Judge orders Lake Elmo mother to be released after immigration arrest
After detaining her for nearly a month, immigration officials released a young Lake Elmo mother from custody on Wednesday after a federal judge ordered them to do so.
Antonia Aguilar Maldonado came to the U.S. from El Salvador in 2016 without legal status as a 17-year-old unaccompanied minor. She now has two young U.S. citizen children.
On July 17, she was headed to her job as a self-employed painter when Homeland Security investigators stopped her and her husband in St. Paul.
Both were detained, but sent to different facilities. The mother was taken to the Kandiyohi County jail in Willmar.
The federal judge’s ruling to release her restores a prior immigration court decision granting her a $10,000 bond, an amount her church community has been raising to help get her out.
Her attorneys, Hannah Brown and Gloria Contreras Edin, say Aguilar Maldonado has no criminal record, she’s been following all the rules of her immigration case and has an active asylum application.
Tuesday’s decision was an emergency order — a temporary injunction — that allows Aguilar Maldonado to pay bond and be released while her larger immigration case is still ongoing. To grant that order, U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson had to find there was a strong chance Aguilar Maldonado would win that case — something the federal government disputes.
Her attorneys say when she was arrested last month, federal agents told Aguilar Maldonado they were acting on an old deportation order.
But that order was reopened and canceled years ago because she never received proper notice of her court hearing when she was a teenager, according to her lawyers.
They say since then, she’s been attending all of her hearings and has stayed in compliance with the court.
“She expressed thankfulness to us, but more importantly, I think she’s just happy to be reunited with her children and her family,” Contreras Edin said following a phone call with her client.
“The breast milk that she’s feeding her toddler is the only thing that her toddler can take. He’s allergic to other forms of milk,” the attorney said. According to her lawyers, the jail didn’t give her a breast pump right away after she was detained. Staff later purchased a manual pump for her.
On Tuesday, the courtroom was filled with supporters — some were friends, others had heard of her case.
“There are folks here who knew her and folks here who don’t know her,” attorney Hannah Brown said. “I think it was really beautiful to see so many people, so many Minnesotans, showing their support for a young mother who does not need to be detained.”
Both attorneys say Aguilar Maldonado’s husband has separate counsel and did not share further details about his case.
Related Articles
As federal activity takes root in DC, police chief orders more cooperation with immigration agents
Judge orders RFK Jr.’s health department to stop sharing Medicaid data with deportation officials
DeSantis announces plans for second immigration detention facility in north Florida
Judge weighs whether Trump violated federal law by deploying National Guard to Los Angeles
Jury finds Texas couple guilty of concealing and harboring bakery workers in the US illegally
