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'He wants to leave': Daughter says man being held at 'Alligator Alcatraz' wants to self-deport
Fernando Artese had plans to voluntarily leave the country before he was arrested last month for driving with a suspended license, his daughter said.

Basically, this guy holding dual citizenship from Argentina and Italy has been living here in the US for the past 10 years. He overstayed his visitor visa. (I think the 10 year count is the time he was here illegally). His past criminal history is not mentioned in any of the news reports I've seen, but for the purpose of this conversation, let's assume he has no past criminal record.
He gets pulled over, likely for speeding, and is ticketed for not having a driver's license. He skips the court date and is pulled over a few months later, and is arrested because there's a bench warrant out for him.
This guy is sent to Alligator Alcatraz, a controversial facility in the Florida Everglades that is supposed to be for the worst of the worst criminals.
The family claims that they were headed to California to self-deport to Argentina through Mexico. They were then going to live in Spain, where the daughter was born, and planned to go to college. The man lives in South Florida and he was arrested in Melbourne, which is a few hours north of Miami. He's also driving an RV, which is relevant to the story.
The daughter starts a go fund me page to raise money for a lawyer because she wants her dad to be released so he can proceed to self deport, but apparently ICE will allow detainees to self-deport at their own expense to the country of their choosing. The father says in phone calls home that the conditions in Alligator Alcatraz constitute a violation of basic human rights and he says they asked him if he wanted to leave the country, but he's been denied access to an attorney to understand his rights and options.
Please share your thoughts on this story. I'd like to hear what you all think about this man having been sent to Alligator Alcatraz in the first place based on the assumption that he's not the worst of the worst. Does it sound reasonable that his family was really trying to self-deport, or does that sound like a story they made up in an effort to get him released? Even if they were really on their way to Mexico, should that even matter to ICE officials, especially after remaining illegally for a decade?