Miami Herald

Human-smuggling case against undocument­ed alleged van driver heads to trial in Florida

- BY ANA CEBALLOS AND SYRA ORTIZ BLANES aceballos@miamiheral­d.com sortizblan­es@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Syra Ortiz Blanes: @syraob

A Mexican national facing up to 20 years in prison for traveling to Florida from Georgia with passengers who were undocument­ed is going to trial on human-smuggling charges after a judge rejected an argument that the state law behind his arrest is unconstitu­tional.

The criminal case against Raquel López Aguilar — an undocument­ed father of two from the state of Chiapas living in Tampa and working as a roofer — will be one of the first tests for a state law championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis as he seeks to combat illegal immigratio­n.

López Aguilar, 41, was arrested in August for allegedly driving a van on I-75 with six passengers who had entered the country illegally, according to a police report.

His arrest is part of a broader effort by the DeSantis administra­tion to crack down on undocualso mented immigrants who seek to travel or live in Florida — making López Aguilar’s case just one example of the impact that the governor’s policies could have on the hundreds of thousands of undocument­ed immigrants living in the state and on the organizati­ons and companies that interact with them.

Opponents of the human-smuggling provision have worried the state law, passed last year, could lead to the prosecutio­n of individual­s who are driving family members or groups such as churches for transporti­ng immigrants into the state.

López Aguilar’s attorney, paid for by the Mexican government at the request of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, tried to dismiss the charges. The defense argued the state law is written too broadly and vaguely, leaving “citizens of ordinary intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t officers charged with enforcing the law with no hope of understand­ing what the [state law] prohibits and to whom it applies.” They argued the state law is preempted by federal immigratio­n law.

A Hernando County circuit judge disagreed with those arguments, saying that because the state law did not deal with addressing “removal proceeding­s or any other aspect of immigratio­n,” the state has the authority to enforce a law targeting individual­s who transport undocument­ed immigrants into the state.

Furthermor­e, the judge disagreed with the defense’s argument that the state law is discrimina­tory.

“The statute is clear that it does not discrimina­te; citizen, non-citizen, state resident, or out-of-state resident — all are affected equally under the statute,” Judge Stephen Toner wrote in his ruling, which was issued late Wednesday.

López Aguilar has been in jail for seven months as he awaits his trial, which is scheduled for April 8. He was arrested after a Florida Highway Patrol trooper pulled him over, noting that the van had dark tint and large cracks on the windshield, according to the police report.

When authoritie­s stopped López Aguilar, he was in the driver’s seat, according to Florida Highway Patrol arrest report documents obtained by the Miami Herald. The six passengers, including a 7-year-old, were Mexican nationals, according to the FHP document.

Under Florida law, a person can’t transport into Florida “an individual whom the person knows, or reasonably knows, has entered the United States in violation of the law and had not been inspected by the federal government since his or her unlawful entry.”

The law, which took effect in June, strengthen­ed a version of a previous human-smuggling law.

López Aguilar is accused of “knowingly and willfully” transporti­ng undocument­ed immigrants into the state and is facing four third-degree felony human-smuggling charges, each of which could be punishable by up to five years in prison.

He was also charged with a misdemeano­r for allegedly driving without a license.

The state determined that López Aguilar had traveled from Georgia because he had several receipts for money transfers that were in his pocket and indicated he had been there. The vehicle, a 1997 van registered in Georgia and processed as evidence, belonged to a constructi­on firm there, according to the Mexican consul in Orlando. Public records from the neighborin­g state show the van’s owner also has a roofing company registered to the same address as the vehicle.

But Mexico’s consul has argued that there is no proof that Lopez Aguilar was the driver when he crossed the Georgia state line into Florida.

 ?? Florida Highway Patrol ?? This traffic stop in Hernando County resulted in the arrest of Raquel López Aguilar, a Mexican national, on charges of transporti­ng undocument­ed immigrants into Florida.
Florida Highway Patrol This traffic stop in Hernando County resulted in the arrest of Raquel López Aguilar, a Mexican national, on charges of transporti­ng undocument­ed immigrants into Florida.

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