News US

ICE detains reporter Estefany Rodríguez in Nashville

by Mikeie Honda Reiland, Nashville Banner
March 5, 2026

A reporter who faced death threats in her home country could now be sent back by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. 

Nashville Noticias staffer Estefany Rodríguez was detained by ICE in South Nashville on Wednesday morning. There was no warrant for her arrest. Her attorneys have filed an emergency petition in federal court seeking a writ of habeas corpus, or an immediate review of whether or not her detention is legal. 

Rodríguez, who was in the car with her husband — a U.S. citizen — has been following all the legal steps to citizenship. In her job, Rodríguez has reported several stories that hold ICE accountable, and it’s unclear whether her detention was retaliation. As of Thursday afternoon, she was in Alabama en route to an ICE processing center in Louisiana. 

A citizen of Colombia, Rodríguez originally entered the country lawfully on a tourist visa in March 2021, then applied for political asylum. According to Joel Coxander, her immigration attorney, Rodríguez was forced to flee Colombia and seek asylum because of her work as a journalist. She covered armed and militant groups and had received threats, which Coxander has seen in the form of a text message. She also filed at least one police report before coming to the U.S. For the journalists’ safety, Coxander said, a lot of the publication’s articles have been scrubbed from existence. 

The first time Rodríguez had any contact with ICE was Jan. 8, when she received a G-56 letter requesting that she come to the office for “processing and additional information” on Jan. 26. The letter also stated that she would be issued a Notice to Appear (NTA), an official charging document initiating an immigration court case. “Come in so you can help ensure the best outcome for your case,” the letter read. Coxander said this language is common across these types of letters. 

“So ICE sends out these letters to citizens who’ve never had any contact with [them],” he said. “The letters just say, like, ‘Hey, please come by the ICE office.’” 

“They’re invitations,” he emphasized. “They don’t say they’re required. They say, ‘Come in so we can help ensure the best outcome for your case.’ They cite no legal requirement to come. And that’s because, for a lot of people, they have no connection to ICE, this isn’t connected with an application with USCIS — or at least it doesn’t say anything like that.”

“If you don’t want to delay the processing of your case and to help ensure the best outcome,” read the bottom of the letter, “IT IS VERY IMPORTANT that you make every effort to keep this appointment.”

Before Jan. 26, Rodríguez, her husband and Coxander compiled folders full of documents and prepared to attend the appointment. They planned to lay out arguments as to why ICE shouldn’t begin removal proceedings through the NTA or take her into custody. Then, on the agreed-upon date, the ice storm hit Nashville, and nobody could go anywhere. ICE’s ERO office was closed. 

On Feb. 10, Rodríguez received a letter with a makeup date for the appointment: Feb. 25.

Two days before the appointment, her husband and Caleb Mundy, an agent of Coxander’s, visited the ERO office. They were confirming, Coxander said, that Rodríguez actually had to show up. They wanted ICE to send the NTA directly to the attorneys. 

“She’s not in the system,” the duty officer told them after running her Alien Registration Number. “This appointment’s not in the system.”

Mundy double-checked if Rodríguez needed to show up, and the duty officer said no. Another agent took a look at the case, then they took her letter and gave her a check-in sheet stating that Rodríguez should return on March 17, when everything would be resolved. 

‘Trying to follow the rules’

Early on March 4, when she was stopped in her car, Rodríguez said she was shown an NTA rather than an arrest warrant. 

Mundy showed up to the ICE office that morning around 8:15 a.m. He said the Supervisory Detention and Deportation Officer (SDDO) told him Rodríguez’s arrest was justified because she was considered a flight risk for missing two meetings. 

The SDDO also said that Rodríguez hadn’t shown up in the system because she hadn’t had a previous interaction with ICE. 

“She’s being told, ‘We’re holding it against you that you didn’t do this thing we told you you didn’t have to do,” said Coxander, emphasizing that she didn’t show up to the first date because the ice storm closed the office and didn’t show up to the second because ICE told her not to. “They’re saying, ‘Hey, you didn’t show up to this invitation letter, so you’re a full flight risk.’”

“Joel had prepared a mountain of evidence,” for the first hearing, Mundy said, in favor of Rodríguez being released on her own recognizance. “And we didn’t get to present it until she was already arrested.”

Because of myriad national statutes, regulations, subregulations and unpublished norms and operations at local field offices, best practices in immigration law are a moving target. Mundy said the Middle Tennessee Immigration Bar hadn’t seen G-56 letters until the past two or three months, but the SDDO told him they’d been more common in California when she worked there. 

“We’re trying to sort out what all these things mean,” said Mundy, “and what advice to give our clients.”

Attorneys involved say immigration law is like an incredibly high-stakes form of the scientific method — because of a lack of guidance, a lawyer either screws up a case or guesses correctly. When something works, a document format or proceeding, the immigration bar shares with each other. When something goes horribly wrong, they do the same. 

People who know her describe Rodríguez as smart, tough, brave and positive, even in the face of something like this. 

“She’s not falling apart,” Coxander said.

“I think that [positivity’s] a real skill as a reporter,” he added, “given all the things you see.”

He said that he’s always admired Rodríguez’s courage in continuing to report on ICE for Noticias, up close and personal, when she knew she was putting herself at serious risk.

“That’s pretty brave,” Coxander said, “because she understood the whole time that she could be at risk of getting picked up — not even as a reporter, just by physically being present.”

Coxander found it ridiculous that Rodríguez would be considered a flight risk and likely criminal.

“Her husband and attorney literally went to the ICE office two days before the appointment. Like, we’re not blowing it off.”

“She is somebody that has been trying to follow the rules the whole time.”

ICE did not respond to a request for comment before publication.

A GoFundMe has been set up for Rodriguez’s family and her legal bills.

UPDATE, 3:30 p.m.: This is the full statement from Nashville Noticias:

On March 4, Estefany Rodríguez, a reporter for Nashville Noticias and Univision 42 Nashville, was with her husband, Alejandro Medina III, outside the gym located at 2615 Murfreesboro Pike, when the vehicle they were traveling in (marked with the Nashville Noticias logo) was surrounded by several other vehicles. Several men got out and demanded that our colleague be taken into custody for reasons that the legal team will specify at a later date.

Estefany Rodríguez was taken to a detention center.

Estefany Rodríguez holds a degree in journalism from Colombia, her native country, where she has worked for several years at various news outlets. She joined the Nashville Noticias team in 2022, covering social, family, health, police, and immigration issues.

Nashville Noticias LLC expresses its respect for the laws of the United States and hopes that this situation will be resolved favorably for our colleague so that she can be released soon, as she needs to reunite with her young daughter and husband to continue her legal process within the framework permitted by law. Her legal team at MIRA Legal, as well as the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Coalition (TIRRC), are providing legal representation in the case and will have details on the progress and responses from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Tennessee Federal Court.

Nashville Noticias will also be providing updates on its social media platforms and website, nashvillenoticias.com.We trust in the justice system of the United States of America.

This article first appeared on Nashville Banner and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button