San Francisco Chronicle

A ‘Dreamer’ went to Mexico and can’t return

- CATHERINE RAMPELL Email: crampell@washpost.com. Twitter: @crampell.

“Dreamer” Marco Villada Garibay left the country on the U.S. government’s promise of a possible green card. Now he’s trapped in Mexico and might never be allowed to return.

Villada, 34, came to the United States — the only country he knows — illegally from Mexico at age 6. This is where he went to school; where he worked and paid taxes; and, most significan­tly, where he met his husband, Israel Serrato.

“From the beginning,” Villada says, “I knew that Israel was my home, that that’s where I belong.”

In 2013, Villada received protection from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, DACA. This was a huge relief to the couple. Among other things, it meant Villada could work lawfully — as a legal assistant at a Los Angeles-area firm. And he could do simple things, such as drive to the supermarke­t without fear of being detained.

DACA gave them hope for a life of security together. So too did the Supreme Court’s affirmatio­n of gay couples’ right to wed. Just six months after the landmark Obergefell decision, they got married. They began planning a family and all the other things that blissful newlyweds engage in. They also had one critical, additional task: making Villada’s immigratio­n status permanent.

DACA, after all, was a temporary fix whose future was uncertain. Under U.S. law, citizens such as Serrato can sponsor spouses for green cards — a process that requires the immigrant spouse to return to his or her birth country to apply through a U.S. Consulate there.

Leaving the country is risky, though. Normally if you’ve spent more than six months here unlawfully and you leave, you’re barred from coming back for years. Sometimes forever.

In select cases, such immigrants can get waivers if they can prove their absence would cause their family extreme hardship. Which Villada had no problem demonstrat­ing, given the emotional and financial support he provides to his family in the United States.

Working with an immigratio­n attorney, Villada applied for, and received, a “provisiona­l unlawful presence waiver.” This basically said the government determined that he met the qualificat­ions and that he should feel free to go to Mexico for a consular interview.

The couple planned a twoweek trip to Ciudad Juarez in January, which they mostly viewed as a formality. Still, it was significan­t: When he left the country, Villada’s DACA protection­s, which had been scheduled to last through 2019, automatica­lly terminated.

Things didn’t go according to plan.

The consular official interviewi­ng Villada kept leaving the room and returning. At the end, she gave him a blue paper saying his applicatio­n for a visa was denied — and that he could not return to the United States for at least a decade, if at all.

Villada and Serrato had planned a dinner celebratio­n that night. Instead, they went to their hotel and held each other, sobbing, for hours. A few days later, Serrato returned to Los Angeles, alone.

One of their (new) lawyers, Stacy Tolchin, said she has gotten a lot of calls lately like this one: from immigrants who left the country after receiving provisiona­l waivers, only to be told at their consular interview that — oops! — the government found something disqualify­ing them from returning to the United States after all. (The State Department told me it cannot comment on specific cases because visa records are confidenti­al under U.S. law.)

In Villada’s case, the consulate told him, he’d been disqualifi­ed by a short trip he took in 2000, at 17, to Mexico to attend his grandfathe­r’s funeral. The consulate said the problem was that he entered the country “without inspection” a second time. But Villada had already disclosed this trip to the government when he applied for that provisiona­l waiver. Plus his lawyers argue that because an immigratio­n official had looked at his school I.D. and waved him through, he didn’t enter the country illegally, according to recent case law.

Tolchin and co-counsels from the National Immigratio­n Law Center and the firm Mayer Brown plan to file a federal suit Tuesday challengin­g the consulate’s decision.

Meanwhile, Villada is crashing with relatives whom he barely knows. Things are not much better back home in L.A.

Without a second income and crushed by the weight of their prior legal bills, Serrato was forced to sell their furniture and move in with a friend. Villada’s mother and U.S. citizen siblings — one of whom is about to deploy to Iraq — face the fallout, too. Villada had been helping provide financial support and care for his 7-yearold brother, who has autism.

“We are all victims of this unjust decision,” Serrato says. “He belongs here. He belongs here with me.”

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