After 9 months in detention, Undocumented Student is Finally Released!
Obama’s discretionary policy continues to keep innocent Dream Act-eligible youth in detention and deportation risk
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 11, 2012
Contact: Daniela 646-472-9565
New York, NY. Jordana Vera Serna, an undocumented Dream Act-eligible young woman, has finally been released after unjustly spending 9 months in a detention center in New Jersey. Jordana was brought to the United States, from Argentina, when she was only 12 years old. She attended Carteret High School and began working at a local supermarket in order to provide for her family. Jordana was unable to graduate from high school because her family relied on her financially. However, she valued her education and obtained her G.E.D from Amboy Adult Center while working as a waitress. Jordana sought to pursue her education at a local community college. Her plans for Fall 2011 enrollment were interrupted last July when Jordana was arrested and detained while ICE visited Jordana’s home searching for another family member. She was taken to a detention center, and on August 4, 2011, a few weeks later, was taken to the airport for deportation to Argentina. Jordana refused to board her flight and in retaliation, ICE sent her to Hudson County Jail. Since then Jordana was detained in much worse conditions than the detention center she was previously in.
After a grassroots campaign led by the New York State Youth Leadership Council and Dreamactivist.org, hundreds of phone calls and more than thousand petition signatures to ICE, Jordana was released. Jordana expresses her gratitude to everyone who supported her in this difficult situation. Finally, Jordana will be able to return to her family and start her education to become a lawyer and psychologist. However, this is a temporary relief given that Jordana was only given a six-month stay, after which she will be at risk of deportation again.
Jordana can be with her family after enduring nine long and painful months in a detention center, where everyday she had to face the risk of being deported away from the country she considers her home. Her case and those of many other innocent undocumented youth show that President Obama’s prosecutorial discretion on deportation cases is far from working properly. Dream Act-eligible youth continue to be detained and deported. Our immigrant communities do not need a symbolic and unenforced memorandum. We need a real commitment and action to stop deportations of innocent and hard-working undocumented immigrants. President Obama, no more unfulfilled promises – our immigrant communities need concrete solutions!

For more information, contact Daniela at 646-472-9565.
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The NYSYLC is a youth led organization that seeks to improve access to higher education and creating equal opportunity for immigrant youth and children of immigrants, regardless of immigration status through leadership development, organizing and advocacy. The National Immigrant Youth Alliance (NIYA) is an undocumented youth-led network of grassroots organizations, campus-based student groups and individuals committed to achieving equality for all immigrant youth, regardless of their legal status.
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