The Arizona Republic

TOGETHER AGAIN

Guatemalan mother seeking asylum in U.S. reunited with son after first-of-its-kind lawsuit

- Dianna M. Náñez

Beata Mariana de Jesus Mejia-Mejia had walked, hitched rides and crossed a country to escape violence in Guatemala.

On Thursday, she sat in a Washington, D.C., courtroom waiting to hear whether she’d get her 7-year-old son back.

She didn’t speak English. So an interprete­r next to her turned a steady flow of words between attorneys into Spanish.

This woman, who had filed a lawsuit in what is believed to be the first of its kind involving a

parent and child separated under the so-called zero-tolerance immigratio­n policy, had gotten used to not knowing what would happen next.

The Trump administra­tion’s policy has separated at least 2,000 children from their parents or other adults. Beata would tell them about her son Darwin, how he screamed and cried as agents took him away.

“Those government lawyers were going to have to look her in the face if they were going to try to defend such a despicable policy,” said Beata’s attorney, Mario Williams.

The mother and the attorneys hoped to be among the first to put a child back in a parent’s arms.

Williams had filed a restrainin­g order on Tuesday to force the government to give Beata her son back.

In a move that surprised the attorney with years of experience, the judge scheduled a hearing for two days later.

So Beata got on her first plane flight, a trip from Texas, where a judge had allowed her to stay with friends while she awaited a hearing on her asylum case.

She’d spent the past two days at a hotel outside Washington with the attorney who took her case for free and the owner of a company that helps bail migrants out of jail.

They had spent long hours preparing the 39-year-old mother to take the stand and tell her story.

May: Entering the U.S., losing her son

Beata crossed into the U.S. illegally on May 19 in San Luis, a town of about 25,000 people in the southweste­rn corner of Arizona, across the border from San Luis Rio Colorado, Sonora.

“She said she didn’t know what the border looked like or a port of entry but she knew to look for the flag,” said Mike Donovan, owner of Libre by Nexus, the immigratio­n bond services business paying for Beata’s case.

She spent two days with her son in a central processing center in San Luis, Donovan said. To seek asylum, she would have to show “credible fear” of being harmed if she returned to her home country.

“They fed her and her son for two days cold soup that came out of a hose — it’s horrifying,” he said.

Two days later, the men green in suits came and took her and her son.

She tried to stop them. She pleaded in Spanish, held onto her boy. He screamed.

“They told her they don’t have to answer her questions, and that’s the last time she’s seen her son,” Donovan said.

Beata was taken to the Eloy Detention Center. She didn’t know where her son went. A guard was able to tell her that her son was in Phoenix, her lawsuit says.

Williams said she got to speak with her son once.

During the phone call, she could hear her son saying “Mama, Mama, Mama,” the lawsuit says.

June: Looking for her son

On June 15, she was released on bond. She’d come across the number for the bond company Libre by Nexus by word of mouth, Donovan said.

A judge approved her staying with friends in Austin while she waited for her hearing.

Beata cared about only one thing: finding her son.

She called the number for Libre’s immigratio­n services, Nexus Derechos Humanos Attorneys.

She was assigned a civil-rights attorney and an immigratio­n attorney. But she had no idea where her son was.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t does not comment on pending litigation, a spokeswoma­n said.

Williams gathered with a group of seven lawyers and reviewed Beata’s case.

“Mario calls me and he says, ‘Mike, this case crystalliz­es everything that’s wrong with the Trump administra­tion program and we have to take this case and we have to take this fight,’” Donovan said. “This woman is so brave because she’s willing to fight this so other people don’t have to.”

That, says Donovan, was the beginning of Beata’s day in court.

June 21: Her day in court

Williams said the hearing was running about 10 minutes late when an attorney from the U.S. Justice Department approached him.

The attorney wanted to talk about releasing Darwin to his mother. The two stepped out.

The attorney for the Justice Department offered to return Darwin in a couple of days, Williams said.

Williams said he told the attorney, “If you can do it in a couple days, do it today.”

An agreement was brokered. They went back into the courtroom.

Williams told Beata: You’re getting your son back today.

The translator changed the words to Spanish.

“She started crying … and then she cried a lot,” Williams said.

District Court Judge Paul Friedman took the bench and listened to the attorneys’ agreement.

Williams said he told the attorneys he wanted a status report by Friday to be sure the government had reunited Beata with her 7-year-old son.

Officials with the U.S. Department of Justice did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

Finding a flight

Beata and her attorneys left the courtroom and went straight to a nearby Starbucks, where they started looking for flights.

Nothing would get Darwin to D.C. and to his mom that same day.

They found a Southwest flight that would leave Phoenix a little after 6 p.m. and get in at 1:30 a.m.

But Williams said they continued to argue with officials with the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt and Southwest Key, the company that operates the shelter in Phoenix where Darwin was taken after he was separated from his mother.

Officials wanted Beata’s fingerprin­ts. That request came after wanting birth certificat­es and countless copies of other documents that most migrants don’t have.

No, the government arrested her; you have her fingerprin­ts, Donovan said.

Put Darwin on the Southwest flight, he said. No more excuses.

They tracked the plane. The flight was delayed. But the boy was on the plane — his first flight ever.

From the runway, the caseworker sent photos of her boy.

In one photo, Darwin is peeking out the window.

In another, he rests his head against the window, waiting.

A few hours later, the plane was on the ground, and Beata was waiting at the gate, a green-and-white blanket around her shoulders. Her attorney and others stood nearby, video cameras rolling.

After 2 a.m., Darwin stepped into the terminal. His eyes said he was unsure what was happening.

Beata set him in a waiting-room chair, and wrapped the blanket around her son.

Then, she wrapped her arms around him and sobbed.

“Why did they do this to us?” she said to him in Spanish. “Why did they separate us?”

“I love you son, the only one I have,” she said. “Thank God you’re with me, my love.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Beata Mariana de Jesus Mejia-Mejia and her son Darwin are being considered for political asylum following a lawsuit that returned the young boy from a center in Phoenix to his mother in Washington, D.C.
PHOTOS BY PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Beata Mariana de Jesus Mejia-Mejia and her son Darwin are being considered for political asylum following a lawsuit that returned the young boy from a center in Phoenix to his mother in Washington, D.C.
 ??  ?? Darwin Mejia was reunited with his mother at a Washington, D.C.-area airport early Friday. He had been held at a facility in Phoenix.
Darwin Mejia was reunited with his mother at a Washington, D.C.-area airport early Friday. He had been held at a facility in Phoenix.

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