Children aren’t exempt from ICE’s violence. And for administration hardliners, that’s the point.
By Jordan Liz
On January 20, ICE agents detained a five-year-old child just outside his home in Minnesota. The child was used as “bait” to try to draw family members out of their home.
A widely circulated photo of the boy being apprehended, with
his Spiderman backpack and fuzzy little animal ears on his winter hat, may
become an
indelible image of ICE’s cruelty.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) alleges that ICE was conducting a targeted operation against the boy’s father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias. Yet he and his son had entered the country via an official crossing point. They have an active asylum case and there was no order of deportation against them.
Zena
Stenvik, the local school superintendent, reports that this was the fourth
child detained by ICE in that community alone. A 10-year-old fourth grader and
two 17-year-olds were also taken.
Since then, more children have been abducted. On January 22,
ICE agents detained a 2-year-old
girl and her father, Elvis Joel Tipan Echeverria, in south
Minneapolis. Like Arias and his son, Echeverria and his daughter are asylum
seekers without an active order for deportation.
On January 29, two brothers in the second
and fifth grades were detained with their mother. She also has a
pending asylum case.
Violence towards children is nothing new for the Trump
administration. During Trump’s first term, more than 5,000 immigrant children were forcibly
separated from their parents. These children were
held in dirty, crowded, chain-linked cages and only provided foil sheets to
serve as blankets. In December 2024, Human
Rights Watch reported that as many as 1,360 children had still not
been reunited with their parents.


















