Just days after celebrating his high school graduation in Ohio, 19-year-old Emerson Colindres was deported to Honduras, a country he has not known since childhood. The young man, known for his soccer talent and dedication to school, was taken into custody during a regular check-in with immigration officers.
Colindres, who had no criminal record, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on June 4 during his scheduled appointment in Cincinnati. According to his family, he was later moved to a facility in Louisiana before being deported on June 19. His sudden removal has sparked widespread concern among teachers, teammates, and immigration advocates.
His mother, Ada Bell Baquedano-Amador, said her son had always followed the rules and avoided trouble. She shared her fears about his future in Honduras, a country he left when he was just eight years old. “He doesn’t know anything about living there,” she said. “It’s unsafe, and he’s unfamiliar with the culture.”
Colindres was well-known at Gilbert A. Dater High School, where he had been a standout soccer player. After his arrest, classmates and teachers organized protests outside the Butler County Jail, where he was first held. Later, he was transferred out of state before being sent to Honduras.
His club coach, Bryan Williams of the Cincy Galaxy, spoke out about the deportation, saying Colindres represents many others in similar situations. “There are so many Emersons out there,” Williams said. “They do everything right, follow the rules, and still face this kind of action.”
This case reflects a larger trend in U.S. immigration enforcement. Officials say their focus is on individuals with criminal records or final orders of removal. However, data shows that many recent arrests involve people without any criminal background. In fact, being in the country without legal status is considered a civil offense, not a criminal one.
Despite this, a judge issued a final deportation order for Colindres and his family in 2023. Their asylum application had been pending for nearly nine years before being denied. Once the order was finalized, they had limited legal options left to stay in the U.S.
A spokesperson from the Department of Homeland Security said that such actions are standard. “If you are in the country illegally and a judge has ordered you to be removed, that is precisely what will happen,” said Tricia McLaughlin in a statement to the press.
Since early 2024, ICE has stepped up arrests across the country, with a goal of making at least 3,000 arrests per day. Students and young people, even those with no criminal history, have increasingly been caught in these enforcement efforts.
The deportation of Emerson Colindres has raised new questions about how immigration laws are enforced and who is truly being targeted. Advocates are calling for more humane treatment of individuals who have built their lives in the U.S., especially those who contribute positively to their communities.
As his supporters continue to speak out, Colindres begins a new chapter in a country that no longer feels like home. His story is a reminder of the complex and often harsh realities faced by undocumented youth in the United States.