UC Berkeley is working for the release of an undocumented student who was detained by border patrol agents, the campus’ chancellor announced Monday.
Immigration authorities took Luis Mora, a third-year student at UC Berkeley, into custody in San Diego on Wednesday. Mora was visiting family with his girlfriend when Border Patrol took him to a detainment center, according to the Daily Californian. He is now awaiting a court hearing in which Immigration and Customs Enforcement can determine his legal status.
Mora, who is originally from Colombia, applied to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program but was denied. The Daily Californian reported his U.S. visa expired about two years ago. Mora is currently eligible to pay in-state tuition under AB 540, a California law that guarantees in-state tuition for eligible undocumented students.
In September, President Donald Trump ended DACA, a program enacted by former President Barack Obama in 2012 that deferred the deportation of undocumented individuals brought to the United States as children. The University of California sued the Trump administration in September, claiming that ending the program violated DACA recipients’ constitutional rights.
Rising Immigrant Scholars through Education at Berkeley launched a social media campaign shortly after Mora was detained. RISE, a student-immigrant rights organization, also supplied him with a lawyer, the Daily Californian reported.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ said in a statement the university is working to make sure Mora has access to legal advice and attorney services. She added the university’s government relations staff has been lobbying lawmakers to press for Mora’s release.
“He is not alone, nor are those working to secure his freedom,” Crist said.
Mora’s lawyer, Prerna Lal, said on Twitter that several lawmakers, including Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris, and Rep. Barbara Lee, offered to support Mora.
The UC, which prevents campus police officers from working with immigration authorities, provides legal and counseling services to about 4,000 undocumented students.
When UC Berkeley works to allow any and all would-be students – no matter how low their GPAs or how mentally ill they are – to attend their campus classes and earn advanced degrees, then I will listen to them,