The Day

Honduran native living in city gets asylum

Woman hopes to be reunited with children

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

New London — Emma Castillo is working seven days a week as a hotel housekeepe­r, trying to improve her English and waiting for the day when she will be reunited with her four children.

The 35-year-old Honduran native in 2011 fled an abusive husband who was a member of a criminal enterprise.

She left in the middle of the night, took a train to Mexico and crossed the border into the United States with about 20 others, sometimes walking in water up to her neck. She was detained for 26 days, settling in New York, then Connecticu­t after her release. She currently lives in New London.

After years of delays, Castillo was granted asylum June 27 by Hartford Immigratio­n Judge Philip Verrillo.

Many cannot fathom leaving their children behind, but Castillo thought it was too risky to bring them. She said she was able to arrange for them to go into hiding and leave them relatively safe. She had to move them to different locations after she, and they, started receiving threats. Her husband, who she said refused to go into hiding, was murdered.

“My experience through the immigratio­n process surprised me,” Castillo said during an interview in early August. “It seemed so complicate­d and took so long.”

Castillo has been able to work legally and drive while awaiting asylum

“My experience through the immigratio­n process surprised me. It seemed so complicate­d and took so long.” EMMA CASTILLO

and soon will be receiving her green card. She said it would take about a year to bring her children, two boys and two girls ages 11 to 18, to Connecticu­t — a process that involves providing fingerprin­ts, medical records and obtaining passports.

During the interview, she clutched a keychain laminated with a picture of one of her sons. She has FaceTime conversati­ons with her kids, but has not seen them in person for eight years.

The immigratio­n process cost her about $21,000 and included fees for lawyers, interprete­rs and transporta­tion. She said the first lawyer she hired charged $5,500 and didn’t show up for her court date or do any work on her behalf. His incompeten­ce could have resulted in the deaths of her children in Honduras, she said.

Her current lawyer, Jesus Cachaya of White Plains, N.Y., fought “like a lion” for her, she said. She authorized him to speak about her case for this report, but interview arrangemen­ts could not be finalized by deadline.

Judge Verrillo granted asylum based on “family membership,” a type of relief that has since been limited by Attorney General William Barr, and noted he was not reaching a decision based on Castillo’s applicatio­n for humanitari­an asylum and for asylum as a victim of domestic violence.

Verrillo is one of three judges who decides immigratio­n cases in Hartford. According to data compiled in 2018 by Syracuse University-based data-gathering group Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use, he heard 408 cases over the five fiscal years ending in 2018, and granted asylum 56.9 percent of the time.

Castillo said Verrillo made it clear in court that he was granting her asylum because she was able to prove the threats on her life and her children’s lives. She said she provided “a ton of evidence” during the applicatio­n process, including testimony from witnesses who were threatened by the same people, and footage of a Honduran newscast about her husband’s murder.

Castillo said some of the things that happened to her are too painful to discuss. She lived in New York upon her arrival, where she met and married Roberto Rauda-Santos, a refugee from El Salvador who also has a case pending in immigratio­n court. He works seven days a week in constructi­on, she said, and they are both looking forward to uniting with her children. Castillo said her employer doesn’t provide medical insurance, so she pays for coverage by a state subsidized plan.

She said it’s heartbreak­ing to see families separated at the border, but that those who are seeking a better life, and not fleeing persecutio­n, are taking a risk that is understand­able but perhaps unwise.

The most recent data from the Migration Policy Institute indicates that in fiscal year 2017, the United States granted asylum status to 26,568 individual­s.

New London immigratio­n attorney Marcy Levine, whose caseload includes asylum-seekers from Haiti, Guatemala and Honduras, said courts are scheduling cases for trial more quickly, and that she and her colleagues from across the country are pressed for time and finding the process increasing­ly chaotic. Convincing judges that cases are credible is “a really steep uphill battle,” Levine said.

“We’ll have people from their country write declaratio­ns, swearing to the informatio­n, then the Department of Homeland Security alleges that the documents were made for trial,” she said. “Well of course they’re made for trial. People don’t flee their country with documentat­ion.”

The latest data available from the Pew Research Center indicated an estimated 10.5 million undocument­ed immigrants live in the United States and 140,000 reside in Connecticu­t.

During the past legislativ­e session, the General Assembly passed the Connecticu­t Trust Act, which restricts law enforcemen­t agencies from detaining immigrants for the federal government without a court order unless they are on a terrorist watch list or have been convicted of a serious felony. Members of the immigrant community remain fearful of large-scale raids such as those that occurred in Mississipp­i this past week. Locally, Levine and others have reported seeing ICE agents detain people outside of the Broad Street courthouse in New London when they appear in court for traffic violations or misdemeano­r crimes.

“Its very important that people make contact with an immigratio­n attorney and be prepared,” Levine said.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY, FILE ?? Emma Castillo, a native of Honduras, listens while her husband Roberto Rauda, a native of El Salvador, talks about being placed in an immigratio­n facility during an interview at the home of attorney Marcy Levine in Waterford last September. Castillo, who lives in New London, has been granted asylum after years of delays.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY, FILE Emma Castillo, a native of Honduras, listens while her husband Roberto Rauda, a native of El Salvador, talks about being placed in an immigratio­n facility during an interview at the home of attorney Marcy Levine in Waterford last September. Castillo, who lives in New London, has been granted asylum after years of delays.

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