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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe 'Geras Aliadas': How two American women are helping locate migrants lost in the ICE labyrinth
https://english.elpais.com/usa/2026-04-03/the-gueras-aliadas-how-two-american-women-are-helping-locate-migrants-lost-in-the-ice-labyrinth.htmlThe Güeras Aliadas: How two American women are helping locate migrants lost in the ICE labyrinth
A pair of North Carolina residents have launched a project that has helped more than 200 families connect with loved ones who were detained by federal agents
PATRICIA CARO
Washington - APR 03, 2026 - 07:30 EDT
On December 24, while preparing the traditional Christmas Eve dinner at their home in Oaxaca, Mexico, Fernanda froze upon seeing a TikTok video showing the arrest of migrants in Alabama by agents of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Service (ICE). One of the detainees appeared to be her father. The video was from the day before. She ran to tell her mother and they tried to contact him, but the calls did not get through and there was no response to the messages they left him.
Fernandas father had emigrated to the U.S. four years before to improve the familys finances. There was no doubt it was him. With no news, and without knowing where to look for information or who to turn to, the days that followed were harrowing. As a last resort, Fernanda asked the TikTok search engine how to locate a person detained by ICE. The social network directed her to Las Güeras Aliadas. I thought that maybe it was a fraud, that they would scam me, ask for money. But I thought it wouldnt hurt to try and I filled out the form. And Devyn contacted me on WhatsApp.
Devyn Brown and Kathryn Coiner-Collier are behind Las Güeras Aliadas, a project to locate migrants detained by federal agents and to put them in contact with their families. The idea arose in November, during the immigration crackdown that the Trump administration launched in Charlotte, North Carolina, where they live. About 200 Border Patrol agents were deployed to the city in a campaign that lasted until December and resulted in more than 400 arrests. Brown, a teacher, and Coiner-Collier, a social worker, took to the streets to protest against the presence of the agents and distribute whistles and pamphlets with information on migrant rights.
Outraged by the raids and keen to help, the pair made informative videos that they posted on social media. Coiner-Collier had extensive experience helping migrants in court and had worked at the infamous Dilley detention center. Brown had experience working with Latinos. Both had lived at some point in Latin American countries. A few days later, a woman from Honduras contacted them asking for help in locating her husband, who had been detained. The request was the first of many. The two women realized the barriers foreigners faced in locating their loved ones who had been arrested by ICE, and decided to help them.
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The 'Geras Aliadas': How two American women are helping locate migrants lost in the ICE labyrinth (Original Post)
cbabe
17 hrs ago
OP
CoopersDad
(3,340 posts)1. K/R Concentration Camps aren't getting the attention they need.
We are Nazi Germany and it's not being reported.