
A Nebraska lawmaker sheds tears, vows action after visiting jailed migrants in North Platte
By:Cindy Gonzalez
Nebraska Examiner
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. â After three months in ICE detention, legal fees mounting and no release in sight, Nuri Garibo Chona did what she called unimaginable. She left behind four daughters to return to the birthplace where she hadnât lived for decades. The Omaha mom was here illegally. Her kids are all U.S. citizens, and younger ones now are in the care of her oldest daughter, who is 27.
Another woman ensnared in the Glenn Valley Foods immigration raid in Omaha also was removed to Mexico last week without her two children, who remained in Omaha with their dad. On her way out, Leydy Solis Factor said she still was confused about why the work permit she got through proper channels was no longer good
Meanwhile, one of the men still held from the raid in the Lincoln County Jail has hired a local lawyer to replace an out-of-state firm and prays he hasnât lost a shot at being released on bond. He has a wife and children in Omaha and fears for their safety if he is forced back to Guatemala.
The number of Glenn Valley workers detained in this North Platte jail, which is paid by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain migrants, has dwindled since the high-profile worksite raid executed June 10 by more than 80 federal and local agents.
Shortly after the Nebraska Examiner visited the facility last week, Garibo Chona and Solis Factor were removed from the country, and three other women were released on bond, leaving six from the Glenn Valley raid among those in custody there.
ICE officials did not provide specifics when asked this week for an update, but of the original group of roughly 80 arrested, a spokesperson previously said about a dozen were released early and 63 were sent to North Platte. Several of the detainees agreed to voluntarily deport themselves, and many have been released on bond as their lawyers build cases to prevent forced removal.
To State Sen. Margo Juarez of Omaha, their journeys and circumstances have become even more relevant as the state prepares to repurpose a state prison into a 300-bed ICE detention center in McCook, a town of about 7,200 residents about an hour from North Platte.
Last week she became the first state lawmaker to sit down with Glenn Valley detainees. The discussion ranged from medical, legal and interpreter services to how their children were faring. After meeting with men and women garbed in black and white stripes, Juarez stepped into a nearby hall and cried.
She said sheâs on a mission to ensure that federal ICE detainees in Nebraska have access to the same services offered to state inmates in state prisons.
âIt was really difficult to see the reality, the human faces,â said Juarez, whose South Omaha district includes the Glenn Valley plant and other meatpackers that traditionally have attracted immigrant workers.
âThese are people locked up away from family,â she said. âWe have jailed innocent working people.â
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The federal government has a different viewpoint.
Representatives of ICE and its Homeland Security Investigations arm have repeatedly referred to the Glenn Valley case as a targeted, federal criminal investigation aimed at stopping the widespread use of stolen identifications by foreign-born workers to gain jobs.
âThese so-called âhonest workersâ have caused an immeasurable amount of financial and emotional hardship for innocent Americans,â HSIâs Mark Zito has said. âIf pretending to be someone you arenât in order to steal their lives isnât blatant criminal dishonesty, I donât know what is.â
Court documents track the Omaha raid â the largest immigration enforcement action in Nebraska since 2018 â back to a March subpoena that sought company employment records tying 107 of 177 employees to fraudulent IDs or documents that didnât authorize them to work in the country.

At least one defrauded U.S. citizen already had lodged identity theft complaints with the Internal Revenue Service and Social Security Administration. During the raid, agents questioned a worker whose job application matched the name of that complainant â leading to the arrest of Guadalupe Cabrera Mejia.
To date, available federal court records show Cabrera Mejia as the only Glenn Valley employee criminally charged for the alleged use of a stolen ID. Asked how that reconciled with âwidespreadâ criminal activity alleged earlier, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorneyâs Office in Nebraska said ICE determines whether to pursue felony criminal charges.
With regard to the Glenn Valley probe, she said, ICE elected âoverwhelminglyâ to pursue administrative charges in immigration court, a venue and process independent of federal prosecutors.
ICE has said an administrative charge is often a more expedient option, a faster path to deportation. The raid came as federal agencies are under pressure from the Trump administrationâs goal of making 3,000 related arrests per day and pursuing mass deportations.
In Nebraska, Gov. Jim Pillen, backed by many legislative Republicans, has pledged resources to help President Donald Trumpâs immigration agenda. Among state offerings: turning the McCook-based Work Ethic Camp into a Midwestern ICE detention center that federal officials dubbed the âCornhusker Clink.â
That conversion plan requires the relocation of 186 state inmates elsewhere in a Nebraska correctional system already ranked as the most crowded in the country, when measured by operational capacity. The decision to offer ICE state assistance sparked protests at the Governorâs Mansion and a four-hour public hearing that drew dozens of opponent speakers and no proponents.
Scant details shared about the project is partly what Juarez said spurred her to make the trek west to the jail in North Platte and prison in McCook.
âThis isnât going away,â she said. âTheyâre amping up enforcement, and I really wanted to see and hear from these families for myself.â
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On a day last week, Lincoln County Sheriff Jerome Kramer accompanied Juarez into separate cell blocs for men and women. The Examiner was allowed as well.
