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ICE to release Georgia teen arrested after now-dismissed traffic charges

by Camilo Montoya-Galvez
May 21, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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ICE to release Georgia teen arrested after now-dismissed traffic charges

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A Georgia teen who was detained by federal deportation officers following local traffic charges that have since been dismissed was granted bond on Wednesday, paving the way for her to be released from immigration detention, her mother and attorney told CBS News.

Ximena Arias Cristobal, who came to the U.S. from Mexico when she was 4, has been in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody since earlier this month, when she was stopped by local police in Dalton, Georgia, over allegations that she had made an improper turn while driving.

Arias Cristobal, 19, was charged with driving without a license and making an improper turn and booked into the county jail in Dalton, where she lives with her family. ICE then took custody of Arias Cristobal, who is in the U.S. illegally, at the county jail, which has an agreement to work with federal immigration authorities.

She has been held at the Stewart ICE detention facility in Lumpkin, Georgia, since then. Initially, that facility was also housing her father, who had been taken into ICE custody in April, also after a traffic stop. But he was granted bond last week and released.

Given her time in the U.S. and lack of a criminal record, local community members, including the Republican lawmaker representing Dalton in the Georgia legislature, expressed support for Arias Cristobal and called for her release. Community outrage intensified once Dalton authorities dismissed the traffic charges against Arias Cristobal after revealing she had been mistakenly stopped by the police officer who arrested her.

Dustin Baxter, Arias Cristobal’s immigration attorney, said an immigration judge on Wednesday granted his client a $1,500 bond, the lowest amount allowed by law.

“The judge had reviewed Ximena’s case in detail and determined that Ximena is in fact not a flight risk or a danger to the community in the least,” Baxter said. “The Department of Homeland Security indicated that it would not appeal the judge’s decision.”

Baxter said Arias Cristobal should be back home with her family by Thursday afternoon.

While she is set to be released from the detention, Arias Cristobal will continue to face deportation to Mexico, as ICE has started a deportation case against her in immigration court. The Department of Homeland Security has previously said she and her father should face “consequences” for being in the U.S. illegally.

1a77935c-f498-472b-ba90-d388c77c2ac6.jpg

Ximena Arias Cristobal

CBS News


Under the Biden administration, it would’ve been unlikely for someone like Arias Cristobal — an undocumented immigrant without a criminal history who came to the U.S. as a young child — to be arrested by ICE.

But as part of its sweeping immigration crackdown, the Trump administration has vastly broadened who ICE officers can target for arrest and deportation, revoking Biden-era policies that generally ensured the agency would only target serious criminals, national security threats and recent arrivals in the country illegally.  

Even though Arias Cristobal is an undocumented immigrant who came to the U.S. as a child — a group commonly known as “Dreamers” — she did not qualify for an Obama-era program that protects half a million of those individuals from deportation. 

That Obama administration policy, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, requires beneficiaries to have arrived in the U.S. before June 2007. Arias Cristobal came to the country in 2010. DACA has also been closed to new applicants due to federal litigation.

Camilo Montoya-Galvez

Camilo Montoya-Galvez is the immigration reporter at CBS News. Based in Washington, he covers immigration policy and politics.

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Camilo Montoya-Galvez

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