Federal immigration officials announced on Friday they plan to deport a prostitute known as the 'Harbor Hooker' who fatally injected a Google executive with heroin in 2013.

Authorities took Alix Tichelman, 29, into custody immediately after she completed a jail sentence for involuntary manslaughter she served for injecting married Google executive Forrest Hayes with an overdose of heroin, killing him.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman James Schwab said a judge ordered Tichelman to be deported back to Canada because of her felony convictions.

Federal immigration officials plan to deport Alex Tichelman, a Canadian prostitute known as the 'Harbor Hooker' who fatally injected a Google executive with heroin in 2013

Tichelman pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and drugs charges, which resulted in the 2013 death of Forrest Timothy Hayes (pictured)

Tichelman, who had a privileged upbringing in Atlanta, Georgia, and then California, was freed from prison on March 29, after serving just two years behind bars.

As soon as she stepped outside the prison gates, ICE agents took her into their custody.

She injected Hayes, a married father-of-five, with heroin in November 2013 and then left without seeking help when he passed out on his yacht in the Santa Cruz harbor.

Police said a surveillance video at the harbor showed Tichelman at first panicking and trying to revive Hayes. Then it showed her casually step over Hayes' body, finish a glass of wine and lower a blind before leaving the yacht.

Police said Hayes hired Tichelman several times for drug-fueled sex after they met on the website Seeking Arrangement, which pairs 'sugar babies' with rich older men or women.

Santa Cruz sheriff's officials confirmed they turned over Tichelman to the custody of Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents after her release from prison.

The Santa Cruz Sentinel, citing court records, said Tichelman holds dual citizenship in the United States and Canada, where she was born.

Tichelman (left and in court right) served nearly two years in the Santa Cruz County Jail after she pleaded guilty in May of 2015 to felony involuntary manslaughter and administering drugs

Santa Cruz County Immigration Project director Doug Keegan said: 'Anyone with a felony is put in a very special category, and there's virtually no way of preventing their deportation.'

Although rare, it is possible for a naturalized U.S. citizen to have his or her citizenship stripped through a process called 'denaturalization.'

Natural-born U.S. citizens may not have their citizenship revoked against their will.

Tichelman served nearly two years in the Santa Cruz County Jail after she pleaded guilty in May of 2015 to felony involuntary manslaughter and administering drugs.

Defense attorney Larry Biggam said Tichelman injected herself with heroin before she injected Hayes, and the drugs clouded her judgement at the time.

Tichelman grew up in a wealthy, upper-class family but rejected her privileged upbringing. She became addicted to heroin and turned to high-class prostitution to support herself

Speaking in 2014, he said: 'This case is about two adults who were engaged in mutual consensual drug usage in the context of a sexual encounter initiated and encouraged by Mr. Hayes. There was no intent to harm or injure, much less kill, Mr. Hayes. Why would she? He was a lucrative source of income to her.

'To demonize, and sensationalize, and totally blame Alix Tichelman for his death is misplaced, unfair, and simply wrong. She's like a wounded bird.'

His body was discovered the next day and she was arrested eight months later.

Police originally recommended homicide charges.

Several charges were later dropped or reduced by prosecutors, she pleaded guilty before the case went to trial, and a judge sentenced her to serve six years in jail.

Tichelman completed drug rehab programs during her time in jail because she was addicted to heroin.

She grew up in a wealthy, upper-class family but rejected her privileged upbringing.

Tichelman became addicted to heroin and turned to high-class prostitution to support herself.

According to her Facebook profile, Tichelman went to high school in Atlanta, Georgia, majored in journalism at Georgia State University, and worked as a dancer, makeup artist, and model.

Her ex-boyfriend, 53-year-old monkey trainer Dean Riopelle, died from a heroin overdose in Georgia two months before Hayes' death. His death was ruled as accidental.

Her ex-boyfriend, 53-year-old monkey trainer Dean Riopelle, died from a heroin overdose in Georgia two months before Hayes' death. His death was ruled as accidental

After Tichelman was charged in California, police in Milton, Georgia, took another look at the 2013 overdose death of Riopelle. He was the owner of a popular Atlanta music venue, the Masquerade.

Authorities said a panicked Tichelman had called Milton police, saying Riopelle had overdosed on drugs and wasn't responding. Tichelman was not charged.

An autopsy report listed Riopelle's death as an accidental overdose of heroin, oxycodone and alcohol.

After Tichelman was charged in California, police in Milton, Georgia, took another look at the 2013 overdose death of Riopelle. He was the owner of a popular Atlanta music venue, the Masquerade

WSB-TV reported that Tichelman had been arrested two weeks prior to Riopelle's death for biting him, and friends called their relationship volatile and abusive.

Captain Shawn McCarty with the Milton Police Department said: 'It's still conjecture, looking at the similarities of the two situations, but obviously we're going to go back and look at it and make sure that everything determined to be correct, almost a year ago, is still factual and still accurate.

'Both subjects in these cases died of heroin overdoses so there's just several factors we want to look at to make sure that we didn't miss anything.'