by Marvin Ramírez
Imagine a father stepping into court, not to flee from justice but to comply with it — to check in, to follow protocol, to resolve his case. Then, without warning, he disappears into detention, hundreds of miles away, leaving behind his children, his job, his American-citizen wife, and an entire life built over decades. That is exactly what is happening right now in our communities.
The recent case of Miguel Angel Lopez Luvian — a 47-year-old father of three from Livermore who has lived in the United States for 27 years — is a harrowing example. On May 27, Miguel walked into a routine immigration appointment in San Francisco, as he had done many times before. He was not evading the law. He had an active legal case, was complying with the process, and was the sole breadwinner for his family. Moments later, he was detained by ICE and swiftly relocated to a facility 250 miles away, in McFarland, California.
His wife Rosa, an American citizen, said she received a stunned phone call from him, urging her to contact his lawyer — then his phone went dead. Like countless others in his position, Miguel was complying with the system and actively pursuing legal resolution. Yet he was treated as if he were hiding or absconding from the law. His arrest feels more like an ambush than a lawful detainment.
Even more disturbing, the same day saw ICE agents conducting other “unusual” arrests in San Francisco, including detaining people just outside — or even inside — federal courtrooms. Attorneys and reporters described plainclothed agents who refused to identify themselves, taking individuals into custody without stating a reason. This is deeply troubling. Historically, immigration court has been a place where ICE exercises restraint, especially when individuals have pending legal matters. It’s supposed to be a zone where due process takes precedence. That norm now appears to be collapsing.
The consequences are devastating. These expedited detentions are inhumane not only because of how they’re executed, but because they disregard the complex human lives entangled in each case. People like Miguel are not criminals hiding in the shadows. They are parents, taxpayers, community members. They are spouses of U.S. citizens, caretakers of children, workers supporting local economies.
In Miguel’s case, he has paid taxes, supported his family, and lived peacefully in the Bay Area for nearly three decades. He and Rosa have been married since 2001 and known each other since they were teenagers. Despite their efforts to regularize his status, including appeals to higher courts, Miguel was detained with no warning — while his case is still active.
Is this what justice looks like?
Detaining people during pending court processes strips them not only of their legal rights but their humanity. It punishes people who are complying, discourages others from showing up, and threatens the very notion of due process. Moreover, these detentions fracture families overnight. Children are left without a parent, spouses without support, and families without income — all in the blink of an eye.
If the justification is the reimplementation of a so-called “rule of law,” as Homeland Security officials claim, then why is the law applied so unevenly and arbitrarily? Why are people who are complying being detained without resolution of their legal cases? Why are detentions occurring before the facts are fully reviewed?
This is not the return of lawful order — it’s the abandonment of fairness.
We must remember that justice is not about punishment for punishment’s sake. It is about process, rights, and respect for human dignity. A government that strips people of those principles while they are actively engaging with the system is a government acting in bad faith.
Furthermore, these actions inflict long-lasting trauma on children and spouses — many of whom are citizens — and deepen fear in immigrant communities. When breadwinners are taken without warning, entire families spiral into crisis. Community trust is shattered, legal processes are undermined, and America’s promise of fairness becomes hollow.
Protests are already forming, such as the June 4 rally in Livermorium Plaza demanding Miguel’s release. But rallies should not be the only way to stop the injustice. Elected officials, community leaders, and all Americans of conscience must demand a return to principled immigration enforcement — one that recognizes due process and the sanctity of the family.
Until then, we must ask: how many more families must be torn apart before fairness prevails?
With reports from KTVU, NBC Bay Area, and KPIX.