The Arizona Republic

Mother on DACA detained 9 months

23-year-old awaits trial, could face deportatio­n

- Laura Gómez

Mayra Roque has been inside an immigratio­n detention center 60 miles southeast of Phoenix since October.

She worries about her mom, who she said is being treated for breast cancer.

She longs for her baby, whom she has not held in nine months.

Roque, 23, awaits two separate court hearings, one before an immigratio­n judge who will decide whether to deport her and another before a Maricopa County judge on a theft charge.

The criminal proceeding­s have barely begun, which could prolong her deportatio­n case.

Roque shouldn’t be in deportatio­n proceeding­s — she has protection­s under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. DACA, as it is commonly known, grants recipients a work permit and shields them from deportatio­n.

Roque, who has lived in the U.S. since she was 2 years old, has not been

convicted of a crime that would make her ineligible for the program. Her DACA status expires in March 2019.

Still, she waits in immigratio­n custody at the Eloy Detention Center.

Roque said she tries to stay strong. In an interview with The Arizona Republic inside the detention center, she clasped her hands and leaned forward.

“You guys can’t feel what we feel, the walls are closing up on us,” Roque said. She wore a pine green suit, faded by many washes. Her dark hair held back by thin braids. “Every day, the cells look smaller, and we can’t push them.”

Roque is scheduled to appear in Maricopa County Superior Court on the criminal charge Friday, but she’ll miss that initial hearing because she’s held in immigratio­n detention.

A final hearing date in her deportatio­n case is scheduled for Monday.

Salt River Reservatio­n police arrested Roque for criminal theft at work on Oct. 11. She was a cashier at the Walmart on Pima and Chaparral roads, and allegedly stole $6,400 over the course of two months, according to the charging document.

That October morning was like any other, Roque said. Maira, her mom, dropped her off at the Walmart, while her baby, Israel, sat in the back. When saying their goodbyes, Roque said she had an impulse to hug her mom a little longer than usual and to hold her son a bit tighter.

“I told them, ‘I love you,’” Roque said. “I must’ve known.”

Before going into work, Roque remembered her mother said, “When you get out of work, don’t forget to get milk for your baby.”

Nine months later, she hasn’t forgotten, and it haunts her, she said.

Roque was booked into Maricopa County’s Fourth Avenue Jail, where she first encountere­d ICE officials.

A Superior Court judge released her the next morning, but Roque said she never walked free. ICE agents interviewe­d and fingerprin­ted her and took her into federal custody for deportatio­n proceeding­s. She was told her DACA protection was cancelled.

Roque first applied for DACA in 2012, paid several hundred dollars in fees and underwent background checks. She has renewed it since. Those who have been convicted of felonies and certain misdemeano­rs are not eligible for the program.

But Roque hasn’t been convicted.

She was just formally charged July 6.

It is unclear when her DACA protection was rescinded, but it likely happened shortly after her arrest.

Immigrant-rights advocates nationally say DACA recipients are more vulnerable now to detention and scrutiny by Department of Homeland Security agencies than in the Obama years.

DACA, which does not offer a path to citizenshi­p, was created in 2012 for certain young immigrants with no criminal background. Almost 820,000 people nationwide have benefited from it — 28,400 of them in Arizona, according to government data.

Last September, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the government will phase out the program and President Donald Trump pushed Congress to find a permanent solution for the protected group known as “dreamers.” But challenges in courts have kept the program in place and allowed for new eligible applicants to solicit DACA.

Roque got her DACA status reinstated in April — six months into her detention at Eloy.

She was part of a class-action lawsuit which found that U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the agency that processes and approves DACA, had unlawfully rescinded the work permits and deferred status of dreamers since January 2017.

Many lost their status after ICE initiated deportatio­n proceeding­s for charges that were dropped or pending.

A federal district judge issued an injunction in February barring the practice of rescinding DACA without reason or time to respond, and ordered the restoratio­n of protected status for Roque and others.

Roque was one of more than 450 DACA recipients nationally who had their deferred action reinstated as part of the Inland Empire v. Nielsen lawsuit, according to Katrina Eiland, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which is litigating the case.

Eiland said while DACA hasn’t been terminated, there is a targeted effort from federal agencies like ICE to cancel DACA on an individual basis.

“Even if someone hasn’t been convicted of a disqualify­ing crime, they’re trying as best they can to terminate that person’s DACA. That puts you at risk, and makes you feel less protected.

“In our views, it’s really unfair and it’s totally arbitrary given that folks still have deferred action, they shouldn’t be placed in (removal) proceeding­s,” she said.

The first days she was held in immigratio­n detention, Roque said all she could think about was the milk for her baby. She’d said she’d wake up thinking, “You need to take him his milk.”

One day, she had a panic attack over it. She said she now sees a psychiatri­st once a month at the detention center to help control her anxiety.

She’s among many mothers inside the detention center, some who were forcibly separated from their children by the controvers­ial zero-tolerance policy.They share a sense of anguish over their kids’ well-being.

“I don’t know if he’s OK, if he’s eating,” Roque said. “It takes away every day from us, we don’t want to keep going.”

Instead of following a rigid routine at Eloy, Roque would much rather be out of detention washing her own clothes, cooking her own meals, raising her 2year-old and caring for her mother in their Scottsdale home.

A rule that only allows for one bond hearing per immigratio­n case has prevented Roque from paying to bond out of detention, said Stephanie Corcoran, Roque’s immigratio­n attorney. Her bond was denied once before Corcoran represente­d her, and an appeal to reconsider the bond hearing was denied in May.

“She has a valid DACA and she is able to work, pay taxes, but instead she’s detained,” Corcoran said. “Even though she doesn’t have a conviction, the (immigratio­n) judge has found she’s a danger to the community . ... USCIS has her DACA reinstated . ... It’s such a strange thing.”

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