A woman in El Salvador (her name not being given out) was kidnapped by guerrillas, made to watch them kill her husband, then used, under threat of death, as a slave for three years. She finally escaped to the US, where she is now threatened with deportation for "providing material support to terrorists."

'Judge Pauley went so far as to conclude that there was no exception to the “material support” bar even if the victim was “under duress,” adding that her actions did not need to be “voluntary.”
In a scathing dissent, Judge Linda Wendtland argued that the relevant statute lists examples of “material support” for terrorists, including offering safe houses, transportation, funds, and other tangible assistance.

'“I cannot conclude that the menial and incidental tasks that the respondent performed — as a slave — for Salvadoran guerrillas, including cooking, cleaning, and washing clothes, are of ‘the same class’ as the enumerated forms of assistance set forth in the statute,” Wendtland wrote.
'“Under the majority’s strained interpretation, providing a glass of water to a thirsty individual who happened to belong to a terrorist organization would constitute material support of that organization, because the individual otherwise would have needed to obtain water from another source.”
'The woman’s only chance to overturn this verdict would be if she appeals to a federal court. Or, as CNN points out, she could “persuade Attorney General Jeff Sessions — who serves as a functional one-man Supreme Court of the immigration courts — to intervene.”

'To read the entire article, click here https://edition.cnn.com/2018/06/06/p...ing/index.html'
Freedom United (formerly Walk Free)
To ask Jeff Sessions to intervene and block her deportation, go to
https://www.justice.gov/contact-us.