DEPORTED FOR DRIVING: THE ERASURE OF FELIPE ZAPATA VELÁSQUEZ

The United States educated him. Welcomed him. Gave him a student ID and a tuition bill. Then it kicked him out like a used napkin over a technicality.

Felipe Zapata Velásquez — third-year economics student at the University of Florida, kind-hearted, brilliant, and determined — got pulled over on March 28th for expired tags and a suspended license.

Gainesville police shrugged, ICE sharpened its claws, and within 48 hours he was in shackles. No trial. No hearing. No lawyer present. Just a pipeline from campus to Krome Detention Center, Florida’s own bureaucratic oubliette.

The Trump administration didn’t deport a criminal.

It deported a student.

A dreamer.

A life in progress.

They told Felipe he could “wait it out” in detention, for months or years — or take a one-way flight to Bogotá and call it “voluntary.” That’s not immigration enforcement.

That’s state-sponsored extortion in a navy blue jacket.

Now he’s in Colombia, shattered. His mother says he barely speaks. His future — the one he was building in Gainesville — was erased by a traffic stop and a system that no longer pretends to care.

UF students protested. Professors pleaded. But ICE doesn’t do nuance. It does quotas. And fear. And quiet erasures like this.

This wasn’t just a deportation.

It was a warning.

To every international student. Every undocumented youth. Every person with the wrong accent or the wrong paperwork or the wrong goddamn luck. It says: “You don’t belong. And we can take everything.”

And if expired tags are enough to end your American life —
what isn’t?


Felipe Zapata Velásquez wasn’t a criminal. He wasn’t a threat.

He was a student — until a broken taillight, a suspended license, and a shrug from a cop cost him everything.

At Closer to the Edge, we don’t just tell you the story.

We rip the mask off the system that made it happen.

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This post has been syndicated from Closer to the Edge, where it was published under this address.

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