The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Honduran dad: ‘I thank God to be with my son’

Man held at Georgia detention center was back with boy Tuesday.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Jose and his son crossed the border in May, fleeing their native Honduras after gang members killed three family members.

The 27-year-old farmer was sent to a detention center in south Georgia and his son, 3, was sent to a facility in Arizona in keeping with the Trump administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance” immigratio­n policy.

On Tuesday, Jose and his namesake were reunited in Phoenix.

“I thank God to be with my son,” he said in a statement released by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is assisting with his asylum case. “It was very difficult to be separated from him for so long.”

Jose, first interviewe­d by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on days after being sent to the Stewart Detention Center about 140 miles south of Atlanta, didn’t want to give his full name, fearing for the safety of his common-law wife and other loved ones back home. He and little Jose are now headed by bus to northern Virginia, where they will stay with a relative. The father has been fitted with an electronic ankle monitor while their asylum claims are pending; an immigratio­n court hearing is scheduled for July 19.

President Donald Trump last month signed an executive order ending the policy of separating children from parents at the U.S.-Mexico border following internatio­nal outrage. The administra­tion has acknowledg­ed it missed a deadline set by a San Diego federal judge to reunite detained children under 5 with their families. Trump responded to questions about the missed deadline just before departing for this week’s North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on summit in Belgium: “Don’t

come to our country illegally. Come like other people do. Come legally.”

Little Jose had been held in a government shelter in Glendale, Arizona. Peter Isbister, a senior lead attorney for Southern Poverty Law Center’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative, said the father and son reunion was a touching one.

“We are very glad our client is reunited with his son,” he said. “It seemed pretty apparent that the little boy was emotional as well.”

Isbister and a colleague connected with the dad and son via FaceTime.

“I could see the clear beaming delight on my client’s face as he thanked God again and again,” Isbister said. “He became clearly emotional as he described how hard it was to be separated from his son for so long.”

The dad encouraged his son to greet their lawyers over the phone. The 3-yearold seemed too overwhelme­d to say much, but managed a wave.

“We were fighting back tears as well,” Isbister said. “I was thinking of my own children, not much older than my client’s boy.”

He asked which toys the child likes and learned he’s a fan of “PAW Patrol,” a Nickelodeo­n Jr. show created in partnershi­p with the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It’s about a boy who responds to calamities like cats stuck in trees with the help of his trusty band of rescue dogs in training.

“Each pup is inspired by a real-world job like firefighte­r, police officer and constructi­on worker,” the show’s web site explains. “For kids, ‘PAW Patrol’ is a fun way to learn bravery and heroism, with exciting stories that never get too scary.” The SPLC got Jose a PAW Patrol toy to welcome him to America.

Informatio­n from the Cox Media Group National Content Desk and The Associated Press was used in this article.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY SPLC ?? Jose, 27, and his 3-year-old namesake were reunited Tuesday after being separated at the border.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY SPLC Jose, 27, and his 3-year-old namesake were reunited Tuesday after being separated at the border.

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