Army soldier’s wife released from immigration custody

Summary

Deisy Rivera Ortega, wife of an Army sergeant first class, was released after about a month in federal immigration detention.

Why this matters

The case highlights how immigration enforcement policy can affect military families, including relatives seeking legal status while a service member is on active duty.

The wife of a U.S. Army soldier was released from federal immigration custody late Thursday after about a month in detention.

Deisy Rivera Ortega, who is married to Sgt. 1st Class Jose Serrano, was arrested April 14 at an immigration office in El Paso, Texas.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth’s office said the Illinois Democrat called Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin this week to seek Rivera Ortega’s release. Duckworth said Rivera Ortega was reunited with her family after her release.

Rivera Ortega, a native of El Salvador, entered the United States in the Rio Grande Valley region of Texas in 2016 and had been under a final order of removal since December 2019, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Duckworth’s office said Rivera Ortega married Serrano in 2022 and had been applying for a program that gives family members of U.S. service members temporary permission to remain in the country while pursuing permanent legal status.

The Homeland Security Department ended a 2022 policy in April 2025 that had treated an immediate family member’s military service as a “significant mitigating factor” in civil immigration enforcement decisions. The new policy says “military service alone does not automatically exempt aliens from the consequences of violating U.S. immigration laws.”

Duckworth’s office said Rivera Ortega received a valid five-year work permit in 2024 and was working at two hotels in Fort Bliss, where Serrano is stationed, when she was arrested.

The Department of Homeland Security confirmed Friday that Rivera Ortega was released from detention.

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