Davin News Server

From: "illegal-presence@usa.org" <illegal-presence@usa.org>
Subject: Canadian political actor detained at US border in 'inhumane
Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2025 11:00:11 +0100 (CET)
Newsgroups: alt.politics.immigration, alt.politics.trump, can.politics,
Organization: dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider

A Canadian entrepreneur and actor in the American Pie movie franchise said 
she was detained for almost two weeks in “inhumane” conditions by US 
border authorities over an incomplete visa.

Jasmine Mooney, an actor who is also co-founder of the beverage brand 
Holy! Water, was detained on 3 March in San Diego, California.

The 35-year-old Canadian citizen’s work visa to the US was reportedly 
revoked back in November while traveling from Vancouver to Los Angeles, 
and she was attempting to file a new application.

“Every single guard that sees me is like, ‘What are you doing here? I 
don’t understand. You’re Canadian. How are you here?’” Mooney said in an 
interview with ABC 10 last week from the Arizona immigration detention 
center where she was being held.

Mooney told the Guardian that she had been traveling back and forth for 
work several times between Canada and California without issues. It wasn’t 
until during one trip returning to the US that she was suddenly questioned 
by a border patrol agent and subsequently detained.

According to Mooney, she was told that her visa hadn’t been “properly 
processed” during a lengthy interrogation. An officer also claimed that 
she couldn’t work for a company in the US that made use of hemp, one of 
these ingredients used in her Holy! Water health tonic brand.

Her mother, Alexis Eagles, who lives in British Columbia, says Mooney was 
detained at the San Ysidro border crossing between Mexico and San Diego, 
the busiest land border crossing in the world, on 3 March with an 
incomplete application for a work visa. Eagles told the Vancouver Sun that 
instead of sending her daughter to Canada or advising her to fix her 
application, US Customs and Border Protection officers arrested her.

Mooney had not been charged with any crime and does not have a prior 
criminal record.

She spent three nights in the detention center, then was transferred. “We 
eventually learned that about 30 people, including Jasmine, were removed 
from their cells at 3am and transferred to the San Luis detention center 
in Arizona,” Eagles said.

“They are housed together in a single concrete cell with no natural light, 
fluorescent lights that are never turned off, no mats, no blankets, and 
limited bathroom facilities.”

Every time Mooney was transferred, she was handcuffed and in chains, 
Eagles claimed.

Mooney told ABC 10 that she was appalled by the conditions inside the 
private detention facility in San Luis where she was being kept.

“I have never in my life seen anything so inhumane,” she said. “I was put 
in a cell, and I had to sleep on a mat with no blanket, no pillow, with an 
aluminum foil wrapped over my body like a dead body for two and a half 
days.”

Mooney was profiled in BC Business magazine in 2019 for her work in the 
hospitality industry. According to the profile, she moved from the Yukon 
to Vancouver in 2008 to study at the British Columbia Institute of 
Technology. From there, she went to acting school, before owning and 
operating a bar.

She has said she had a three-year US work visa, which her mother said was 
revoked as she attempted to travel back to Los Angeles, where she was 
living, after a holiday in Canada. It was unclear why Mooney’s earlier 
visa was revoked, or why she was at the southern border this month. 
However, she told ABC she got her first visa at the San Ysidro border 
crossing on the advice of a Los Angeles attorney, who met her at the 
border, and therefore may have thought it would work a second time at that 
location.

The Guardian contacted US Customs and Border Protection for comment.

Mooney was released over the weekend and landed at Vancouver international 
airport shortly after midnight on Saturday morning.

“I’m still, to be honest, really processing everything,” Mooney told 
reporters who were waiting for her at the airport’s international arrivals 
area.

“I haven’t slept in a while and haven’t eaten proper food in a while, so 
I’m just really going through the motions,” she told CTV News.

“Thank you for all your messages of support. I’m sorry if I haven’t been 
able to respond to everyone – just got home after what felt like escaping 
a deeply disturbing psychological experiment,” she added in a post on her 
Instagram account.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/18/canadian-actor-jasmine-
mooney-detained-mexico-border

Boo hoo