Her mom said Canadian Jastine Mooney

According to her mother, a Canadian woman appeared in a movie in the “American Pie” film and was detained by U.S. immigration officials for several days when they tried to cross the border from Mexico to the United States to renew her work visa. The woman's father hopes his daughter will return to Canada as early as Friday.
Jasmine Mooney, a 35-year-old business consultant, said on Facebook Wednesday that her mother, Alexis Eagles, said on Facebook Wednesday that his mother, Alexis Eagles, said on Facebook on Facebook Wednesday that his mother, Alexis Eagles, said on Facebook on Facebook, said his mother, Alexis Eagles, said on Facebook on Wednesday that his mother, Alexis Eagles, said on Facebook on his mother, Alexis Eagles Eagles said on Facebook Wednesday that she was detained by U.S. immigration and customs enforcement on March 3, including the 2009 “American Pie Gift: Love Letter” and the 2009 “American Pie Gift: Love Letter”. Mooney tries to cross the border with her Visa paperwork and a job offer from a US company
Mooney is crossing the border to apply for a temporary visa, called the TN visa, and she has successfully obtained a visa before. The TN visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows Canadian and Mexican citizens to engage in certain professional work in the United States under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement, known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
Her visa was denied and she was held for three nights at the San Isidro crossing in Southern California, according to the Eagles. She was then transferred to the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego and held for three nights.
Carlos Moreno/anadolu by Getty Images
According to the Eagles, the locator system for online detention showed Mooney had been released on Sunday, but 24 hours later, she still had no signal or communication from her, putting her family and friends in a state of uncertainty and anxiety.
“We eventually learned that about 30 people, including Jasmine, were forcibly removed from their cells at 3:00 am and transferred to the St. Louis Detention Center in Arizona,” the Eagles said on Facebook. “They were installed in a single concrete cell without natural light, with fluorescent lights never turned off, no mats, no blankets and limited bathroom facilities.”
Mooney’s friend Brittany Kors told Canadian newspaper Globe and Mail that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection suddenly informed Mooney of Mooney’s visa and she was detained because she was booking a flight back to Canada.
“No warning, I've just been taken away,” Mooney told CTV News during a telephone interview with the Arizona detention center. “I feel like I've been kidnapped.”
ICE told San Diego Station KGTV on Thursday that Mooney was detained for lack of legal documents. A spokeswoman told the station: “All foreigners who violate U.S. immigration laws are likely to be arrested, detained and evacuated from the United States if found to be found, regardless of nationality.”
Mooney's father, Stephen Mooney, said in an interview with CBC Radio that he hopes his daughter will be taken to a detention center in Tijuana, Mexico and released. He hopes she flew back to Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday night.
Susan Mooney
In a Facebook post Thursday, Eagles said she bought a ticket for her daughter and was awaiting ICE approval. She also said she was cautiously optimistic that Mooney would be home in the next few days.
Mooney's mother said she was very worried about her daughter's living conditions in detention. She called Ice's treatment of her daughter “inhumane and deeply worrying.”
“Being detained is one thing, but there is no excuse for people to be treated when they are detained or deported delays,” she said. “They are not criminals, they just want to go home.”
Dina Destin, a spokesman for Canadians for Global Affairs, told CBS News in a statement that they are aware of Canadians’ detention in the U.S., where consular officials contact local authorities to collect information and provide consular assistance.
“Each country or region determines who can enter or exit through its borders. The Canadian government cannot intervene on behalf of Canadian citizens regarding the entry and exit requirements of another country,” Distin said in a statement.