MERCEDES — For most of her life, Geovanna Galvan didn’t worry that her parents, both undocumented farm workers in the Rio Grande Valley, would be deported. After President Donald Trump entered his second term in office, that changed. With a new pit in her stomach, she downloaded an app to track the location of her immediate family.
It didn’t take long for the app to prove useful. One afternoon in January — less than two weeks after Trump was inaugurated for his second term — Geovanna, 29, got a panicked call from her mother.
Geovanna’s father Jaime Galvan Sanchez, 48, had been working, driving a tractor down a road in the small town of Primera when a police officer pulled him over for obstructing the street. When Jaime couldn’t produce identification, the officer called U.S. Border Patro