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Another undocumented mom faces immigration check-in under Trump

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CHICAGO (CNN) -- The day before she checks in with immigration officials, Francisca Lino gets sick. Migraines cripple her mind. Her stomach churns. She can't sleep.
 
"My entire body hurts," she told CNN.
 
Her check-in Tuesday couldn't have been more excruciating. It marked the first time the 50-year-old mother of six, who lives outside Chicago, had to report to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement since Donald Trump became President.
 
As her meeting drew near, anxiety mounted. Terror gripped her. She wondered if she'd fall victim to the new administration's hardline immigration policies, which dramatically expand the power of immigration officers and make clear that no one, including people who otherwise have not broken the law, is safe from deportation.
 
Now that Trump is President, "it worries me," Lino said.
 
Since Trump ordered the changes in January, similar fears have festered as families, lawyers and advocates accustomed to a relatively predictable process have tried to divine how the new rules would affect them. So far, little clarity has emerged.
 
Some immigrants deliberately have skipped their check-ins and gone into hiding. Others have spoken out against the changes and been detained. Some have checked in and been released, as usual. Meantime, Trump supporters have lauded the President for making good on campaign promises to tighten immigration rules to protect American jobs and security.
 
At the break of dawn Tuesday, Lino and her family sat in their kitchen. Everyone else in her household is a US citizen. And every other time Lino has checked in with ICE, she's been allowed to return to her life -- her husband, her children, her church.
 
'Hoping for a miracle'
 
As on the days of those prior visits with ICE, Lino's three youngest daughters skipped school Tuesday. They all sat down for breakfast together, the girls munching cereal. Lino and her husband, Diego Lino, sipped coffee.
 
Everyone said they felt a sense of calm.
 
"I don't feel like anything is going to happen today," 16-year-old Britzy Lino said. "I feel like we'll all come home."
 
But beneath the surface, dread simmered.
 
"It's just a very heavy feeling. It just feels like something that's weighing down on me," Britzy said, recalling her mom's previous ICE check-ins. "It's just scary (thinking) that the only person that's going to walk out is my father, that my mom is going to stay back, and I don't know anything at the moment because she's inside and I'm outside, in the waiting room."
 
If her mom were sent back to her native Mexico, Britzy wouldn't hesitate, she said. Her mother is her only confidante. She'd move with her.
 
But Lino frets about her three youngest children. Born in Illinois, the two youngest don't speak Spanish well. It would be hard for them to acclimate to Mexico, she said.
 
In the living room, Lino's mother-in-law sat alone, terrified her son's wife would be deported. She could barely speak. And when she did, tears started rolling down her cheeks.
 
"This makes me so sad," Maria Burciaga, 62, said.
 
Twelve years ago, when Lino's case first raised red flags with ICE, she was detained for 28 days. Diego, a healthy man, had a heart attack at work, Burciaga said. Britzy, then 4, sank into depression.
 
"Francisca is a good woman. Her only crime is to come to this country to try to better herself and to help her children in Mexico get ahead. What mother wouldn't do that? Or what father?" Burciaga said. "I don't know what is going to happen. The other President would give her a chance. But this one, I don't know. We are hoping for a miracle."
 
Getting caught, coming clean
 
As she tidied up after breakfast, Lino began to cry. She put on her jacket, grabbed her purse and reading glasses, and headed out the door. Rolling downtown in rush hour, the radio played. The girls focused on their phones. Then, they fidgeted as the stress of the day lingered in the car.
 
They arrived 90 minutes later at the ICE office, at the busy intersection of Congress Parkway and Clark Street in the Loop.
 
The scene felt strange. Before Lino's prior visits, her supporters had held news conferences and prayer circles outside the federal building, Lino's pastor, Emma Lozano, said. Now, security guards asked reporters to turn off their cameras and turn the lenses of their cameras away from the federal building.
 
Lozano asked Lino to wait for her attorney before walking in. When he arrived, the three of them, plus Lino's family, went in together.
 
The lawyer had been hopeful about this check-in.
 
"We will walk out of there, no problem," he told CNN Monday as he prepared for the visit with ICE. "She will not be grabbed by ICE because she has a stay until April 27."
 
Lino first tried to enter the United States in 1999. She hired a coyote, or human smuggler, who gave her a visa. She didn't know it was fake, she said.
 
Border agents snagged Lino that time and sent her back. But days later, she tried again and made it all the way to Chicago, where she met and married an American citizen and gave birth to four American children. She is an active member of her church.
 
Soon after they wed, her husband filed paperwork for Lino to obtain a green card. They hired someone to help them file the paperwork. Lino says that during her final in-person Lino says she was told her paperwork didn't match what she was saying verbally. She was immediately detained, she remembers.
 
Officers detained her for four weeks, and as her mother-in-law recalled, her family has lived in fear of getting torn apart. Since then, Lino has had to check in periodically with ICE.
 
Joy, then heartbreak
 
At the federal building in Chicago, about 60 minutes passed before Lino re-emerged through the glass doors.
 
She clapped her hands together, then quickened her step and ran, arms outstretched in joy, "Thank God!" she yelled. "Thanks to all of you!!"
 
"Yes, she could!" a supporter howled.
 
"They gave me a year until I have to come back," Lino told CNN. "So we're going to try to fight for my visa."
 
Relief reigned for five minutes. Then Lino's lawyer came back.
 
"They called," Bergin said, "and they said the officer we talked to was filling in, and the main officer in charge of her case wants to talk to her about it, he's got some information on her case. I don't know what that means."
 
Lino's demeanor changed, showing serious concern. Her daughter Britzy's eyes filled with tears.
 
The entire family disappeared back into the building. Less than a half-hour later, Lino was back.
 
"There were changes," she said.
 
Immigration officers told Lino to return July 11, suitcases packed and plane ticket in hand.
 
In other words, her deportation date is set for July 11.
 
Inside the ICE office, Britzy had suffered a panic attack.
 
"I couldn't breathe," the teenager told CNN. "I was choked up. I couldn't talk at all. I just couldn't breathe. It's not fair that they do that to us, that they tell us, 'Oh, you have a year,' and then they just say, 'Oh no, you have a few months.' It's not fair."
 
Time to plan
 
As for what happened Tuesday, this is the Trump administration in action, Bergin said. It wouldn't have happened under Obama.
 
"The whole point of Obama's policy was discretion," Bergin told CNN. "Someone who just has a removal order and has all these kids and husband, they're all citizens, been here forever, no criminal record, never caused any trouble -- they would leave them alone. "
 
CNN has reached out to ICE about Lino's case, the agency says they're looking into it but wouldn't comment further.
 
Lino is committed to showing up when authorities ask her to, she didn't want to run or seek sanctuary somewhere. But not everyone has her conviction and given the widespread fear already in immigrant communities some worry about a further chilling effect cases like Lino's may have.
 
Leon Fresco served as deputy assistant attorney general at the Department of Justice's Office of Immigration Litigation under the Obama administration and he expressed concern about situations like this.
 
"ICE needs to be careful not to turn routine supervised release visits into a high risk of detention," Fresco said. "Or it will unwittingly create more fugitives who won't show up to these visits."
 
Far from defeated, Lino's supporters vowed to spend the next four months searching for a way for her to stay.
 
"I'll keep fighting," Lino said. "I have to keep fighting. They're not going to separate me from my family."
 
Her daughter, the one who says she cannot live without her mom, won't accept another outcome.
 
"My mom, she's not leaving," Britzy said. "She's not leaving."
 
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