and part-time jobs in high school and fear of getting pulled over could lead to deportation by i.c.e. alden, talk to us about having to live with a perpetual escape plan. >> i live in new york and look in brooklyn where you have to live in a state of that. a cop can look at me and stop me just because of the color of my skin or because they assume that i'm going to commit a crime because i look african-american. unfortunately, because i'm not african-american and i'm undocumented, what they can now do is report that to i.c.e. and tell i.c.e. we do not have identification, and i can be detained or deported just for not having identification in new york city. >> alden, i want to get to how you got here in the first place. the u.s. government asked your mom to come here and teach in some of the most trying schools in new york city, right? >> right. >> what was she told? what was she promised? >> the department of education in 2001, they went all the way to the caribbean to get the best and brightest teachers to teach in some of the hardest-staffed schools in new york city. my mother taught spe