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17-year-old Silvana Sanchez speaks to a crowd alongside her brother, 19-year-old Victor Sanchez Jr., at a protest outside the federal Courthouse on Main St. in Hartford on Sept. 24, 2025. Silvana and Victor's father, Victor Sanchez, was detained during a six-month check-in with ICE earlier that afternoon. Credit: Emilia Otte / CT Mirror

This story has been updated.

A crowd of people gathered outside the federal courthouse in Hartford on Wednesday evening to protest the detention of Hartford resident and activist Victor Sanchez, who they said had been arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents a few hours earlier. 

Sanchez is a member of Make the Road Connecticut, an immigrant advocacy organization, and Hartford Deportation Defense. He has testified in front of Connecticut lawmakers in support of expanding HUSKY to unauthorized immigrants.

The crowd, holding signs and chanting, listened as 19-year-old Victor Sanchez Jr. and 17-year-old Silvana Sanchez talked about their father. 

“I’m really mad right now because I’m not only losing my dad, but I’m losing my best friend as well,” said Silvana Sanchez. 

Silvana said her father encouraged her when she was frustrated with school, telling her that he’d come to the U.S. so his children could have a better life. She said her parents are the reason she’s working toward her dream of becoming a nurse. 

Her brother, Victor Sanchez Jr., said he sometimes helped his father with his contracting business, working on apartments. 

“He’s [been] taken away, and all that work that he has was for nothing. His dream was to start a business, and he did, but yet his dream is probably getting taken away,” said Victor Jr. 

Teresa Quintana, an organizer at Make the Road Connecticut, speaks and leads chants at a protest outside the Abraham A. Ribicoff Federal Building and Courthouse on September 24, 2025. Activists from immigrants’ rights organizations gathered at the courthouse in protest of the detention of activist and community member Victor Sanchez earlier that afternoon.

Sanchez arrived in the U.S. in 2004. A native of Mexico, he has three children — Victor Jr., Silvana, and a 2-year-old son, all of whom are U.S. citizens.

According to the Connecticut Judicial Branch records, Sanchez was arrested for driving under the influence in 2019 and sentenced to probation, which he completed in 2020.

But Constanza Segovia, co-founder of Hartford Deportation Defense and organizing director of CT for All, said that Sanchez had joined Alcoholics Anonymous, found recovery, and become a fixture in the community. 

“ He not only has gone through recovery and becomes sober himself, but he has been a leader in local groups and has supported many, many other people,” Segovia said. 

Sister Margarita Castañeda of the Congregation of Notre Dame said Sanchez was very active in his church, Our Lady of Sorrows in Hartford. “He showed his leadership right from the beginning,” she said.

“When I arrived, there was nothing to Our Lady of Guadalupe,” added Castañeda, referring to the Catholic image of the virgin Mary that has become the patroness of the Americas and Mexico. “Now we have Mass, we have Novenas, we have gatherings, but I don’t think we can do it this year. Our people are too afraid, and that frightens me.”

According to Segovia, Sanchez had a pending immigration case and had been complying with all the requirements brought forward by the court. 

“Victor has been following every single rule that this building has put in front of him. Every single rule. He has shown up, every time. He has done everything asked of him,” she said. 

Jacob Pudlin, co-chair of the Hartford branch of the Democratic Socialists of America and a volunteer with Hartford Deportation Defense, said he had accompanied Sanchez to his six-month check-in with immigration officials that afternoon. He said he witnessed Sanchez be placed in handcuffs and taken away by five people. 

ICE officials did not return a request for comment.

Rep. Jillian Gilchrest, D-West Hartford, and Hartford City Councilman Josh Michtom were also present outside the courthouse. Michtom called on his fellow city council members and state lawmakers to do more to stop ICE from detaining residents. 

Segovia also reiterated activists’ calls for new state laws that would make it more difficult for the federal government to access immigrants’ data, would prevent ICE agents from accessing state courthouses and allow people to attend court hearings remotely.

Sanchez’s attorney, Glenn Formica, said in a statement read by Segovia that he had filed a request to delay Sanchez’s deportation. 

Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly reported the organization Jacob Pudlin co-chairs as the Greater Hartford Democratic Socialist Alliance. He is co-chair of the Hartford branch of the Democratic Socialists of America.

Emilia Otte is CT Mirror's Justice Reporter, where she covers the conditions in Connecticut prisons, the judicial system and migration. Prior to working for CT Mirror, she spent four years at CT Examiner, where she covered education, healthcare and children's issues both locally and statewide. She graduated with a BA in English from Bryn Mawr College and a MA in Global Journalism from New York University, where she specialized in Europe and the Mediterranean.