The Troy woman who was detained after rolling through a stop sign earlier this year will find out Thursday if she will be deported to New Zealand.

Dalila Yeend, 35, has been in ICE custody in Batavia since early June.

Troy police arrested her May 29 after officers discovered she did not have a New York driver’s license. A judge ordered her to be released on her own recognizance, but police held her until ICE agents arrived to pick her up.

A Troy police spokesman previously said that the department will hold a person if it has a warrant from another agency.

More for you News Troy woman faces deportation after rolling through stop sign

Her mother, Monique de Latour, said for 48 hours last week she couldn’t get in touch with her daughter and worried she had died in custody. She said she had to call State Police to confirm her daughter was still in the facility.

The communication issue eventually appeared to be the result of a computer error with the system used to communicate with detainees.

Since she was arrested, Yeend’s two children have bounced from house to house, staying with family members. Last month, in a video interview from the detention facility, Yeend said her children have struggled with the separation.

Yeend came to the United States with her mother when she was 17. The pair struggled with immigration issues when they arrived. Their first immigration lawyer ripped them off, preventing them from getting th necessary paperwork in order.

Yeend eventually moved to Troy, got married and began her own green card application in a Buffalo court. In the middle of her application, her pro bono attorney decided to stop practicing in that court. Yeend tried to make all of her court dates but the court required her to have a lawyer. When she failed to get one, she was issued a deportation order in 2015.

Her attorney said last month that Yeend had applied for and received approval for an I-360 petition, which allows immigrants who are abused by American citizens to receive permanent resident status. All that is holding her up, however, is the previous deportation order for the failed green card application.