The Hill (Op-Ed)
By Nadia Anguiano-Wehde, John Bruning, Andrea Crumrine, Alexandra De Leon, and Mary Georgevich
February 4, 2016
Last
week, the Huffington Post and other news sources reported on comments
made by Vice President Joe Biden to a meeting of House Democrats about
immigration raids at
the beginning of the year which targeted Central American women and
their children.
House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi relayed his message and stated, “They
weren’t raids. They were individuals who either had broken the law in
other ways other than status
or were newcomers to the country.”
This
simply isn’t true. We know, because we spent the first week of January
with those women and children in the visitation trailer at the South
Texas Family Residential
Center in Dilley, Texas as part of the CARA Family Detention Pro Bono
Project. Our team included five law students and two professors from
the University of Minnesota Law School Center for New Americans.
We
travelled to Texas to help some of the thousands of women and children
fleeing horrendous violence in Central America. These families are
escaping domestic violence
and the breakdown of law in the region due to gangs; many have been
subjected to brutal violence including beatings, death threats, and
sexual assault. In the United States, these families, including
children, are detained in prison-like conditions and need
the help of attorneys to understand the immigration process, articulate
their claims for protection, and get out of detention.
We
arrived in Dilley on January 3, as news of the raids was reported
across the country. We soon learned from CARA staff that the families
picked up in the raids were
being transported to the detention facility in Dilley before
deportation.
One
hundred and twenty-one mothers and children were picked up in raids
that weekend and many of them brought to Dilley that weekend and
immediately we understood the
gravity of the situation. We heard shocking stories and the disturbing
and tragic circumstances of these raids have been documented in a recent
report released by the Southern Poverty Law Center. ICE agents gained
entry to homes by force and deceit. They
did not display warrants or court orders. They claimed to be looking
for other people. They woke sleeping mothers and their children. They
demanded to search houses and promised that it was just a routine
check-in and mothers and children would be returned
to their families in a few hours. Women were not allowed to contact
their attorneys. Instead women reported that they were loaded into
cells filled with crying women and children who were bound for Dilley.
And
unlike the vice president’s assertions, none of the women and children
we met with had any criminal convictions or charges and they did not
report being picked up
for that reason. Many were subject to ankle monitoring and were
attending regular immigration check-ins as directed. Some had work
permits. Many women with final orders of deportation report confusion
and disarray within the immigration system and report
they never had the opportunity to tell a judge about why they needed
protection in the United States, or understood their right to appeal.
We
also heard about what awaited them if they returned to their home
countries. Like so many other asylum seekers from Central America, they
were fleeing threats against
their lives or their children’s lives, retaliation for failing to pay
to keep their children out of vicious gangs, lethal domestic violence,
and extreme sexual abuse by gang members or intimate partners.
Returning home meant returning to this brutality, helplessness,
and pain.
Our
team worked alongside CARA Project staff and volunteers to file appeals
and successfully obtained stays from the Board of Immigration Appeals
and we were able to prevent
thirty-three mothers and children from being instantly deported,
working to literally pull families off planes as the Board issued these
orders. During this frantic week, ICE told the women that no one could
help them and they had no right to a lawyer. In
spite of the misinformation and coercion, thirteen families found their
way to the legal visitation trailer and sought protection. We held
twelve-hour vigils with family to keep agents away and we watched
families cry and cheer with relief when someone was
saved from imminent deportation. They sang together around a table
after breaking down privately when forced to explain to their legal
teams what was waiting for them and their children at home. ICE’s
tactics were representative of the government’s overall
policy towards these women and children which has been criticized for
violating the rights of asylum seekers, jailing and mistreating
children, and denying some of the world’s most vulnerable people basic
due process.
The
vice president and House Minority Leader may say that what happened in
the early hours of the New Year on January 2 and 3 were not raids, but a
policy that treats
these courageous asylum seekers more like terrorists than refugees and
is focused more on deterrence than protection of the vulnerable, denies
the rights of asylum seekers. During our time in Dilley, we were deeply
moved by the strength, bravery, and resilience
of these mothers. Their experiences warrant humanitarian protection
based on their internationally recognized human rights, not
incarceration. The hardship they have suffered to keep their children
alive deserves our support, not our condemnation.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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