ORLANDO, Fla. — A DACA recipient living in Central Florida is one of 700,000 immigrants whose lives are in limbo as the Supreme Court decides the fate of the program.

On Tuesday, the nine Supreme Court justices heard 80 minutes of oral arguments on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Program. The Trump administration rescinded the program two years ago.

For Karen Caudillo, the future in uncertain. Her parents brought her to the U.S. from the Mexico undocumented when she was 4 years old.

Caudillo said her life changed when she became a DACA recipient because it gave her the opportunity to attend and eventually graduate college from her dream school UCF.

She is now a political science major at UCF and plans to graduate this December, but she knows some DACA recipients may not get the opportunity.

“It’s difficult to hear that I’m going to be able to graduate this fall, but that may not be the story a lot of DACA recipients will be experiencing," Caudillo said.

Caudillo said her goal is to hold office one day. She said even though she cannot vote, she advocates for others to do so.

“I think that it’s very beneficial for people who are being treated with injustice to also understand what the process of that injustice is," Caudillo said.

The Supreme Court justices are expected to make their decision next year.