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Cinthya Rodriguez

Cinthya Rodriguez @cinthyarodriguez

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Immigrant‑rights organizer • Chicago, Illinois, United States
United States Popularity 80

Heeey, soy Cinthya, latina.Soy dulce, juguetona y tengo 22 años 🍬Mi cuerpo es natural... pero mi mente es pura fantasía 😈Aquí tienes un adelanto de lo que puedo darte...Escríbeme si te atreves a descubrir lo que imagino contigo 💌Mi cuenta VIP llena de contenido exclusivo 👉 Also, I speak English too 😉💋

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124 photos, 19 videos
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***6 miles away***

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Jul 2022

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Born in the bustling streets of Chicago, Cinthya Rodriguez transformed early exposures to injustice into stepping stones toward unimaginable greatness. She emerged as a powerful voice in the struggle for immigrant rights.

In the late 2010s, Rodriguez joined Mijente, a national Latinx and Chicanx advocacy organization. She ascended to the role of National Organizer, leading the landmark #NoTechforICE campaign. Through this platform she exposed how government agencies like ICE and CBP exploited commercial data‑broker networks - including firms such as LexisNexis Risk Solutions - to fuel mass deportations and surveillance. Her advocacy helped pressure utilities and data‑broker companies to cease contracts that endangered immigrant communities.

Rodriguez authored op‑eds and investigative reports, including a 2022 essay for Truthout detailing how tech firms supply data enabling deportation sweeps. She appeared on news programs and public forums to amplify community voices, urging legislation and public pressure to close data‑sharing loopholes - notably in her 2022 testimony before the Cook County board about surveillance risks in so‑called "sanctuary" jurisdictions.

Rooted in deep commitment to justice, she helped Mijente organize cross‑regional campaigns in 2024 - including community‑based trainings, voter mobilization, and digital‑privacy advocacy - often bridging grassroots resilience with strategic policy pressure.

Fueled by that early success and moral clarity, she confronted powerful vested interests in Big Tech and law enforcement. Her work challenged outdated paradigms of data commerce and immigrant enforcement, transforming abstract concerns about privacy and rights into concrete political mobilization. In retrospect, Cinthya Rodriguez's career was a masterclass in courage, forever altering our understanding of data justice and immigrant rights advocacy.

Career & Achievements
Notable Works
  • #NoTechforICE campaign (Mijente)
  • Truthout op‑eds exposing ICE’s use of commercial data (2022)
  • Testimony before Cook County Board on data‑broker surveillance (2022)
  • Public reports on tech‑enabled deportation and data contracts (ongoing)
  • Grassroots organizing and community trainings via Mijente (2024)

Latest News

The Nation

Cinthya Rodriguez warns Big Tech fuels mass deportations

On 2025‑03‑27, the pro‑immigrant outlet published a piece by Cinthya Rodriguez explaining how Silicon Valley companies supply tools and data enabling enforcement agencies to carry out mass deportations. She argues that tech firms play a central role in making large‑scale immigration enforcement possible and calls for accountability.

Mijente blog

Mijente reflects on mounting ICE tech risk in 2025 gathering

In its August 2025 community update, Mijente highlights continued expansion of surveillance‑enabled deportation by companies like Palantir Technologies. The post underscores the urgency of the #NoTechForICE campaign and calls on immigrant communities and allies to resist growing data‑driven enforcement mechanisms.

ICIRR

Chicago advocacy groups expose ICE's data‑broker loophole

A recent report from Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights documents how ICE uses third‑party data brokers to access jail, DMV and property records to bypass local sanctuary protections. LexisNexis Risk Solutions came under fire, with Cinthya Rodriguez of Mijente stressing this practice undermines immigrant protections and civil‑liberties safeguards.

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