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Girl, 11 -year -old, dies of suicide after school thugs say the ice will deport her family: Daily Voice Reports

Girl, 11 -year -old, dies of suicide after school thugs say the ice will deport her family: Daily Voice Reports

Jocelyn Roho Carraza of Gainesville, Texas, died on Saturday, February 8, five days after she was taken to hospital, Univision 23 reports. She was a student at the Gain Intermediate School, about an hour north of Dallas.

Her mother, Marbella Karanza, told Univision that students were making fun of her daughter repeatedly, saying that her family would be deported from immigration and customs application (ICE).

“I waited a whole week for a miracle that my daughter would be fine, but unfortunately nothing could be done,” Marbella said at the university. “My daughter will always live for me and I will always love her.”

Karanza also said an investigator told her that Jocelyn was looking for a school consultation one to twice a week to report harassment. The Gainesville’s independent school district has not made a statement about Wednesday’s death, February 19th.

On the Gofundme page, Jocelyn Ernesto Alonso Rojo’s father complains of the death of his “princess”.

“This helplessness hurts my soul and it is not easy for me or for any of its relatives who have been present in her life as a child,” Rojo writes. “Knowing she is no longer with us breaks my heart into pieces.”

Gofundme raised over $ 27,900 out of at least $ 647 donations to the press time.

Jocelyn’s death comes against the backdrop of the aggressive implementation of President Donald Trump’s immigration and promises of mass deportations. Trump ordered Ice to ignore his policy not to raids “sensitive places” such as schools, churches, hospitals, playgrounds and domestic violence or homeless shelters.

Ice recently made arrests for high -profile immigration in several cities, including Newark, Philadelphia and New York.

President Trump claims that the purpose of deportation efforts is to eliminate violent criminals from the United States. According to Axios, less than 0.5 percent of 1.8 million cases in immigration courts in the fiscal year 2023-24 have included deportation orders for crimes other than illegal entry into the country.

The Conference on Leadership for Civil and Human Rights criticizes the Trump administration policy as cruel and drives children – regardless of immigration status – to live in fear.

“These abrupt changes have led to their parents keeping their young students at home from school for fear of rabbits of ice and children who are afraid to go to school because they are worried that their parents will be taken while at school” , the non -profit group said. “The school should be a place where children can get their education and feel safe while they do it, but these policies change it, threatened it.”

According to the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), the fourth and fifth amendments protect everyone in the United States, regardless of their legal status.

“Ice must have an order to enter or arrest people in a” private “place,” Nyic said. “You have the right to remain silent. The fourth amendment protects areas where people have a” reasonable expectation of confidentiality “and ICE needs a court order (not just an administrative order) to enter those areas that are considered private.”

The National Immigrant Justice Center has educational resources to remind people of their rights when confronted with ICE.

Jocelyn on Tuesday, February 18, a holiday of life was held. Her funeral liturgy was the next day.

If you or someone you know, you have a mental health crisis, you should call or send a message 988 immediately.

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