“This is just an example of them going into our communities on a Sunday morning and picking people up who aren’t a danger or a threat or a flight risk,” she said.

But that is the new reality under the Trump administration, she said, adding, “Everyone is an enforcement priority.”

Mr. Garcia was 13 when he came to the United States, traveling from Mexico with his teenage brother, his daughter said. From then on, “he worked diligently to achieve the American dream,” she said.

He picked fruit in fields in Northern California, tried to make it as an amateur boxer and worked as a truck driver. But he has spent most of his career working as a machine operator at a factory, she said.

Her father received his green card and became a permanent legal resident in 1988, Ms. Garcia said.

In 2001, Mr. Garcia was convicted of a misdemeanor stemming from a dispute with his wife, according to his lawyer and his family. A spokeswoman for the Los Angeles Superior Court said he was sentenced to 25 days in jail and three years of probation. Ms. Garcia said that her father completed probation.

It was a domestic dispute they settled years ago, and “they are still married to this day,” Ms. Garcia said.

A spokeswoman for ICE said in a statement that Mr. Garcia was arrested because he “has past criminal convictions that make him amenable to removal from the United States.”