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Eleazar Lopez Ayala sits at the kitchen table in his Manchester home last month.
December 8, 2020
by Lauren Poussard
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immigration, immigration cases, Jeffrey Rubin, NH Union Leader

Honduran airports remain closed so Manchester dad avoids deportation on Wednesday

With airports still closed in his native Honduras, a Manchester father of three has gained a reprieve from his deportation, which had been scheduled for Wednesday, his lawyer said.

Boston immigration lawyer Jeffrey Rubin said he advised his client, Eleazar Lopez Ayala, not to show up Wednesday morning at the ICE office at the Norris Cotton Federal Building in Manchester.

That’s where Ayala would have had to surrender himself for self-deportation.

Meanwhile, a stay of Ayala’s deportation is on the desk of New England region ICE administrator Todd Thurlow.

“The ball is in ICE’s court,” Rubin said.

Two weeks ago, the New Hampshire Union Leader reported that Ayala, 43, was facing imminent deportation following a three-year legal battle. That battle started in Deerfield, when police alerted ICE after they came across Ayala beside a car with a flat tire.

Ayala had sneaked into the United States when he was 17 and for more than two decades stayed out of trouble. But his legal appeals were exhausted earlier this year, and he was ordered to self-deport on Nov. 9.

The destruction caused by two hurricanes prevented his deportation flight then, and the airport at his destination, San Pedro Sula, remains closed, said immigration activist Eva Castillo.

Also, last week the Honduran government asked the Trump administration to provide temporary protected status to Hondurans living in the United States, the Washington Post reported.

The status protects immigrants from deportation while their country manages a crisis.

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez also warned of an immigration surge to the United States in the absence of coordinated assistance for his country in the wake of hurricanes Eta and Iota.

Nearly 100,000 Hondurans are living in shelters and the country’s economy has been paralyzed, the newspaper said.

ICE did not provide a comment for this article.

Rubin said a representative from the office of U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., told him that ICE will give Ayala a new date, but did not specify what the date would be for.

Rubin believes ICE has lost interest in Ayala. His client’s agent has not returned three telephone calls from Rubin.

The agency backs off when religious organizations, politicians and the media become interested in a case, he said.

“There are so many millions of others they can go after,” Rubin said.

 

Read original article here.  https://www.unionleader.com/news/politics/national/honduran-airports-remain-closed-so-manchester-dad-avoids-deportation-on-wednesday/article_ae29145c-2441-5634-97de-e4b72d2d84fd.html

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Family could lose father to deportation next week
November 30, 2020
by Lauren Poussard
News
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deportation, ice, immigration, NH Union Leader

Family could lose father to deportation next week

n nearly indisputable likelihood, President Trump will leave office on Jan. 20.

That could very well be six weeks too late for Eleazar Lopez Ayala. In the worst-case scenario, Immigration and Customs Enforcement will deport the 43-year-old father of four to his native Honduras nine days from today.

Ayala, who sneaked into this country at the age of 17, became a cause celebre three years ago when City Matters first reported about him. He and a friend were on a lunch break from a nearby construction site when their car got a flat while driving through Deerfield.

Deerfield police called ICE, and Ayala, who had stayed out of trouble and worked hard for years, found himself in an ICE jail cell in Massachusetts.

His detention disproved the notion, popular at the time, that ICE was concentrating on hardened criminals and gang members. No, ICE was coming for people who might be working on the addition to your house or whose kids attend school alongside your children.

Deerfield police quickly adopted an ICE policy because, let’s face it, Ayala’s arrest amounted to racial profiling. Deerfield townspeople raised money for Ayala’s family, as did a Keene activist and parishioners of Ayala’s church here in Manchester, the immigrant-friendly St. Anne-St. Augustin Parish.

After nine months, ICE released Ayala and he eventually resumed a normal American life of provider, father, churchgoer.

But on Nov. 9, ICE told Ayala to arrive at the federal building in downtown Manchester with his bags packed.

For three years, his lawyers had tried to convince a judge to reopen his case. But his appeals were exhausted, and ICE told him he would have to self-deport, meaning he had to pay for his own plane ticket.

He arrived at the ICE offices with his family and a crowd of supporters.

Luckily for him, Hurricane Eta had arrived days before in Honduras, closing all international airports and burying much of the country in floodwaters and mud. Two weeks later, Hurricane Iota struck Honduras. As it stands now, however, Ayala must leave on Dec. 9.

