What to Do If a Loved One Is Detained by ICE: How to Locate, Contact, and Help Them

3 min de lectura
por June 24, 2025
What to do if a loved one is detained by ice

When someone you love is arrested by immigration authorities, panic is a natural response. But the truth is, you’ll need clarity, patience, and a lot of persistence to navigate the system. ICE doesn’t make it easy—and in many cases, it’s intentionally confusing.

But you are not powerless. This is how you fight back.

What to do if a loved one is detained by ice

How to Find Them: Step-by-Step Guide to Locating a Loved One in ICE Custody

1. Use the ICE Online Detainee Locator

Start with ICE’s Online Detainee Locator. You can search using the person’s A-number (found on immigration documents or work permits) and country of birth—or by name and country of birth. The name must be entered exactly as ICE has it, which may mean trying several spellings or versions.

Exceptions:

  • Children under 18 won’t appear in the system—even if detained.

  • Victims of crime (T or U visa applicants) often won’t appear.

  • If the person was arrested very recently, it may take up to 48 hours to show up.

Pro Tip: Screenshot or document everything you find. Keep a timeline. This can help later if your loved one is transferred or needs legal support.

2. Contact the ICE Field Office

If you can’t find them online, call or email the local ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO). Be brief: only share the A-number, name, and country of birth.

Tip: Field offices often don’t answer on the first try—call daily if needed. Ask for the officer handling your loved one’s case and keep their name and contact info.

If no one responds, you can try contacting a Community Relations Officer (CRO) through the ICE Office of Partnership & Engagement.

3. Try the Bureau of Prisons

ICE increasingly uses federal prisons to detain immigrants. If your loved one doesn’t appear in the ICE system, try the BOP Inmate Locator, especially if the arrest happened near a federal prison.

4. Reach Out to Their Consulate (With Caution)

All detained immigrants have the right to contact their consulate. You can reach out for help locating them—unless they are seeking asylum or fear persecution by their home government. In those cases, don’t involve the consulate.

5. Call Around—Yes, Seriously

If all else fails, start ruling out detention centers. ICE publishes a list of facilities it uses across the country, and the group Freedom for Immigrants maintains a more community-focused directory, including facilities and contact details.

Narrow by gender and region. ICE only detains women in certain jails. And if your loved one was arrested in a state without a detention center, they’ve likely been moved to another state under the same ICE field office.

What If They’ve Been Sent Overseas?

Under Trump, ICE has sent immigrants to overseas jails like Guantanamo Bay or CECOT in El Salvador. These facilities are often shrouded in secrecy and offer little legal recourse.

If confirmed at Guantanamo, contact the ABA hotline for limited legal aid: 1-855-641-6081.

What to do if a loved one is detained by ice

See also: Fake ICE Agents Arrested in Multiple States Amid Crackdown Chaos

Once You Find Them—What Comes Next?

1. They won’t be given a free lawyer—but you can help them get one.

Immigration proceedings are civil, not criminal, so the government isn’t required to provide an attorney. But there are resources:

  • AILA Lawyer Search: Directory of private immigration attorneys

  • ABA State Directories: Lists local and state bar associations with immigration contacts

  • immi.org Legal Help: Free and low-cost nonprofit immigration legal aid

2. They may be eligible for release.

Your loved one might be able to ask for:

  • Release on Recognizance (free without bond)

  • Bond (payment for temporary release)

  • Parole (for humanitarian or urgent reasons)

To support their case, start collecting:

  • Proof of community ties (work, school, volunteer commitments)

  • Letters of support from family, employers, or community leaders

  • Records of U.S. residence, including utility bills, leases, or pay stubs

3. They still have rights—help them use them.

Even in detention, your loved one has the right to:

  • Say clearly and repeatedly if they fear returning to their home country (this could trigger asylum protections)

  • Show proof if they’ve lived in the U.S. for at least two years or have pending legal status applications or appeals

  • Have documents explained in a language they understand

  • Refuse to sign anything they don’t understand, especially if it includes phrases like:

    • Waiver

    • Stipulated removal order

    • Voluntary departure

Tell them to request a lawyer before signing anything—and not to sign under pressure.

See also: “Dictator Approved”: How a Giant Sculpture on the National Mall Just Dragged Trump

You’re Not Alone—And Neither Are They

What to do if a loved one is detained by ice

Immigration detention is designed to isolate—to make people feel lost, unreachable, forgotten. But every phone call you make, every record you keep, every question you ask pushes back against that silence.

You don’t have to do everything at once. But doing something—searching, calling, asking for help—can make the difference between being erased and being seen.

Your loved one still has rights. They still have a name. And no matter how hard the system tries to hide them, you can keep fighting to bring them back home.

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