U.S. Citizen Child Deported With Mother After ICE Detention in Texas

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A 5‑year‑old U.S. citizen, identified as Génesis Ester Gutiérrez Castellanos, was reportedly deported to Honduras along with her mother, Karen Guadalupe Gutiérrez Castellanos, after both were taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) earlier this month, according to immigration advocacy group Grassroots Leadership and local reporting.

How It Happened

The incident began on Jan. 11, 2026, when Austin Police Department officers responded to a call about a possible disturbance at a residence in the West Oak Hill area. Police reported finding no active disturbance but did identify an administrative immigration warrant for Karen Gutiérrez Castellanos.

Under departmental policy, APD notified ICE about the warrant. Federal agents then took both the mother and her daughter into custody. They were reportedly held temporarily at a hotel in San Antonio before being deported to Honduras. Advocacy groups say they were instructed not to disclose their location.

Community Reaction and Concerns

Advocates and local community members have raised concerns about the handling of the case, describing it as an example of a “cruel immigrant system” that adversely impacts families. Grassroots Leadership and others have questioned how a U.S. citizen child could be removed from the country along with her mother.

During the first days after the detention, Génesis’s family said they were unable to locate her and her mother, heightening alarm among relatives. After two days of uncertainty, family members were finally able to contact them, according to local Spanish‑language reporting. The mother was reportedly nervous and accompanied by immigration agents when she made the call, and was told not to reveal her location.

Legal experts have pointed out that federal immigration authorities are not required to notify family members when an individual is detained for immigration reasons, a policy that can complicate efforts to track detained loved ones and make arrangements, especially when children are involved.

Legal and Rights Questions

Under U.S. law, citizenship status is a constitutional protection — U.S. citizens generally cannot be deported from the United States. Legal advocates argue that deporting a citizen, especially a minor, raises serious due process questions. Experts have also noted that ICE and other immigration authorities have at times removed citizen children along with parents because of the complexities of family deportation cases and how administrative warrants are handled, although such actions are controversial and legally fraught.

Broader Context

While this case has sparked particular attention, similar situations, including other U.S. citizen children being deported with their parents, have occurred in recent years and drawn legal challenges and public debate. Courts and advocacy groups have criticized the lack of clear procedures for handling citizen children in immigration enforcement actions, especially when parents are subject to removal.