Summary

Canadian citizen Jasmine Mooney was detained by ICE for two weeks despite having a valid U.S. work visa. Stopped at the San Diego border, she was abruptly arrested, denied legal counsel, and held in freezing cells before being transferred to a private detention center.

She witnessed systemic inefficiencies, inhumane conditions, and detainees trapped in bureaucratic limbo.

After media attention and legal intervention, Mooney was released.

Her experience highlights the profit-driven nature of private detention centers and the broader failures of U.S. immigration enforcement under Trump’s administration.

  • @[email protected]
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    631 month ago

    Wow, what a story. The kind of thing you’d expect from a 3rd world shithole country which I guess the USA is becoming.

    • @[email protected]
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      221 month ago

      I haven’t done any international travel for the last few years, but I used to do it a decent amount for work, and lemme tell you: the worst part of those trips wasn’t the long / cramped plane flights; it was going through US customs.

      I’m a US citizen, but every time I went through those lines, it felt like I was passing through a military checkpoint into occupied territory. Every time I went through that experience, it made me hate what our country has become just that little bit more.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 month ago

        Traveled to Rome recently (as US citizen). Walked no more than 10 minutes from the gate, was 5th in line to one of a half dozen or so automated camera/scanner customs gates, and cleared customs within 15 minutes of landing.

        Returned to the US, walked for 20 minutes through a maze of twisty passages to get to the customs hall, where I stood in line for another 30 minutes to get to one of a half dozen or so checkpoints where an agent scanned my passport, told me to stare at the camera, and eventually, maybe even grudgingly, welcomed me home.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 month ago

          The last time I came through American customs, it was when I was returning from a conference in Spain, and a colleague of mine got detained for 3 hours because he “looked suspicious”. Man’s a fucking engineer, with credentials out the wazoo, but apparently he fidgeted in line or something. Sitting there in the little space available just anxiously waiting for them to release him was harrowing, but I can’t even imagine what he went through. Nobody would tell me shit; in fact, the more I asked about him, the more it felt like they were treating me like a suspect. If they’d ended up deciding that he didn’t pass the sniff test, they could have taken him anywhere, and nobody would know a fucking thing about it for God knows how long.

          Man, I’m getting sweaty just reliving that. Fuck I hate this country sometimes.

    • Count Regal Inkwell
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      41 month ago

      Inhabitant of a 3rd world country here

      I don’t think “kidnapped and tortured by the government” is a thing we’ve done much of since the US stopped funding our far right dictatorship in the 80s (and the military immediately fucked off and ‘let democracy take its course’ when the funding dried up).

      … Let us not speak of what our criminal factions get up to though.

      • @[email protected]
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        01 month ago

        So I’ve always wondered,

        Are criminal factions avoidable in whatever country that is?

        Like here in the US we always hear random horror stories about Mexican cartels, but we almost never hear about crimes elsewhere in the world. Honestly, I’ve kind of assumed that crime is a made up American thing to put minorities in jail.

        • Count Regal Inkwell
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          01 month ago

          The country is Brazil.

          If you are unfortunate enough to live in the favelas (aka: Very very poor in a big city), you’ll be under their thrall.

          But the little secret is that… They end up being not that different from the government. They have their own ‘laws’, and if you follow them, you’ll be left alone. Their protection rackets become like taxes, except instead of going to jail for not paying, you’ll get tortured – And you might even benefit from them in a way.

          A friend of mine tells a story about doing social work in a favela, and how after years of neglect from the government resulting in kids from the place not getting vaccinated, the local crimelord bought the vaccines with his own money and had his own paralell vaccination campaign for everyone that was properly paying their protection money. Hopefully you won’t catch a stray bullet when the illegal liege lord of your neighbourhood-fiefdom is at war with the police or another neighbourhood-fiefdom’s illegal lord for the umpteenth time that year.

          If you are not in the favela…

          … Well… If you buy weed from a dealer or borrow money from illegal lenders and don’t pay your bills, they’ll probably abduct you and break your legs.

          If you do none of those things… You might get pickpocketed or mugged, but that is honestly the extent of interactions that I, a rich boy from the third world, have had with the criminal factions of my country. Muggings. Being threatened and told to hand over my phone (which I did, I’m not stupid). Having a gameboy swiped from my bag while at an anime con.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 month ago

            So it’s basically just like the US.

            Except I can probably be mugged in any city over 50k. Pickpocketing I’ve only really known about in big cities.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 month ago

              Fuck I love Canada - I haven’t been mugged in my entire life, and I have done lots of walking around dark cities

    • @[email protected]
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      381 month ago

      Has been for quite a while, it’s just that Americans have been told they’re number 1 for so long and most of them don’t travel so they don’t see anything else.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        I highly recommend foreign travel. For example Colombia seems to be completely developed in some places and stuck in the 1950’s in other places.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 month ago

        Excuse me, that’s my exceptionalism you’re insulting right now! *Cackles and coughs in underinsured*

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      having been to countries some consider third world shitholes, it’s far worse (edit: in the USA) IMO.

      In many low income countries this would have been a $50 bribe and 5 minutes to resolve (which could mean being deported).

    • Cid Vicious
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      21 month ago

      1st/2nd/3rd world terminology becoming increasingly outdated as America becomes aligned with Russia and Europe and Canada distance themselves.