Bay Area attorneys could not remember such charges being filed before against an anti-ICE protester in San Francisco before.
AngĂ©lica, a trans woman from an immigrant family, was one of those filmed being zip-tied and led away, her head wrapped in a keffiyeh and held down by officers. AngĂ©lica was brought into the Immigration and Customs Enforcement headquarters at 630 Sansome St. without a cellphone, her partner Renee said. A day passed before her family heard from AngĂ©lica again.Â
Holding a citizen at an ICE building is âunheard of,â Chan said. Earlier this month, ICE agents detained two protesters in downtown San Francisco for the first time in recent memory.Â
Supporters spent the rest of Wednesday checking the inmate logs of every jail in the area, Renee said, trying to find AngĂ©lica. The gym AngĂ©lica works at in Oakland closed to let her co-workers join the search. One supporter reached out to Nancy Pelosiâs office.Â
Around midnight, Renee said, AngĂ©licaâs name finally appeared on a list of people held at Santa Rita jail in Alameda County. AngĂ©lica told family members that there was no access to a phone or an attorney in the holding cell. AngĂ©lica said the sheriffâs deputies appeared confused: They did not seem to know what to do with someone brought over by federal agents...
Unlike most defendants who are arrested on federal charges, Angélica was never in the custody of the United States Marshals Service, and was brought to Santa Rita instead by officers with Homeland Security Investigations, a division of ICE. ICE officers also took Angélica to federal court.
AngĂ©lica, a born and raised San Franciscan, was represented by federal public defender Samantha Jaffe, who declined to comment. Magistrate Judge Sallie Kim ordered AngĂ©lica be released until a pending court date in September.Â
ICE agents can make arrests only in âextremely specific circumstances,â Chan said. âThey must witness a federal felony offense in front of them while engaging in immigration-related enforcement and have completed requisite training.â   Â
AngĂ©lica has been ordered to stay away from the immigration courts at 100 Montgomery and 630 Sansome streets. Federal prosecutors had requested an order to keep AngĂ©lica from all federal buildings and officers, Renee said, but Judge Kim noted that this would be impractical â AngĂ©lica has to attend her own hearings, after all, and federal agents arenât always visible.











