Travis Gettys
December 19, 2025
ALTERNET

Esther Lopez-Sanchez/WZTV-TV
A Tennessee woman's baby remains in state custody weeks after prosecutors dropped charges that led to her arrest and detention by immigration officials.
Esther Lopez-Sanchez is being held at a South Louisiana processing center while her daughter remains in the custody of Tennessee’s Department of Children’s Services (DCS), and she is pleading to be reunited with the child, who is a citizen because she was born in the U.S., reported WZTV-TV.
"This has destroyed her," said migrant advocate Zeinab Al-Mathkour. "She had her baby for only two and a half days."
Lopez-Sanchez was arrested last year while pregnant, and she went into labor after being taken to Rutherford County jail and gave birth at a nearby hospital.
Court records show Lopez-Sanchez was arrested Aug. 15, 2024, with her partner, Roberto Nunez-Gomez, on drug and firearm charges, but the charges against her were dropped Nov. 12, 2025, while Nunez-Gomez was convicted.
Al-Mathkour told the station Nunez-Gomez is the baby’s father but said the pair are no longer together.
However, DCS and the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is holding Lopez-Sanchez in custody, have refused to return the child a month after she was told she would face no additional action.
Lopez-Sanchez has asked authorities to place her child with family members, but Al-Mathkour told the TV station DCS has resisted.
"(DCS) told her those won't work because one of them is undocumented," Al-Mathkour said. "The other one lives with someone who is undocumented."
Lopez-Sanchez is weighing whether to return to Mexico or fighting deportation, Al-Mathkour said, but conservative political analyst Steve Gill told the TV station that DCS faced a difficult decision.
"The real focus has to be is best for the child, whether it is being under foster care here in the U.S. while the mother is back in Mexico or whether it is dispatching the child to Mexico, which is a hard call," Gill said.
Immigration attorney Andrew Rankin agreed the courts should decide custody based on the interest of the child, but he said migrants deserved an opportunity to be heard before a judge.
"There is an argument that as a matter of due process, parents have the right to parent their child," said Rankin, adding that family members should be next in line.
Wisconsin Judge’s Case Is ‘Far From Over,’ Advocates Say After Conviction for Helping Immigrant at Courthouse
Judge Hannah Dugan’s case is “not about one judge,” said an advocacy group, but rather “the normalization of ICE operating in courthouses.”

Demonstrators protest in front of the federal courthouse in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where Judge Hannah Dugan appeared in front of a judge after being arrested by the FBI on April 25, 2025.
(Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Julia Conley
Dec 19, 2025
COMMON DREAMS
The case of Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan “is a long way from over” said a lawyer for the judge after a jury found her guilty late Thursday of the felony charge of obstructing immigration agents who showed up at her courtroom in April with the aim of arresting an immigrant who was appearing before Dugan.
The jury deliberated for six hours before finding Dugan, a Milwaukee County circuit court judge, guilty of obstructing an official proceeding. The jurors acquitted her of a misdemeanor charge of concealing a person from arrest—a result her lawyer, Steve Biskupic, said he would question when he seeks to have the conviction thrown out by a court.

