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Nevilledog

(54,802 posts)
Fri Feb 13, 2026, 10:37 AM 6 hrs ago

The Children of Dilley (ProPublica)

https://www.propublica.org/article/life-inside-ice-dilley-children

Fourteen-year-old Ariana Velasquez had been held at the immigrant detention center in Dilley, Texas, with her mother for some 45 days when I managed to get inside to meet her. The staff brought everyone in the visiting room a boxed lunch from the cafeteria: a cup of yellowish stew and a hamburger patty in a plain bun. Ariana’s long black curls hung loosely around her face and she was wearing a government-issued gray sweatsuit. At first, she sat looking blankly down at the table. She poked at her food with a plastic fork and let her mother do most of the talking.

She perked up when I asked about home: Hicksville, New York. She and her mother had moved there from Honduras when she was 7. Her mother, Stephanie Valladares, had applied for asylum, married a neighbor from back home who was already living in the U.S., and had two more kids. Ariana took care of them after school. She was a freshman at Hicksville High, and being detained at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center meant that she was falling behind in her classes. She told me how much she missed her favorite sign language teacher, but most of all she missed her siblings.

I had previously met them in Hicksville: Gianna, a toddler who everyone calls Gigi, and Jacob, a kindergartener with wide brown eyes. I told Ariana that they missed her too. Jacob had shown me a security camera that their mom had installed in the kitchen so she could peek in on them from her job, sometimes saying “Hello” through the speaker. I told Ariana that Jacob tried talking to the camera, hoping his mom would answer.

Stephanie burst into tears. So did Ariana. After my visit, Ariana wrote me a letter.

“My younger siblings haven’t been able to see their mom in more than a month,” she wrote. “They are very young and you need both of your parents when you are growing up.” Then, referring to Dilley, she added, “Since I got to this Center all you will feel is sadness and mostly depression.”

*snip*
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The Children of Dilley (ProPublica) (Original Post) Nevilledog 6 hrs ago OP
I seriously don't understand they're justification for "detainment" Walleye 5 hrs ago #1
DURec leftstreet 5 hrs ago #2
Kick dalton99a 5 hrs ago #3

Walleye

(44,149 posts)
1. I seriously don't understand they're justification for "detainment"
Fri Feb 13, 2026, 10:51 AM
5 hrs ago

They are locking people up for long sentences without any sort of due process. They won’t even look at their paperwork. And they can’t understand why people hate them

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