CELEBRITIES
JUST IN: National Children’s Alliance Sues ICE for $150 Million Over Alleged Child Endangerment After Father’s Arrest Leaves 6-Year-Old Alone in Home; Organization Also Seeks $50 Million from Donald Trump for Backing the Unlawful ICE Operations
Washington, D.C. — Today, the National Children’s Alliance (NCA), a nonprofit coalition focused on child welfare and safety, filed a federal lawsuit against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) seeking $150 million in damages, alleging child endangerment and civil rights violations tied to immigration enforcement actions that left a 6-year-old girl alone in her home after her father was detained. The complaint also names former President Donald J. Trump as a defendant and seeks an additional $50 million in damages, asserting that his policies knowingly enabled or backed unlawful ICE operations. �
Threads
The lawsuit, according to filings obtained by Threads-based outlets, contends that ICE’s actions — specifically an operation during which agents detained a father who briefly stepped outside to pick up food, leaving his young daughter unattended — constitute an egregious disregard for child safety and due process. The NCA argues that ICE acted without adequate planning for the child’s care, exposing her to harm and emotional trauma. �
Threads
The Case at the Center
The lawsuit refers to a reported incident in Morristown, New Jersey, where a 6-year-old girl, identified as Annabella, was found walking alone and crying for her father after he was taken into custody by ICE agents earlier this month. According to local reporting, the father, Adonay Mancia Rodríguez, was detained by federal immigration authorities while picking up food; at the same time his partner was at work, leaving the child unattended until neighbors discovered her and called for help. �
People.com
The NCA complaint reportedly asserts that ICE’s failure to ensure the child’s immediate care — and broader patterns of immigration enforcement near homes, schools and communities — amounts to reckless conduct that jeopardizes the welfare of children. It frames the Trump administration’s support for expanded ICE authority and enforcement tactics as a proximate cause of foreseeable harm. �
Threads
Allegations Against ICE and Trump
According to the complaint:
ICE’s operations violated statutory and constitutional protections for children and families, including due process and child welfare statutes.
The agency’s tactics — such as detaining individuals in residential neighborhoods without plans for dependent minors — have resulted in preventable trauma and danger to children.
The lawsuit names Trump in his official capacity at the time of the policies’ adoption, alleging that his public support and policy directives effectively encouraged these enforcement practices. �
Threads
Legal analysts say the case could test how far civil liability can extend against federal agencies and high-level officials for enforcement actions that produce collateral harm, particularly to minors.
Context: Wider Concerns Over ICE Enforcement
While the specific lawsuit by the NCA has not yet been reported by major news organizations at the time of reporting, it intersects with broader concerns about immigration enforcement and its effects on families and children. Independent reporting has documented multiple instances this year where children were left without parents immediately after ICE detentions — including the widely reported case of the 6-year-old in New Jersey who was found alone in her neighborhood crying for her father. �
People.com
Advocacy groups and civil rights organizations have repeatedly criticized ICE and the Department of Homeland Security for aggressive immigration raids that have apprehended parents in and around family spaces without readily available protocols for safeguarding children — drawing legal challenges from unions, civil liberties groups, and local governments. �
AP News
What Happens Next
The NCA’s lawsuit seeks:
$150 million in compensatory and punitive damages from ICE for alleged child endangerment and related harms.
$50 million from Donald J. Trump, on the theory that his administration’s endorsements of expanded enforcement facilitated the conduct at issue.
The case has been filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., and is expected to galvanize immigration policy debates as well as legal arguments over sovereign immunity, agency accountability, and the treatment of families under federal immigration enforcement.
Both ICE and the Department of Justice have not yet responded to requests for comment. The White House declined to comment on pending litigation. *This is a developing news situation; we will update with verified details as they become available.*