The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

JESSICA COLOTL’S DACA PROTECTION REVOKED

Former Kennesaw State student loses DACA status.

- By Kate Brumback

Federal immigratio­n authoritie­s have for the second time this year revoked the protection from deportatio­n granted to a Mexican woman whose case grabbed national headlines when she was a Kennesaw State University student seven years ago.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s re-evaluated 29-year-old Jessica Colotl’s protection under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and decided not to renew it, federal government lawyers wrote in a court filing Wednesday.

The DACA program, which was created by the Obama administra­tion in 2012, offers a reprieve from deportatio­n to people in the country illegally who can prove they arrived before they were 16, have been in the U.S. for several years and have not committed a crime since arriving. It also allows them to work legally.

President Donald Trump last month announced an end to the program. But he said those whose authorizat­ions were set to expire within six months could apply for renewals as long as they did so by Oct. 5.

The government previously revoked Colotl’s DACA status in May, and a government lawyer the next day filed a new request for a deportatio­n order.

Her lawyers argued at the time that the government terminated her protected status illegally — without notice, without due process and without a reasoned explanatio­n. They filed a challenge in federal court in Atlanta.

U.S. District Judge Mark Cohen in June wrote that it appeared the government had failed to follow its own procedures.

He instructed federal authoritie­s to reconsider the terminatio­n of Colotl’s DACA status and her applicatio­n for renewal. He ordered that her DACA status be restored while that reconsider­ation was pending.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s reinstated her status and reopened her renewal applicatio­n, Wednesday’s court filing says. They provided her with a notice of intent to deny her renewal request on Aug. 18 and considered her response before deciding Monday to deny her request, the filing says.

The government has therefore addressed the concerns, so the case should be dismissed, government lawyers argue.

Charles Kuck, a lawyer for Colotl, said the government still has not given a valid reason for denying her the protected status.

“We’re very disappoint­ed that the immigratio­n service continues to play with this young woman’s life,” Kuck said Wednesday. “We will once again see them in court over this.”

Colotl, now 29, was brought to the U.S. illegally by her parents when she was 11. She became a flashpoint in the national debate over immigratio­n reform in 2010 after she was pulled over on a traffic charge on the campus of Kennesaw State University. She was arrested and turned over to federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, who kept her in a detention center for 37 days.

Her case drew national attention after her sorority sisters held posters with her name on them during a march for immigratio­n reform in Atlanta while she was detained.

She has since graduated from college and first applied for DACA in 2012. Her applicatio­n was granted in 2013 and was renewed. She has been working as a paralegal in Kuck’s firm and has said she wants to go to law school and to become an immigratio­n lawyer.

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