Santa Fe New Mexican

Suit: Feds using marriage interviews as trap

- By Regina Garcia Cano

BALTIMORE — Alyse and Elmer Sanchez were thrilled when they survived their “green card” interview, a crucial step in obtaining lawful status in the United States. She texted her family from the immigratio­n office as relief washed over her: The officer had agreed their marriage is legitimate.

Moments later, Elmer Sanchez was in shackles, detained pending deportatio­n to his native Honduras, leaving her alone with their two little boys.

“We feel it was a trap, a trick, to get us there,” Alyse Sanchez said.

The Sanchezes have joined five other couples in a classactio­n lawsuit accusing federal agents of luring families to marriage interviews in Baltimore, only to detain the immigrant spouse for deportatio­n.

Federal regulation­s allow U.S. citizens like Alyse Sanchez to try to legalize the status of spouses like Elmer Sanchez, who has been living in the country illegally. Thousands of families are doing it: Records show the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services approved 23,253 provisiona­l unlawful presence waivers, the final documents spouses, children or parents of citizens need before leaving the country and applying to rejoin their families legally.

But the American Civil Liberties Union says a growing number of officers have “cruelly twisted” the rules by detaining immigrant spouses following marriage interviews. The ACLU is pursuing a similar complaint in Massachuse­tts and says dozens of detentions also have happened at field offices in New York, Virginia, Florida, Illinois and California.

The Maryland case is assigned to U.S. District Judge George J. Hazel, who already reversed the deportatio­n of a Chinese man detained after a successful marriage interview in Baltimore. Ruling just before Wanrong Lin landed in Shanghai last November, Hazel said the government can’t use the process “as a honeypot to trap undocument­ed immigrants who seek to take advantage of its protection­s.”

Alyse Sanchez told the Associated Press her family’s life “just seemed so perfect.”

She and her husband, now 31 and 41, began dating in 2013, after he learned she was selling her car and showed up at her door. He bought it, and they married that year. They have two sons, 4 and 2, and live in the Washington suburb of Kensington, Md., where he owns a home-remodeling company. She works at a local veterinary clinic.

“Everyone has their ups and downs in their relationsh­ips, but ours has been pretty smooth,” she said. “… He’s been there for every important event in my life. He’s been the most important event in my life.”

Court records show Elmer Sanchez had been ordered in absentia to be deported in September 2005, after missing an immigratio­n hearing he said he was never notified of. After consulting with lawyers, Alyse Sanchez submitted paperwork to get her husband a green card in September 2018. Their notice for the May 7 appointmen­t said the required interview was “solely to confirm the bona fides of the couple’s marriage,” according to the lawsuit.

Obama-era regulation­s provide for this, even for people with deportatio­n orders. The monthslong process typically requires couples to demonstrat­e the legitimacy of their marriage as part of the first step. If the couples pass the interview and earn other approvals, immigrant spouses eventually must travel abroad for a visa interview at a U.S. consulate. Only if they receive a visa can they return to the U.S. legally.

It’s unclear how many individual­s have successful­ly become permanent U.S. residents through the process. It facilitate­s a proper record for families with mixed citizenshi­p, and it’s meant “to avoid the grievous consequenc­es of forcing a spouse or parent to leave” the U.S. for years while trying to build a lawful immigratio­n case from their home countries, the ACLU says.

Now, the plaintiffs say, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is unlawfully using the process as bait. ACLU of Maryland attorney Nick Steiner said it began in 2017 and seems to happen randomly nationwide.

“Previous practice would allow immigratio­n lawyers to bring their clients to their interviews without fear of arrest because there was an understand­ing that they were trying to receive Green Cards, notwithsta­nding the removal orders, and there’s also longstandi­ng guidance that USCIS should be following, that prohibits arrests at interviews,” he said in an email.

Elmer Sanchez was released June 19 after the ACLU sought an emergency order to prevent imminent deportatio­n.

 ?? REGINA GARCIA CANO ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alyse Sanchez and her husband, Elmer Sanchez, have joined five other couples in a classactio­n lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Maryland arguing U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s are luring couples to marriage interviews only to detain the immigrant spouses.
REGINA GARCIA CANO ASSOCIATED PRESS Alyse Sanchez and her husband, Elmer Sanchez, have joined five other couples in a classactio­n lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Maryland arguing U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s are luring couples to marriage interviews only to detain the immigrant spouses.

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