(UNITED STATES) Immigration and Customs Enforcement placed a longtime resident in custody this week after he overstayed a visitor visa two decades ago, highlighting a sharp focus on visa overstays even when no crimes are alleged. Advocates and attorneys say ICE detention can begin at home, at work, or outside a courthouse with little warning, and removal cases are moving faster when officers have clear proof of an expired status. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, these arrests now form a larger share of enforcement actions in communities across the United States 🇺🇸.
Overstaying a visa triggers “unlawful presence,” a legal clock that carries automatic penalties once a person departs or is deported. The government imposes a 3‑year ban on re-entry after more than 180 days of overstay and a 10‑year ban after more than one year. Those bars apply even if the person has lived in the country for 20 years, raised children, and paid taxes. They also remain on the immigration record permanently, making most future visas or green card paths far harder to win.
Attorneys report a rise in pick-ups tied only to status violations. While ICE has long had authority to arrest anyone without current status, recent directives have broadened field operations. People with scheduled check-ins, parents dropping kids at school, or workers on a morning shift have been taken into custody after quick identity checks show a lapsed I‑94. In many cases, an officer issues a Notice to Appear (NTA), starting removal before an immigration judge.

Escalating enforcement against long-term overstays
The current policy climate emphasizes arrests of people whose only issue is a civil status violation. Officials have set priorities that sweep in non-criminal immigrants as part of broader campaigns, and arrest targets have filtered down to local field offices.
As a result, cases involving visa overstays of many years—sometimes more than two decades—are showing up in detention logs and court dockets, according to attorneys representing families in several states. Once in ICE detention, a person is processed and either:
- Held for a hearing, or
- Placed into faster-track removal if the evidence of overstay is straightforward.
The agency may transfer detainees far from home, making it hard for relatives to bring clothing, medicine, or proof of family ties. Phone access varies by facility. For many families, the shock comes not only from the arrest but from the sudden distance and confusion over the next steps.
Legal options after long overstays are narrow. Most detained people cannot adjust status unless they qualify for specific forms of relief that Congress carved out, such as:
- Asylum (for those who fear harm),
- Protection under the Convention Against Torture, or
- Certain family-based waivers.
Some may seek bond from an immigration judge; others may be subject to mandatory detention. Lawyers stress that each case turns on years of entries, exits, and prior filings, and that small facts can change outcomes.
Federal rules on unlawful presence and re-entry bars are detailed in USCIS policy guidance on unlawful presence bars. Under those rules:
- Overstay of more than 180 days but less than one year → 3-year bar upon departure.
- Overstay of more than one year → 10-year bar upon departure.
Importantly, these penalties attach when the person leaves or is removed, which is why attorneys often warn clients not to travel abroad while a case is pending unless they have clear legal advice.
What detained families should do now
Families often face urgent choices in the first 72 hours. Attorneys recommend a short checklist to reduce harm while options are reviewed:
- Call an experienced immigration lawyer and sign a Form G-28 so counsel can speak to ICE and the court. You can find the form on the official USCIS page here: Form G-28, Notice of Entry of Appearance as Attorney or Accredited Representative.
- If removal is scheduled quickly, some people ask ICE for a temporary pause using Form I-246: Application for a Stay of Deportation or Removal. Whether to file depends on the facts and timing.
- Make sure the court and ICE have the correct address by filing Form EOIR-33: Change of Address. Missing a hearing can lead to an in‑absentia order of deportation.
- Gather identity, medical, and family papers. Keep copies of passports, birth certificates, marriage records, and proof of long-term residence in one place.
- Avoid foreign travel unless an attorney confirms it’s safe. Departure can trigger the 3‑year or 10‑year bars.
For people without criminal records, the shock of ICE detention often feels at odds with daily life built over decades. Parents miss school pickups; businesses lose owners overnight; mortgages, car loans, and paychecks stop. Advocates say local support networks—faith groups, unions, and community organizations—can help with food, rides to hearings, and small grants while a case moves through court.
The emotional strain is heavy, but having a plan reduces damage in the critical first month.
Enforcement outcomes vary, but the legal consequences of long overstays are consistent:
- A person who leaves after years without status faces bars that block new visas and make many waivers unavailable.
- Prior work permits or driver’s licenses tied to old filings typically lapse.
- Even a strong job history, tax records, or U.S. citizen children rarely change the basic penalties set by law.
That is why early, accurate legal advice is essential when deportation proceedings begin.
Practical tips and final takeaways
This case exposes a growing tension: federal resources are aimed not only at border operations but at homes and workplaces within the interior, where people who arrived long ago believed they had fallen off the radar.
Lawyers summarize the practical steps simply:
- If you have an old overstay, speak to counsel now.
- Keep identity documents ready.
- Tell loved ones how to locate you in custody.
- Prepare contacts and money for calls or commissary.
Silence or delay can close doors that still exist today. Officials emphasize that civil immigration violations can still lead to arrest and deportation. For families with deep roots, the immediate step is preparation: legal counsel, documents, contacts, and funds. Preparation doesn’t stop arrests, but it protects.