His wrists in handcuffs, Mo begged the federal agents to let him bring the baby formula home to his son.

It was the morning after Christmas and Mo had awoken early to make the roughly one mile drive from his Auburn home to the grocery store. He was still in his pajamas when, on the drive back, he saw them in his mirrors — the flashing lights of five SUVs driven by federal immigration officials. Within seconds, he was arrested.

“Even when they stopped me, I was thinking that I did everything right,” said Mo, who asked to use just his first name for fear of jeopardizing his ongoing immigration case and putting his family at risk.

The Palestinian immigrant’s story highlights new facets of how President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown is playing out in Washington state. Asylum-seekers with no criminal record are being detained, even as federal officials claim immigration agents are targeting “the worst of the worst.” Mo was arrested in a traffic stop, which appears to increasingly common. And it’s possible state driver’s license data aided in his arrest.

Mo arrived in the U.S. in early 2024 with his wife and firstborn son from the West Bank, entering legally with a tourist visa. Soon after, he said, he applied for asylum and his case remains pending. Under U.S. law, he has permission to remain in the country while his asylum application is processed, said his attorney Hannah Vickner Hough, who works at the Muslim civil rights organization CAIR-WA. Being deported from the U.S. would be catastrophic for his family, Mo said, and could leave him stranded in a dangerous situation abroad.