Texas – A heartbroken Texas mother claims her 11-year-old daughter took her own life after classmates threatened to report her to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation. While the exact circumstances surrounding her death remain unclear, the family believes the ongoing bullying was a driving factor behind her tragic decision to end her life.
The bullying went on for months, according to the single mom of six, with the sixth grader seeing a school counselor to report the bullying. The woman now demands answers, The Daily Mail reported.
The 11-year-old girl from Texas, tragically took her own life earlier this month after enduring alleged bullying related to her family’s lmmigration status. The girl, a sixth-grade student, JoceIyn, at Ganesville Intermediate School, died after five days in a hospital, where she had been placed in the intensive care unit.
Reports indicate that the child had been taunted by classmates, with threats to report her family to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, implying that her parents could be deported. Despite the girl’s attempts to seek help, the bullying reportedly continued, and school officials failed to inform her mother about the ongoing abuse until after her hospitalization.
School officials have stated they are investigating the situation. While the district has a zero-tolerance policy for bullying, the full details of the case are still under review. This incident has raised concerns about how schools address bullying and the effects of immigration-related harassment on children.
The community has expressed deep concern over the tragedy and is urging both school authorities and local leaders to do more to protect children from bullying and ensure support systems are in place for at-risk students. The girl’s family is left devastated, with calls for greater awareness and action to prevent such tragedies in the future.
The 11 year old according to reports had been ongoing bullied by classmates over her family’s immigration status and threatened to call U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Newsweek reported that some of Carranza’s tormentors taunted her about being abandoned if her parents were deported.
A crowdfunding effort on GoFundMe set up to help pay for hospital bills for the 11 year old has since raised over $52,685 amid widespread sympathy for JoceIyn and others who almost certainly will continue to face ongoing stigma in the backdrop of anti-immigrant rhetoric and demonization.