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Tennessee neighbors form human chain to help father and son escape ICE

The standoff lasted hours, and the video went viral.

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Samira Sadeque

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A group of neighbors banded together to protect a father and son after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents blocked them in their driveway Monday morning, eventually helping the duo escape, according to multiple news reports and documentation on social media.

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Facebook users Susan Hudson McBride and Tristan Call shared live videos of the standoff that reportedly lasted a few hours in Hermitage, near Nashville, Tennessee.

A white truck had reportedly been driving around in the neighborhood for the past two weeks, but only since Monday began flashing red and blue rights, raising alarm bells for the residents, the Tennessean reported

ICE agents blocked the car with the father and son inside on their own driveway, reportedly without a warrant.

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When neighbor Stacey Farley came out for a smoke a little after 8am, she reportedly saw what was going on and gathered other neighbors. Many of them, over the next few hours, helped the father stay in the car with his son, bringing him food, water, and helping refill his gas so they could keep the AC on in the car, while ICE agents waited around. 

“They’re in unmarked cars, they’re not in uniforms,” Call says in the video, which was recorded a bit later.

https://www.facebook.com/tristan.call.9/videos/10105116855732069/

The effort eventually brought out immigration activists, a councilmember, and volunteer workers from advocacy group Movements Including X. Police were also on the scene but not actively helping the ICE agents, as seen in Call’s video. 

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“Seeing these children ripped away from their parents in the way they do it makes me wanna cry,” a neighbor who said they’ve known the family for 14 years said in Call’s video. “It hurts to see people go through what they’re going through. I understand if they didn’t take proper procedures to be United States citizens, maybe they didn’t know how to do it, maybe they waited too late but there’s a way to do it.

“They shouldn’t have to be broken away from their parents,” the neighbor said, adding that keeping the agents on camera was likely helping the family.  

The father and son remained in the car until the ICE agents left. 

In a separate video, McBride documented the moment the ICE car pulled away. In her description, she wrote that Facebook “put a music filter” on her live stream. The audio from the video is not clear as there is a children’s nursery music video playing over the voices of the people on the ground. There is also a tinted window of a visual filter throughout the video.

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It was definitely concerning. It means Facebook is flushing the First Amendment down the toilet and, by default here, siding with Nazis,” McBride told the Daily Dot about her video being tinted with filter and instrumental lullaby.

Call did not respond to the Daily Dot’s request for comments. 

https://www.facebook.com/susan.mcbride.77964/videos/1194140320793022/

Halfway into her video, the white car is seen driving away and a woman behind the camera is heard saying, “ICE is driving off.”

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A few seconds later, the police cars are seen driving off from the street, and other neighbors are seen gathering around the residents’ car. 

“We’re making a chain,” McBride is heard saying from behind the camera. 

After about eight people make a chain around the car, some are heard counting to six in Spanish before the father and the son run out of their car into the home while the neighbors urge them on, “Go! Go! Hurry up!”

After the two are safely inside their home, the neighbors are seen clapping and cheering.

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ICE has been on a mission to arrest migrants across the country, following weeks of taunting by President Donald Trump about much-anticipated ICE raids. But raids that Trump ordered earlier in July ultimately didn’t happen. On Tuesday, the New York Times reported that out of the 2,000 migrants who were targeted for arrests, ICE had so far managed to arrest 35 people. 

The Times report claimed that advance reporting of the scheduled raids prepared families to either relocate to evade arrests or be educated about their rights if ICE did show up at their doors. 

The latter definitely seemed to have worked in the case of the Tennessee father and son, who were able to stay in the car while staying within their rights given the lack of a warrant by the agents.

As Call says in the live video: “He’s seen what other people have done around the country; he knows his rights. They showed him a piece of paper that’s not a judicial warrant and so he stayed in his car.” 

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This post has been updated.

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