered outside, leading agents to deploy “crowd control
measures”, DHS said. The Star Tribune said social media videos showed agents
appearing to use chemical irritants and flash-bang devices.
DHS’s
statement said the father and daughter were “reunited [at] a federal facility”,
but did not acknowledge that she had since been returned to her mother.
Spokespeople did not respond to additional questions about the lawyers’
accounts of the episode and the daughter’s return.
“This
case is horrific … Anybody who is a parent or cares for young kids knows the
fear that happens when a child is separated from their parent,” said Vaynerman,
a civil rights lawyer and co-founder of Groundwork Legal, a Minnesota-based
public interest law firm. “There is no way to know the long-term impact this
will have on this little toddler.”
Vaynerman
criticized DHS’s practice of quickly transferring people it detains out of
state, saying the tactic is meant to move cases out of the jurisdiction of
courts in Minnesota and made it harder for families to reach lawyers and fight
their cases.
“This is
creating terror in our city and state. It’s something I truly have never ever
seen before to this extreme,” she said.
The
family’s lawyers have urged the court to issue a broader order blocking the
government from transferring individuals outside of Minnesota for at least
seven days after they are given an opportunity to contact legal counsel, and
bar out-of-state transfers for people with pending habeas petitions, meaning
they have ongoing challenges to their detention.
“The lack
of humanity at every step of this process of what the government has been doing
and how they have been unlawfully detaining people, including toddlers and
children, it’s truly unimaginable,” said Vaynerman. “And yet this is where we find
ourselves. There has to be an end to this type of cruelty.”

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