Protesters gathered on July 1, 2025, outside Muscatine County Jail, where Pascual Pedro Pedro was being held. โ€” photo from Escucha Mi Voz Facebook page.

ICE deported Pascual Pedro Pedro, a 20-year-old resident of West Liberty, on Monday.

Pedro came to the United States from Guatemala with his father when he was 13 years old. He lived with his grandparents, who have been in the U.S. for over 30 years, and attended West Liberty High School, where he was a standout on the schoolโ€™s soccer team. After graduating last year, Pedro received a work permit with the help of an attorney, and began working at a siding firm owned by his grandfather. 

Pedro has never been accused of a crime, or any anti-social behavior. 

โ€œPascual is a kind, humble young man who came to this country seeking safety and a better life,โ€ Father Guillermo Treviรฑo of St. Joseph Catholic Church in West Liberty said in a statement after Pedro was seized by ICE agents on July 1. Treviรฑo knows Pedro well. Heโ€™s not just his parish priest, heโ€™s also Pedroโ€™s godfather.ย 

Treviรฑo called ICEโ€™s unexpected seizure of Pedro โ€œnot just a legal issueโ€ but said it’s also โ€œa moral crisis.โ€

Pedroโ€™s father was deported shortly after they arrived in the U.S. seven years ago, but Pedro was allowed to remain under an order of supervised release that required him to check in with ICE once a year. He was at his annual check-in when ICE detained him. Pedro was first sent to the Muscatine County Jail, and was later transferred to the notorious ICE detention facility at Pine Prairie, Louisiana. 

An aerial view of the Pine Prairie ICE Processing Center in central Louisiana, where Pascual Pedro Pedro was detained before he was deported to Guatemala. Razor wire surrounds the property. โ€” via Google (c) 2025

Pedroโ€™s attorney headed to ICEโ€™s regional headquarters in Omaha to file a Stay of Removal petition on Monday, but by then it was too late. 

โ€œA Stay of Removal motion was filed in Omaha this morning, apparently about the same time [Pedroโ€™s] deportation flight landed in Guatemala,โ€ Escucha Mi Voz Iowa, a nonprofit that advocates for and assists immigrants, said in a news release on Monday afternoon. 

Neither Pedroโ€™s family nor his attorney had heard from since Saturday, until he called his family from Guatemala City on Monday morning. 

Escucha Mi Voz has been organizing vigils on behalf of Pedro since ICE took him into custody. The group is holding two rallies this week to protest what has happened to Pedro and demand his return. 

On Wednesday at 10 a.m., there will be a โ€œBring Him Back Nowโ€ rally in front of the ICE field office in Cedar Rapids (3351 S Square D Dr SW). The rally is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. 

On Thursday, the protest moves to Davenport, in front of the downtown building where Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Sen. Joni Ernst and Sen. Chuck Grassley have offices (201 W 2nd St). The rally is scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m.

The No Kings protest moves through Cedar Rapids on Saturday, June 14, 2025. โ€” Jordan Walker/Little Village

Escucha Mi Voz has chartered buses for people who need transportation to the Davenport rally. A bus will leave from St. Patrickโ€™s Catholic Church in Iowa City (4330 St. Patrick Dr) at noon on Thursday. At St. Josephโ€™s in West Liberty (107 W 6th St), the departure time will be 12:30 p.m.

“This is a travesty. There was no due process,โ€ Father Treviรฑo said after the news of Pedroโ€™s deportation broke, โ€œand our message is bring him back now.โ€