A wave of protests and political outcry has erupted outside a Texas immigration detention center where a five-year-old boy and his father are being held, a case that has become a national flashpoint in the debate over President Donald Trump’s aggressive enforcement policies.
The focal point of the controversy is Liam Ramos, a pre-schooler taken with his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, into ICE custody in Minneapolis on January 20th before being transferred to the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley. The case ignited after a school superintendent held a press conference stating ICE agents used the boy to knock on a door during a raid and refused to release him to a trusted adult.
Photos of the child bundled in a winter coat, wearing a Spiderman backpack as an ICE officer held its strap, have circulated nationwide. The Department of Homeland Security claims the pair entered the U.S. illegally and that the father “abandoned” his child while fleeing—a claim the family’s lawyer fiercely denies, stating they followed all legal protocols to seek asylum from Ecuador.

Lawmakers Demand Release as Protesters Clash
On Wednesday, the tension moved to Texas. U.S. Representatives Joaquin Castro, Jasmine Crockett, and Greg Casar—all Texas Democrats—visited the family inside the facility. Castro posted a photo of the sleeping boy in his father’s arms, vowing to fight for his release. Outside, Casar told a crowd of protesters, “Donald Trump ran for the presidency, saying he was going to go after ‘the worst of the worst.’ Today he is holding a five-year-old in prison.”
The protest turned confrontational as state troopers clashed with demonstrators. Video shows officers holding a line against the crowd, with one officer appearing to throw an object, prompting loud noises. The protest was organized by community and faith groups to amplify “the voices of children and families held in detention against their will.”
Conflicting Narratives and a Broader Crackdown
The case is mired in conflicting accounts. The school district maintains that adults offered to take custody of Liam but were refused. ICE insists the family refused to accept the child back and that the father wanted him to remain in custody. Vice President JD Vance backed ICE, telling reporters the agency “had no choice because the father ran.”
The detention is part of “Operation Metro Surge,” the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota that has led to the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens and sparked ongoing protests. DHS says it is targeting the “worst of the worst,” but cases like Liam Ramos’s have critics accusing the administration of indiscriminate cruelty.
With a child’s freedom at the center of a bitter national debate, the protest in Texas is unlikely to be the last as the political and legal battle over his fate intensifies.
















