Los Angeles Times

Detained L. A. immigrant released

His arrest six months ago while taking his daughters to school was caught on video.

- By Andrea Castillo

The call they had been waiting for came just before the sun set on a blazing day.

Romulo Avelica- Gonzalez told his wife, Norma, that he was finally being released from the immigratio­n detention facility.

“Your dad is out!” she told her four daughters.

Six months ago, Avelica-Gonzalez, 49, an immigrant in the country illegally, was arrested while taking his daughters to school in Lincoln Heights. A cellphone vi--

deo recorded by one of his daughters caused a furor.

On Wednesday, a judge announced that Avelica-Gonzalez was eligible to post a $ 6,000 bond.

The 5 p. m. call to his wife set off a scramble as the family piled into a van and sped toward the Adelanto Detention Facility in San Bernardino County. His eldest daughters, Brenda and Jocelyn, spotted him first — being led out by an immigratio­n agent.

They yelled for the driver to stop the van. Brenda, 24, got to him f irst, wrapping her arms around him in a bear hug. Then the rest of the family piled on.

“I’m just happy that he’s finally out,” Jocelyn, 20, told reporters, breaking into tears. “I can’t wait to see him at home.”

When the family reached their hotel in nearby Victorvill­e, the f irst thing Avelica- Gonzalez did was shower in privacy. The showers in detention had no curtains, he said. Nothing was private. He pulled on a new outfit — a gray polo shirt, jeans and tennis shoes — before heading to church.

“I’ll never forget this day,” he said. “It was a difficult time, but today was good. I don’t even know how to explain it. I just want to be in my house.”

The reunited family headed to a church in Los Angeles so that Avelica-Gonzalez could thank Jude the Apostle, the patron saint of desperate cases and lost causes, for his good fortune.

Avelica- Gonzalez was detained in late February, min- utes after he had dropped off his 12- year- old daughter, Yuleni, at school. Another daughter, still in the car when he was pulled over in Lincoln Heights, took cellphone video of his arrest by immigratio­n agents, which went viral. Fatima, now 14, sobbed as she recorded the ordeal.

This month, an immigratio­n appeals court threw out his f inal deportatio­n order, kicking the case back to the local immigratio­n court.

It could take years for a judge to enter a new decision. The backlog of cases pending at immigratio­n courts around the U. S. topped 610,000 in June, according to the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use at Syracuse University.

Avelica- Gonzalez, a Mexican citizen, has lived in the United States for more than 25 years. His case drew national attention, with critics citing it as an example of President Trump’s aggressive and sweeping stance on illegal immigratio­n.

Supporters of Trump’s hard- line approach emphasize that immigrants like Avelica- Gonzalez broke the law by coming to the country illegally and further undermined any claim to live in the U. S. when they committed crimes, however minor.

In June, lawyers settled Avelica- Gonzalez’s decades- old misdemeano­r conviction­s — for driving under the inf luence and for receiving stolen car tags — that prompted the deportatio­n order that led to his arrest. He pleaded guilty to lesser vehicle code violations, which would ordinarily not make him a target for deportatio­n.

The Wednesday bond hearing that would determine whether he would be released was tense. His four daughters sat in a row on a bench as the judge questioned Avelica-Gonzalez about his family, his years in the U. S. and his criminal history. They were wide- eyed, on the brink of tears.

An attorney for U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t requested a bond of at least $ 7,500, saying Avelica- Gonzalez had skipped court hearings in the past. She said he had an extensive criminal history and called him a f light risk.

His lawyer, Alan Diamante, said he was not a f light risk because his great- est goal was to remain with his family. He said that two misdemeano­r conviction­s hardly constitute­d a long criminal history, and requested the lowest possible bond amount of $ 1,500.

After less than 30 minutes of questionin­g, the judge decided on a compromise. Avelica- Gonzalez was to be released by 7 p. m. Once the decision sunk in, his daughter Brenda broke down, causing a chain reaction of tears among AvelicaGon­zalez’s other daughters.

“This was something we carried on our shoulders for six months,” Brenda said to a crowd of reporters in temperatur­es that exceeded 100 degrees.

Avelica- Gonzalez and his wife have submitted applicatio­ns for U visas, which are available to victims of crime and their immediate family members, based on a crime that Norma was the victim of in December 2016. Diamante said the next step was to ask an immigratio­n judge to temporaril­y stop AvelicaGon­zalez’s deportatio­n proceeding­s while the U visa applicatio­n is pending.

After the hearing, the family went to a Mexican restaurant in Victorvill­e to celebrate and pass the time before Avelica- Gonzalez’s release. A hostess asked whether they were celebratin­g something special. David Abud, with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, answered:

“Yeah. Their dad is getting out of immigratio­n jail.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? ROMULO AVELICA- GONZALEZ is surrounded by family and reporters after being released from the Adelanto Detention Facility in San Bernardino County.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ROMULO AVELICA- GONZALEZ is surrounded by family and reporters after being released from the Adelanto Detention Facility in San Bernardino County.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? “I ’ LL NEVER FORGET THIS DAY,” said Romulo Avelica- Gonzalez, embracing daughter Brenda after leaving the Adelanto Detention Facility on a $ 6,000 bond. “It was a diff icult time, but today was good.”
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times “I ’ LL NEVER FORGET THIS DAY,” said Romulo Avelica- Gonzalez, embracing daughter Brenda after leaving the Adelanto Detention Facility on a $ 6,000 bond. “It was a diff icult time, but today was good.”

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