‘Monday Afternoon Massacre’: Trump Fires 8 Immigration Judges in NYC

‘A Forceful Stand for Our Constitution’: Judge Orders Release of Kilmar Ábrego García
“While we are disappointed in today’s outcome, the failure of the prosecution to secure convictions on both counts demonstrates the opportunity we have to clear Judge Dugan’s name and show she did nothing wrong in this matter,” said Dugan’s legal team.
The Trump administration seized on the case in April after Dugan responded to FBI and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents’ presence in the courthouse by telling the defendant, Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, to go out a back door of her courtroom after she had sent the agents to another part of the building.
FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo of Dugan in handcuffs on social media in April, and Attorney General Pam Bondi attacked the judge in television appearances, accusing her of “protecting a criminal defendant over victims of crime.”
The case began at Milwaukee County Courthouse in April, when Dugan was hearing a number of misdemeanor cases in one day. Flores-Ruiz, who had been deported in 2013 and had reentered the US without authorization, was facing battery charges.
Emails presented in Dugan’s case this week showed she had tried to push Milwaukee County Chief Judge Carl Ashley to make an official policy regarding how judges should handle the arrival of federal agents at a time when President Donald Trump’s rapid escalation of his mass deportation campaign was sending ICE officers to courthouses across the country. Courts had previously been treated as protected areas where immigration enforcement could not take place.
“We reject a system that uses prosecution and brute force to advance a far-right, anti-immigrant agenda and criminalizes those who stand up against this assault on our human and constitutional rights.”
Without official guidelines in place, the court clerk who notified Dugan of the ICE agents’ presence, Alan Freed, testified that he had been “upset and a little bit outraged” that the officers were there.
Dugan confronted the agents, who were sitting in the hallway and waiting to arrest Flores-Ruiz, and told them to go down the hall to Ashley’s office.
An FBI special agent testified that Dugan “seemed to be angry” when she confronted the officers.
Dugan then returned to her courtroom and told Flores-Ruiz’s lawyer she would find a new date for his hearing. She spoke privately to a court reporter saying Flores-Ruiz could leave the room through a side door that was not open to the public.
“I’ll get the heat,” Dugan said.
The side door led to a stairwell and also to another door that opened into a public hallway where the federal agents were. Flores-Ruiz and his lawyer went through the door and an agent followed and then chased the defendant, arresting him outside the courthouse. Flores-Ruiz was deported last month.
Prosecutors said during the case that Dugan had intended for Flores-Ruiz to escape the agents by going down the stairwell—even though he did the opposite.
An attorney on Dugan’s legal team said during closing arguments that she “never acted corruptly in doing her job as a judge in the middle of a stressful, new, and confusing situation.”
Dugan could serve up to five years in prison and will likely be barred from serving as a judge, as the Wisconsin Constitution prohibits people convicted of felonies from holding public office.
Norm Eisen, executive chair of Democracy Defenders Fund, also emphasized that the case is “far from over.”
“Substantial legal and constitutional issues remain unresolved, and they are exactly the kinds of questions appellate courts are meant to address. Higher courts will have the opportunity to determine whether this prosecution crossed the lines that protect the judiciary from executive overreach,” said Eisen.
Milwaukee-based advocacy group Voces de la Frontera emphasized that Dugan’s case “is not about one judge,” but rather “the normalization of ICE operating in courthouses and the expansion of immigration enforcement into spaces meant to guarantee fairness, safety, and access to justice.”
“By validating this prosecution, the verdict blurs the line between the courts and executive enforcement power, signaling that the law will be enforced aggressively against immigrants and those who dare to defend their rights, while the privileged and powerful continue to evade accountability,” said the group, calling Dugan’s case “a political prosecution that criminalized the exercise of judicial independence and the defense of due process.”
Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Vocesde la Frontera, said the verdict “tells judges, court staff, and our communities that defending due process comes with consequences.”
“That is not justice, it is intimidation,” she said. “We reject a system that uses prosecution and brute force to advance a far-right, anti-immigrant agenda and criminalizes those who stand up against this assault on our human and constitutional rights. We stand in solidarity with Judge Hannah Dugan as her legal defense moves forward to clear her name, and we stand with the immigrant community in calling for ICE out of our courtrooms.”
Judge Hannah Dugan’s case is “not about one judge,” said an advocacy group, but rather “the normalization of ICE operating in courthouses.”

Demonstrators protest in front of the federal courthouse in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where Judge Hannah Dugan appeared in front of a judge after being arrested by the FBI on April 25, 2025.
(Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Julia Conley
Dec 19, 2025
COMMON DREAMS
The case of Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan “is a long way from over” said a lawyer for the judge after a jury found her guilty late Thursday of the felony charge of obstructing immigration agents who showed up at her courtroom in April with the aim of arresting an immigrant who was appearing before Dugan.
The jury deliberated for six hours before finding Dugan, a Milwaukee County circuit court judge, guilty of obstructing an official proceeding. The jurors acquitted her of a misdemeanor charge of concealing a person from arrest—a result her lawyer, Steve Biskupic, said he would question when he seeks to have the conviction thrown out by a court.

