One morning last March, Alejandro said goodbye to his wife Maria and his two small daughters and headed off to work. But four blocks from their home near Bakersfield, Calif., he was picked up by plain-clothes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, who wore vests emblazoned with the word POLICE, and arrested on the spot. Maria said later that she knew it wouldn’t matter that Alejandro had no criminal record, not even a speeding ticket. Or that he’d driven these same roads every day for the past decade, picking grapes, pistachios and oranges in California’s Central Valley. Since 2006, when Alejandro overstayed his visa, he had been considered a “fugitive alien,” and therefore subject to immediate deportation to Mexico. A few days later, he was given an ankle bracelet and allowed to return home to say goodbye. He was gone by the end of spring—before his eldest, Isabella, began talking, before Estefania—photographed here with Maria by @micheleasselin1—took her first steps, before Maria gave birth this winter to their third baby girl. The family’s experience—including the fear of being targeted if their names were not changed in this story—has become increasingly common during the Trump Administration. While President Obama told ICE to focus on violent offenders and recent border crossers, among others, President Trump has cast a much wider net: any and all of the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally are now a priority for deportation. A major consequence of this new policy has been an explosion of fear among immigrant communities, which are reacting not so much to the spiking number of arrests but to the apparent randomness of the roundups. "When everyone’s a target, no one is safe," says Luis Zayas, dean of the Steve Hicks School of Social Work at the University of Texas at Austin. "The fear is worse now than I’ve ever seen it." Read the full cover story by Haley Sweetland Edwards in this week's magazine and on TIME.com. Photograph by @micheleasselin1 for TIME

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One morning last March, Alejandro said goodbye to his wife Maria and his two small daughters and headed off to work. But four blocks from their home near Bakersfield, Calif., he was picked up by plain-clothes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, who wore vests emblazoned with the word POLICE, and arrested on the spot. Maria said later that she knew it wouldn’t matter that Alejandro had no criminal record, not even a speeding ticket. Or that he’d driven these same roads every day for the past decade, picking grapes, pistachios and oranges in California’s Central Valley. Since 2006, when Alejandro overstayed his visa, he had been considered a “fugitive alien,” and therefore subject to immediate deportation to Mexico. A few days later, he was given an ankle bracelet and allowed to return home to say goodbye. He was gone by the end of spring—before his eldest, Isabella, began talking, before Estefania—photographed here with Maria by @micheleasselin1—took her first steps, before Maria gave birth this winter to their third baby girl. The family’s experience—including the fear of being targeted if their names were not changed in this story—has become increasingly common during the Trump Administration. While President Obama told ICE to focus on violent offenders and recent border crossers, among others, President Trump has cast a much wider net: any and all of the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally are now a priority for deportation. A major consequence of this new policy has been an explosion of fear among immigrant communities, which are reacting not so much to the spiking number of arrests but to the apparent randomness of the roundups. "When everyone’s a target, no one is safe," says Luis Zayas, dean of the Steve Hicks School of Social Work at the University of Texas at Austin. "The fear is worse now than I’ve ever seen it." Read the full cover story by Haley Sweetland Edwards in this week's magazine and on TIME.com. Photograph by @micheleasselin1 for TIME


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