A vineyard manager鈥檚 deportation shattered an Oregon town. Now his daughter is carrying on his legacy
A vineyard manager鈥檚 deportation shattered an Oregon town. Now his daughter is carrying on his legacy
Alondra Sotelo Garcia saw the same headlines as everybody else. Masked agents making increasingly bold arrests. Community members disappearing without warning.
As the middle child of immigrants, she feared for her parents. She started tracking her father鈥檚 iPhone location, put in her two weeks鈥 notice at her job, and told her father she wanted to start working at the vineyard management company he founded after decades in the industry.
鈥淗ey, I think I need to step in now with you, Dad, and help you and learn,鈥 Alondra says she told her father. 鈥淚f something happens, are you just gonna leave nine people without a job?鈥
Just days later, he called from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Portland. His message was simple: 鈥淵ou know what to do.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e on it. We鈥檙e taking care of it,鈥 Alondra told her father.
鈥淚 know you are,鈥 he replied.
Her father, Moises Sotelo, was . A pillar of the Oregon wine industry, Sotelo鈥檚 arrest sparked a national outcry and a flood of community support. But that wasn鈥檛 enough to stop Sotelo from being deported to Mexico in July. Alondra鈥檚 mother, Irma, soon voluntarily left to join him.
Since then, she鈥檚 stepped up to take over her father鈥檚 business, finalize his affairs and help her parents set up a new life in . She鈥檚 also navigating a new life on her own, without the family she once had.
Alondra is just one of many Americans who saw their immigrant parents deported this year during the Trump administration鈥檚 relentless immigration crackdown, and explain. She and others have been left to stitch their families together again and carry on the legacy of what their parents built, often at a moment鈥檚 notice.
She will enter the new year with a raft of challenges: a freshly split family, a business to run and bills to pay 鈥 for herself, her brother and her parents. She straddled the two worlds this holiday season, first flying down to Mexico the week before Christmas to surprise her parents, and then back up to in time for a Christmas dinner at her aunt and uncle鈥檚, and late-night TV and gifts alone with her brother at their usually packed house.
After her father was detained, Alondra left her remote job helping with shipping logistics for a dental supply company, as well as an apartment that she rented with a close friend. She moved back to her family home in Newberg, a town of just more than 25,000 people in Oregon鈥檚 wine country, and took the reins at Moises鈥檚 company. In the face of , and with just months of her own experience in the wine business to replace her father鈥檚 decades-long career, it won鈥檛 be easy.
鈥淪ometimes I don鈥檛 even know what the hell I鈥檓 doing with work,鈥 Alondra said this winter. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been doing this for 30-plus years like Dad has. I鈥檓 not going to bring 30 years of experience into three months.鈥
The job itself is never far away. The family home doubles as the office, with workers coming and going. Alondra runs the show hand in hand with a former mentee of her father鈥檚, who helps with the ins and outs of field work, as well as an office administrator. She credits the two with keeping the business above water during the darkest months of her year.
The vineyards operate on an exhaustive schedule, with each season bringing new and painstaking work. Pruning off old growth in the winter. Training shoots one by one to grow vertically in the spring. Peeling leaves away from grapes to prevent mildew. Donning hazmat suits and spraying sulphur in the heat of summer to keep the mildew away. Laying netting against birds. Harvesting each bunch of thin-skinned grapes with care to avoid bruising.
Every vine. Every row. Acre by acre. Vineyard by vineyard. All by hand.
Alondra isn鈥檛 shying away.
鈥淚鈥檓 not going to leave this work and lay it to the ground and leave it for dead, because that would be very unfair for him,鈥 said Alondra.
Although ICE previously alleged that Moises first entered the country in 2006 and had a DUI conviction in Oregon鈥檚 Yamhill county, the county鈥檚 district attorneys told local outlets in June that they had no record of a DUI, and a vineyard owner interviewed by the Guardian said that he had worked with Moises as early as the mid-1990s. Alondra said that both of her parents had submitted immigration cases to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in early 2025.