‘Monday Afternoon Massacre’: Trump Fires 8 Immigration Judges in NYC

‘A Forceful Stand for Our Constitution’: Judge Orders Release of Kilmar Ábrego García
“While we are disappointed in today’s outcome, the failure of the prosecution to secure convictions on both counts demonstrates the opportunity we have to clear Judge Dugan’s name and show she did nothing wrong in this matter,” said Dugan’s legal team.
The Trump administration seized on the case in April after Dugan responded to FBI and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents’ presence in the courthouse by telling the defendant, Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, to go out a back door of her courtroom after she had sent the agents to another part of the building.
FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo of Dugan in handcuffs on social media in April, and Attorney General Pam Bondi attacked the judge in television appearances, accusing her of “protecting a criminal defendant over victims of crime.”
The case began at Milwaukee County Courthouse in April, when Dugan was hearing a number of misdemeanor cases in one day. Flores-Ruiz, who had been deported in 2013 and had reentered the US without authorization, was facing battery charges.
Emails presented in Dugan’s case this week showed she had tried to push Milwaukee County Chief Judge Carl Ashley to make an official policy regarding how judges should handle the arrival of federal agents at a time when President Donald Trump’s rapid escalation of his mass deportation campaign was sending ICE officers to courthouses across the country. Courts had previously been treated as protected areas where immigration enforcement could not take place.
“We reject a system that uses prosecution and brute force to advance a far-right, anti-immigrant agenda and criminalizes those who stand up against this assault on our human and constitutional rights.”
Without official guidelines in place, the court clerk who notified Dugan of the ICE agents’ presence, Alan Freed, testified that he had been “upset and a little bit outraged” that the officers were there.
Dugan confronted the agents, who were sitting in the hallway and waiting to arrest Flores-Ruiz, and told them to go down the hall to Ashley’s office.
An FBI special agent testified that Dugan “seemed to be angry” when she confronted the officers.
Dugan then returned to her courtroom and told Flores-Ruiz’s lawyer she would find a new date for his hearing. She spoke privately to a court reporter saying Flores-Ruiz could leave the room through a side door that was not open to the public.
“I’ll get the heat,” Dugan said.
The side door led to a stairwell and also to another door that opened into a public hallway where the federal agents were. Flores-Ruiz and his lawyer went through the door and an agent followed and then chased the defendant, arresting him outside the courthouse. Flores-Ruiz was deported last month.
Prosecutors said during the case that Dugan had intended for Flores-Ruiz to escape the agents by going down the stairwell—even though he did the opposite.
An attorney on Dugan’s legal team said during closing arguments that she “never acted corruptly in doing her job as a judge in the middle of a stressful, new, and confusing situation.”
Dugan could serve up to five years in prison and will likely be barred from serving as a judge, as the Wisconsin Constitution prohibits people convicted of felonies from holding public office.
Norm Eisen, executive chair of Democracy Defenders Fund, also emphasized that the case is “far from over.”
“Substantial legal and constitutional issues remain unresolved, and they are exactly the kinds of questions appellate courts are meant to address. Higher courts will have the opportunity to determine whether this prosecution crossed the lines that protect the judiciary from executive overreach,” said Eisen.
Milwaukee-based advocacy group Voces de la Frontera emphasized that Dugan’s case “is not about one judge,” but rather “the normalization of ICE operating in courthouses and the expansion of immigration enforcement into spaces meant to guarantee fairness, safety, and access to justice.”
“By validating this prosecution, the verdict blurs the line between the courts and executive enforcement power, signaling that the law will be enforced aggressively against immigrants and those who dare to defend their rights, while the privileged and powerful continue to evade accountability,” said the group, calling Dugan’s case “a political prosecution that criminalized the exercise of judicial independence and the defense of due process.”
Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Vocesde la Frontera, said the verdict “tells judges, court staff, and our communities that defending due process comes with consequences.”
“That is not justice, it is intimidation,” she said. “We reject a system that uses prosecution and brute force to advance a far-right, anti-immigrant agenda and criminalizes those who stand up against this assault on our human and constitutional rights. We stand in solidarity with Judge Hannah Dugan as her legal defense moves forward to clear her name, and we stand with the immigrant community in calling for ICE out of our courtrooms.”
.jpeg)

No comments:
Post a Comment