The Arizona Republic

Children stunned by father’s deportatio­n

Detained on son’s birthday, single dad is quickly returned to Mexico

- LAURA GÓMEZ

An Arizona man who was detained by immigratio­n officials Thursday was deported to Mexico on Friday afternoon, according to the Mexican Consulate in Nogales.

Juan Carlos Fomperosa Garcia, 44, showed up for a check-in meeting with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials in Phoenix on Thursday morning but was taken into custody, according to his daughter Yennifer Sanchez, 23.

He had a work permit, had no criminal record and is a single dad of three U.S. citizens, according to Sanchez.

ICE, in a statement Friday, confirmed Fomperosa Garcia’s deportatio­n. Its databases showed Fomperosa Garcia has been previously repatriate­d to Mexico

three times, including a formal deportatio­n in 2014. In 2016, Fomperosa Garcia again was ordered removed by an immigratio­n judge, with a second immigratio­n judge upholding the decision, the statement said.

Databases show Fomperosa Garcia was convicted in 2015 of a federal misdemeano­r charge, the statement said.

“ICE will continue to focus on identifyin­g and removing individual­s with criminal conviction­s who have final orders of removal issued by the nation’s immigratio­n courts,” the statement said.

Sanchez, Fomperosa Garcia’s oldest daughter, said Friday her father was not a criminal.

“When I hear those words being said about my dad and seeing the type of person he is, it hurts because ‘a criminal’ would never be a way that I describe my father,” she said as she wiped tears from her face.

Fomperosa Garcia did not have an attorney, according to the family. Immigratio­n attorney Ayensa Millan began to represent him Thursday night after he was detained.

Millan said there isn’t any immediate relief from the deportatio­n order that would allow him to return to the U.S.

Millan said Fomperosa Garcia was seeking asylum because after being deported in 2014, “threats (were made) to his family because the kids are U.S. citizens.”

“We see this a lot lately, especially in Mexico,” she said. “(People recently deported) usually stay close to the border so family can go see them. There are a lot of criminal organizati­ons in Mexico that target people like him, because they know they have been repatriate­d and they have family in the United States.”

In an interview with The Republic in Nogales, Mexico, Fomperosa Garcia said his misdemeano­r charge was for crossing the border with false documents. He said in his native state of Veracruz he has received death threats against his children from a faction of a drug cartel, Los Zetas.

Sanchez, who works as a caretaker, said she’ll now be in charge of sustaining her siblings, who are still in school.

The siblings traveled to Nogales, Mexico, on Friday night to spend the weekend with Fomperosa Garcia.

This is the second time in less than a month that an undocument­ed parent of U.S.-citizen children has been deportthe

“I didn’t get to say bye to him. The last thing I said was ‘Go

ed, leaving a family separated.

Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos, of Mesa, was taken into custody Feb. 8 when she went to check in at ICE offices.

When the clock struck midnight Wednesday evening, Fomperosa Garcia walked into his son’s bedroom to wake him up and wish him a happy birthday, as was the family tradition, his daughters said.

He blasted “Las Mañanitas” as Sanchez and Karla Fomperosa, 14, brought in the cake for their brother.

Fomperosa Garcia didn’t get to celebrate his son’s 17th birthday later Thursday, as he had planned.

About 9 a.m., Fomperosa Garciawent into a meeting with ICE officials in Phoenix. Sanchez claimed he had a meeting on his asylum case.

About an hour later, three people stepped out of the ICE offices to tell Sanchez her father was detained.

They gave her a green tote bag with paperwork he had brought for his case, Sanchez recounted Thursday night in tears. “I didn’t get to say bye to him,” she said. “The last thing I said was ‘Go in there; don’t be late.’ ”

About noon, she got a call from him. He told her he was going to be deported Thursday or Friday.

ICE, in its statement, made no mention of any pending asylum case.

Thursday night, the sisters spoke at a news conference at the offices of Living United for Change Arizona, a community group that advocates for civic engagement with immigrant families.

Sanchez and Fomperosa were emotional Thursday night, laughing and crying as they spoke of their father.

Sanchez said her father had a work permit, and she thought that gave him security against deportatio­n, she said.

“He’s not here illegally; I thought they were only taking people who had committed crimes,” Sanchez said.

Fomperosa Garcia is a single dad from Veracruz, Mexico, she said. He came to the U.S. when he was 24 and worked in constructi­on. His two daughters and son are U.S. citizens. The daughters were distraught. “He’s not one of those people that you hear on the news that President Trump says,” Sanchez said through tears. “He’s not a rapist, he’s not a drug dealer, and he’s not a murderer. My father’s an honest, working man, a family man that loves everyone he meets. He cares too much, and that’s the only crime.”

“Please, everyone, be aware. They are taking everyone,” she added.

Karla Fomperosa, the youngest, is an eighth-grader in Phoenix. The last time she saw her dad was before boarding the school bus Thursday morning.

“I didn’t think anything was going to happen; I wanted it to be a normal day,” she said.

When she returned home from school, she saw her brother “crying on the couch.” That’s when she knew what had happened, she said.

in there; don’t be late.’ ”

Republic reporters Rafael Carranza and Rebecca Dantuono contribute­d to this article.

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 ??  ?? Above: Karla Fomperosa (left) and Yennifer Sanchez discuss their father, Juan Carlos Fomperosa Garcia. Right: Sanchez shows a cellphone photo of her father. PHOTOS BY PATRICK BREEN/ THE REPUBLIC
Above: Karla Fomperosa (left) and Yennifer Sanchez discuss their father, Juan Carlos Fomperosa Garcia. Right: Sanchez shows a cellphone photo of her father. PHOTOS BY PATRICK BREEN/ THE REPUBLIC
 ?? BEN MOFFAT/THE REPUBLIC ?? Abril Gallardo of Living United for Change Arizona speaks during a press conference Friday on Juan Carlos Fomperosa Garcia’s deportatio­n. Fomperosa Garcia, a single father, was returned to Mexico on Friday, leaving his three U.S-citizen children in...
BEN MOFFAT/THE REPUBLIC Abril Gallardo of Living United for Change Arizona speaks during a press conference Friday on Juan Carlos Fomperosa Garcia’s deportatio­n. Fomperosa Garcia, a single father, was returned to Mexico on Friday, leaving his three U.S-citizen children in...

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