In early June, masked ICE agents took one of the company鈥檚 employees as they were on the way to work. A vineyard manager, who was in the car at the time, told the Guardian in June that the agents refused to identify themselves and threatened her with an assault charge for asking questions. Alondra described the moment as a 鈥渁 wake-up call.鈥
A week later, her father was taken. She hasn鈥檛 caught a break since.
Tracking her father through the underbelly of ICE detention meant a trip to a facility in the Arizona desert, where, upon arrival, employees told her that her father wasn鈥檛 there 鈥 but they didn鈥檛 know where he was. Eventually, she was able to visit her father in Mexico post-deportation, on a trip that she described as 鈥渕e and Dad against the world鈥, and she tagged along with him as he acquired a new Mexican ID and all the other pieces that go into laying the groundwork for a new life.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檓 gonna ever get these moments with Dad back,鈥 Alondra thought at the time. 鈥淎nywhere he went, I went with him.鈥
Her work didn鈥檛 end there. Helping her mother, deep in depression, leave the country to join her husband. Overseeing the money from the GoFundMe she posted after her father鈥檚 detention and arranging the family finances to buy a house in Mexico for her parents, in a country they hadn鈥檛 lived in in three decades. This comes with a brand new set of bills as well.
鈥淭his house had just about nothing,鈥 Alondra said. 鈥淲e have to have electricians, we have to have plumbers, we have to have construction workers.鈥
Alondra hopes that her parents can find a silver lining in the upheaval by retiring in Mexico, and letting Alondra send money from the U.S. to cover the costs. She expects this to be a hard adjustment for two people used to pulling near-12-hour workdays (鈥淟et鈥檚 see how that goes鈥 was their response), but has hope they will accept her help. They did the same for her grandparents, and Alondra sees 鈥渉istory repeating itself again鈥.
With her younger brother freshly 18, and her older brother with five children of his own, the newfound responsibility, for now, falls on Alondra. The wine industry, where she鈥檚 earning her stripes and paychecks, is , and around the world. However, the relationships her father built over the last few decades are helping carry her through.
Dave Specter, co-owner of Bells Up Winery, worked with Moises for years. 鈥淗ere was a guy who was a dad and a business owner and an employer and an elder in his church,鈥 Specter said. 鈥淭his is the kind of guy that you want your children to grow up to be. So when we lose those people it does nothing but make our society worse.鈥
Wine sales around the globe are at their lowest level since 1961, which paints a grim picture for Willamette Valley鈥檚 saturated market of more than 700 wineries. And the food has been upended by ICE raids. In August, an that he lost about a quarter of his crop. In California, crops in the fields.
Bubba King, a Yamhill county commissioner speaking on his own behalf, said that the raids have affected not just the wine industry but the whole region.
鈥淚t will affect every piece of our community the longer this goes. I know kids that are afraid to go to school,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 know parents that are having to stay home from work because their kids are too young to stay at home by themselves, and they鈥檙e afraid to go to school.鈥
Miriam Vargas Corona, executive director at Unidos Bridging Community, a local non-profit, also sees a harsh economic impact down the line.
鈥淎ll of these actions are going to have a ripple effect on our local economy, because families are focusing on their safety and survival,鈥 she said. 鈥淏usinesses and industries that make Yamhill county vibrant depend on the full participation of our immigrant and Latinx community members.鈥
Meanwhile, Alondra鈥檚 concerns are far from over. This fall, she laid off an employee due to the lack of work. Weeks later, the former employee鈥檚 wife and brother-in-law were deported.
鈥淚t just absolutely tore me apart,鈥 she said.
Lately, she鈥檚 been finding a sort of bleak solidarity with her friends. She recently invited a friend over for dinner whose father was taken by ICE on a Sunday morning when headed out for grocery shopping. Alondra gave her friend advice鈥攖he same advice playing out at many kitchen tables across the country鈥攁s children of immigrants step up to fill their parents鈥 shoes.
鈥淚 kept telling him,鈥 Alondra said, 鈥渦nfortunately, this is where you really have to step up for your dad and be strong for your dad.鈥
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