Women set aside Bibles and art materials and huddled around the silver table where the lawmaker sat. An interpreter from a local advocacy group called Hope Esperanza helped bridge any language gaps.
Kramer praised the nonprofitâs founder, North Platte native TinaMaria Fernandez, for having eased stress that came with the sudden swell of inmates whose first language was different from that of his staff.
The arrival of the Glenn Valley group increased the jail population by about 50% at a time the facility was short-staffed, Kramer said. He said the federal government pays the county $74 a day for each ICE detainee and covers transportation and medical expenses.
âIf I remember it right, they called to see if we could take them and said theyâd be here in three hours,â Kramer said.
Juarez viewed as a positive sign the rapport between Hope Esperanza, Kramer and his team and detainees. She wondered out loud if McCook has a similar community organization able to assist in that townâs future ICE detention operation.
Fernandez said that while McCook is about an hourâs drive away, she didnât see her team being able to provide similar humanitarian outreach at that facility, since the oversight would be federal versus local county officials.
Most of the women, in response to Juarezâs queries, said they hadnât visited with family members face-to-face but had been able to communicate via video conferencing.
Jail staff have been respectful and responsive, several said. Another added: âItâs ugly. Weâre locked up.â
Isabel Ponce, a 34-year-old mother of three kids who are with their father in Omaha, said anxiety was âpushing my limits.â
For some, legal relief has been grinding or nonexistent.
In Garibo Chonaâs case, for example, an immigration judge ordered her removal from the country. She was torn about appealing and leaving her daughters but said the judge told her he would not change his mind if her case came before him six months later. She was removed from the country last week.
Solis Factor said she had a government-issued permit to work while awaiting a court hearing, so she at first was not concerned sheâd be detained. But many immigration programs and rules have changed since Trump took office for the second time in January. And a judge ordered her removal.
âI want my children to stay and continue their education and learning English,â she said of her kids, ages 5 and 10.

Indeed, the swiftly-evolving immigration landscape has been playing out in an Omaha courtroom.
U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Bataillon at least nine times has rejected attempts by the federal government to deny the release of Glenn Valley workers on bonds already granted by an immigration court judge.
The three most recent cases were decided Sept. 11 and involved women who had met with Juarez. Among them was Yurenia Genchi Palma, a single mother of three U.S. citizen children who had been in the country more than 20 years.
Though an immigration judge in mid-July granted Genchi Palmaâs release on a $7,000 bond, federal attorneys blocked it by filing an âautomatic stay.â The American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska, which represents her, called that a new practice driven by the âinterim guidanceâ leaked in a July 8 internal memo from the Trump administration.
The new approach seeks to make nearly all detained immigrants facing removal proceedings ineligible for release on bond, with an aim of making more of them more likely to self deport, experts say.
ICE has said the changed direction âcloses a loophole to our nationâs securityâ that the Biden administration and others had based on âinaccurate interpretationâ of federal law. Such measures are needed, says Trump and other supporters of stepped-up immigration enforcement, to reverse past patterns.
Bataillon ruled the automatic stay provision and prolonged detention unconstitutional despite a Sept. 6 decision days before by the Board of Immigration Appeals, which had affirmed the âinterim guidance.â
As a federal court judge, Bataillon is not required to follow the decision of the BIA, an administrative body in the executive branch. He questioned the legal rationale behind the analysis but said that wasnât his concern.
He said his ruling was based only on the lawfulness of the automatic stay.
Grant Friedman of ACLU Nebraska foresees continued legal challenges and noted that the ICE no-bond practice already is being challenged in a separate national class action lawsuit. He said ACLU and other advocates are on heightened alert.
âThe immigration landscape is rapidly changing,â Friedman said. âWe are doing everything we can to make sure people are being treated fairly, that they have their rights respected.â
Anne Wurth, associate legal director of the Center for Immigrant and Refugee Advancement, which has assisted many Glenn Valley workers, called the current landscape âabsolute chaos.â
âWe have a system that is punishing individuals we rely on in our workforce and who are just humans who deserve to live their life with freedom,â she said.
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Juarez said dealing with immigration-related matters was not something she expected as a state officeholder. Sheâs the first Latina in the Nebraska Legislature and is serving her first year as a state lawmaker.
A Democrat in the officially nonpartisan Legislature, she recently clashed over immigration policy in an email exchange with former Nebraska governor and now U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts, R-Nebraska, and plans to urge the stateâs all-GOP congressional delegation to push for immigration reform. She toured the McCook jail after leaving North Platte, and vows to monitor the conversion and amplify related budget discussions.
âThereâs no doubt Iâm going to stand up,â said Juarez. âMy community expects that.â
ICE told the Examiner politicians should focus on encouraging their constituents to comply with federal law. It said all migrant detainees are treated humanely and given access to essential services and that any concerns regarding detainee care are taken seriously.
For Ramirez Jacinto, each day in detention brings worry. Is his daughter able to sleep yet? Are the house bills paid? Will his family in Omaha go with him if heâs deported? How will they escape the violence?
âIâd like my family to stay, but who would work?â said Ramirez Jacinto. âIâm the worker.â




