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When ICE arrests you, what happens to your car?

MarylandGDELTGDELT event4% biasedMon, Jun 1, 2026, 12:00 AM

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When ICE arrests you, what happens to your car?.Whenever you leave your house, tell your wife, girlfriend, uncle, mother or father the roads you’re going to take.That way, when ICE arrests you, your family will know where to look for your car.This is the advice that Paola Subervi, a community activist living on the Eastern Shore, gives her immigrant neighbors.She knows the consequences of a lost car, a stolen truckload of tools, or the massive fees of a tow lot.“Everything that you worked so hard to get,” she said, “to have what you have, it’s all gone.” That’s why she and other volunteers spend a lot of time these days looking for abandoned cars.There are plenty of them out there lately, all across Maryland – ghostly relics of immigration raids that happened when there was no one left behind to drive the vehicle home.It’s hard to say exactly how many cars have been abandoned in this way.ICE doesn’t tell local police when they make arrests, and the agency says it doesn’t know how many cars have been stopped.Nevertheless, many officials and activists say these “ghost cars” are an acute problem for families, and a painful side effect of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation efforts.People with legal status, clean criminal records and even U.S.citizenship have been arrested from their cars.In more than thirty interviews, the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism uncovered numerous accounts of families left searching the streets for their vehicles.Some have never gotten them back.These interviews with community advocates, county-level politicians, immigration attorneys, tow truck drivers, local police, and relatives of detained immigrants reveal the series of compounding hardships that begin with a deserted vehicle.Officials say that, under the Trump administration, car-based arrests are common.“They’ll actually surveil someone at a location, wait until they drive … and then they conduct a traffic stop and take the person into custody from the car,” said Earl Stoddard, a Montgomery County official who helps coordinate its response to ICE.An ICE spokesperson told the Howard Center that agents “take steps” to ensure that a vehicle left after an arrest is “secured, and does not impede traffic flow.” The arrested person is “permitted to arrange for someone to pick up the vehicle,” the spokesperson said in an email.If that’s not possible, the spokesperson said, “the local police department is contacted to arrange for towing.” But in interviews, many police departments in Maryland said that’s simply not the case.In Montgomery County, immigration agents are “leaving cars with broken driver’s side windows on the side of the street,” said Stoddard, an assistant chief administrative officer in the county’s executive’s office.Those cars become the police department’s responsibility, he said.But ICE doesn’t give a heads-up before abandoning them.“As their operations have ramped up,” Stoddard said, “we’ve gotten less and less information.” In many cases, local police don’t find out about an arrest at all, said Stoddard.ICE frequently makes arrests in parking lots or at gas stations.When a car is on private property, he said, the business owner is responsible for the tow.County officials say they don’t have much power to intervene.“There’s a little bit of helplessness, that I can’t actually stop them,” said Marc Elrich, the Montgomery County executive and the elected official over the county’s police.“We realized that you can’t tell the police that – even though we think this is illegal, what (ICE agents) are doing – you can’t get between them and the person they’re trying to pick up.” That leaves activists to step in and try to reunite detainees’ families with their cars.Sometimes they are the first to tell family members of an arrest.“[We] look through the windows and such and see what we can find to identify what’s going on, who is the person detained,” said Doug Hertzler, a volunteer with the Immigrant Rights Collective who has tracked dozens of empty vehicles.He uses the documents he sees inside the cars, like mail or registration paperwork, to reunite them with their owners.The Immigrant Rights Collective has recorded more than 50 cars abandoned after arrests in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties since January.But that may be the tip of the iceberg.Another organization, People Over Papers, has logged at least 8,500 car-based immigration arrests on its nationwide platform that crowdsources reports of ICE activity since Trump’s inauguration, according to the nonprofit’s founder.More than 800 abandoned cars have been reported to the organization from across the country since May of last year.That’s when the group started allowing users to report abandoned vehicles.The empty cars tell the stories of families and working people going about their daily lives, said Ariel Woods, another volunteer with the Immigrant Rights Collective.“I was dispatched to this minivan,” she recalled.“It was so obviously just a family’s vehicle and they had broken both windows … I saw this child’s pink butterfly hair clip covered in broken glass.” The people paying closest attention are volunteers – networks of friends and citizens who respond to needs they see in their community.Woods and Hertzler volunteer with IRC chapters in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, and the organization has other offshoots in the state and across the region.On the Eastern Shore, Paola Subervi works with an ad hoc group that has sprung up in the past year.While she works as a tax preparer, her advocacy reaches beyond her clientele.“We try to help each other out and cover each other,” she said, “and just try to keep each other safe.” Constant fear Noemi’s husband called her early one morning with bad news: ICE officers had just pulled him over.In the background, she heard a voice tell him to roll down his window and hand over his papers.Before he could tell her where he was, the line went dead.Noemi had to act quickly.She searched the surrounding streets, hoping to see the black pickup truck he relied on for work.Though she looked for four hours, she didn’t have any luck until her husband called from a detention center.“The first thing I asked him was where he had left the car,” Noemi told the Howard Center.“Because I had heard that if the family didn’t pick it up in time, it could get towed.” The truck was outside an apartment building, he told her, in a lot reserved for tenants.The immigration agents had moved it there, he said, after his arrest.A family friend with legal status volunteered to drive it home, and just in time.When he got to the truck, he told Noemi, someone was leaving a note on the windshield that said it would soon be towed away.Instead, the friend drove it safely back to Noemi’s house.But her troubles were just beginning.Her husband spent four weeks in a detention center.“I wouldn’t wish it on anyone,” Noemi said.“We were a family … but then, it was only us two,” she said, referring to herself and her son.Even now, she can immediately recall the pain of those first few hours spent searching.“We are all still suffering,” said Noemi, who asked that she be identified only by her middle name for fear of retribution.” “People simply don’t have the opportunity or the time to say where they’ve left their cars.” Finally, their lawyer was able to secure a bond hearing for her husband, and he was released.He will have another hearing to help determine his status next fall.Immigrant families in Maryland live with the knowledge that, each time a person leaves their house, they might not come back.When someone doesn’t come home on time or stops answering their phone, fear grows.But answers can be hard to come by.In part, that’s because ICE’s practices vary day by day.Advocates have observed a range of behaviors during arrests.Sometimes, agents drive a car a little way off the road, and sometimes they leave it right in the street.Observers have seen keys thrown on