Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

Mother urges deportation after man charged in case involving her 13-year-old bonds out

News transcript · February 12, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

A woman identified as Farmisha Rose says her 13-year-old daughter was involved online with 29-year-old Jordan Castillo Chavez. Castillo Chavez was charged in March with indecent liberties, bonded out, and was later named by Customs and Border Protection as among the "worst of the worst;" the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office says no ICE detainer was issued.

A woman identified by a reporter as Farmisha Rose said this week that she only recently learned the man charged in a case involving her 13-year-old daughter is not a U.S. citizen, and she called for deportation.

Rose described discovering messages and photos on her daughter’s phone that led her to realize the girl had been communicating with a man she later identified as 29-year-old Jordan Castillo Chavez. "I just met him online," Rose told the reporter, and after seeing messages indicating he planned to pick up her daughter she said she fainted.

The reporter said Pineville police charged Castillo Chavez in March with indecent liberties and other related charges. The reporter added that Castillo Chavez has since bonded out of custody.

Customs and Border Protection told the reporter it has named Castillo Chavez among the "worst of the worst criminal legal aliens," and the agency blamed his release on a failed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainer, according to the report.

The reporter said the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office responded to requests for comment by saying ICE had asked for advance notification of Castillo Chavez's release but did not issue an ICE detainer. The sheriff's office said it did not notify ICE when Castillo Chavez bonded out because the office was not legally required to do so.

Addressing the reporter, Rose framed deportation as the only form of justice she would accept given her family's history with removal. "We need justice. He needs to go, and he needs to enforce it," she said.

The criminal charges were filed in March, and the transcript does not provide additional details about upcoming court dates, the exact charges beyond "indecent liberties and other related charges," or the bond amount. The agencies cited in the report include Pineville police, Customs and Border Protection, ICE, and the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office.