“Now I understand the suffering of other families,” Ayala said through a translator the day before Thanksgiving. “I watch others tell stories on TV. You only understand the meaning of it when you have to live it in the flesh.”

Ayala speaks rudimentary English, but he used a translator — immigrant-rights activist and Manchester Police Commissioner Eva Castillo — to assist.

“As someone who works with police departments, to see police call ICE for a flat tire, why would they feel the need to do that?” Castillo said. “These are hard-working people. This is so unfair.”

I tried to get comment from ICE, emailing the media contact early Wednesday, and then again on Friday. I got an out-of-office reply.

I combed their website. It has lots of news releases: “Criminal alien arrested for double homicide,” “ICE lodges detainer on man accused of child sex assault” and “ICE removes unlawfully present Salvadoran national wanted for membership in terrorist organization.”

Nothing along the lines of “Responsible Dad self deports, leaving shattered family.”

In one news release, ICE said it does not exempt any removable aliens from enforcement. “ICE takes many factors into account when targeting and arresting individuals, including their criminal and immigration history,” the release states.

I spoke to Ayala and his wife, Maria Cubias, in the same kitchen where I interviewed Cubias three years earlier. Ayala is a carpenters’ union member and earns about $27 an hour working drywall and construction in Massachusetts. The family isn’t on welfare, housing or food stamps. They do qualify for Medicaid.

As we spoke, their 13- and 12-year-old sons watched TV in the living room, while 6-year-old Dylan walked into the kitchen on occasion. All three are American-born and as much a citizen as I am.

Cubias said Ayala is a great father. He cooks his kids dinner when she works. He stays home and doesn’t carouse. He prays with his kids at night.

Now, Cubias fears she will have to raise the three boys — two of them on the cusp of adolescence — without Ayala.

“To be by myself and be mother and father for three boys is not going to be easy. You know how boys are,” she said. Meanwhile, she won’t go on welfare, fearing that will affect her temporary protected status.

On deportation day Nov. 9, about 45 activists from across the state gathered outside the federal building in Manchester when Ayala showed up, Castillo said. He hugged his children and went inside, only to emerge later, told to return Dec. 9.

His lawyer, Jeffrey Rubin of Boston, said ICE showed Ayala a great deal of respect. Rubin noted that representatives from the offices of Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and Chris Pappas accompanied him into the office.

“I felt like I was loaded with political clout, double-barrel,” he said.

He has one final legal strategy — to ask ICE to hold off deportation until February, when Ayala’s stepson turns 21. Under existing policy, if a U.S. citizen/family member vouches for an undocumented immigrant, the immigrant can receive a provisional waiver, Rubin said. All that’s necessary is for Ayala to return to Honduras briefly.

Ayala has a good case for permanent residency based on the merits, not politics, Rubin said.

At the same time, the election of Joe Biden to the presidency sets a tone that favors Ayala, Rubin said. The Democratic president-elect has said he will restore the DACA program. Biden is considering a 100-day hold on deportations and is likely to narrow guidelines for ICE operations.

The more that Biden’s victory becomes apparent, the less incentive for ICE to play hardball, Rubin said.

Ayala said he’s never thought about running and waiting it out. A monitoring bracelet is attached to his ankle. Rubin has warned that running would ruin any chances Ayala might have. Ayala has even declined offers from churches for sanctuary.

“I want to stay here; I don’t want to go there,” he said. “But if they say to leave Dec. 9, I have to go.”

mhayward@unionleader.com

mhayward@unionleader.com

 

Original Article on UnionLeader.com

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October 15, 2018
by admin
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immigration

Keene event celebrates the release of a Manchester man being held by ICE

About 25 people gathered at Wheelock Park in Keene Sunday afternoon to celebrate the release of Eleazar Lopez Ayala, an undocumented Honduran immigrant living in Manchester who was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement under the threat of deportation for nine months.

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July 26, 2018
by admin
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court, immigration, removal proceedings

SCOTUS Sets Up Potential Immigration Train Wreck

The Supreme Court issued a decision last month (Pereira v. Sessions) that could have potentially devastating consequences for removal proceedings, both presently pending and completed.

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April 17, 2018
by admin
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ice, immigration

ICE Has Made Yet Another Group the Target of a Vicious Immigration Crackdown

Rubin is representing 33-year-old Fabiano de Oliveira, a Brazilian native who was detained by ICE officials while he and his wife, Karah, were visiting the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in Lawrence, MA.

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