
Guatemalan woman faces deportation from US days after giving birth
The woman, who attorneys identified only by her first name, Erika, had been wandering in the Arizona desert alone for two days while eight months pregnant before being detained by US Customs and Border Protection agents on Monday, her attorney Luis Campos told CNN.
She had crossed into the United States from Mexico between ports of entry near Tres Bellotas Ranch, about 120km southwest of Tucson, Arizona, according to a CBP spokesperson.
Erika then gave birth at Tucson Medical Center on Wednesday night, two days after she was taken into custody, with federal agents posted outside her hospital room.
President Donald Trump launched a flurry of immigration policies when he took office in January, to make good on campaign promises to remove undocumented immigrants from the country and slow legal immigration. Those efforts have included targeting foreign students, undocumented workers and those crossing the southern border.
Amid the immigration crackdown, the Trump administration also reversed a longstanding policy directing immigration agents to sensitive locations such as churches, schools and hospitals, and recently left mothers to be deported with their children who are US citizens.
Campos tells CNN he had not been able to speak with Erika for days and was denied access to the hospital, which he said violated her Fifth Amendment right to counsel. He said he also was not allowed to attain her signature on a G-28 form, which is used to notify immigration authorities when an attorney is representing a client in an immigration case, he said.
'There was no regard for due process,' Campos said.
Erika initially faced expedited removal – a process allowing federal agents to quickly deport individuals – before eventually being issued a Notice to Appear on Friday, allowing her to appear before an immigration judge, according to Campos.
He says the pressure on the federal authorities from the local community was immense.
'They shifted their position, and they did it under pressure,' Campos told CNN, who will be meeting his client, now free in Phoenix.
A Customs and Border Patrol spokesperson said the woman crossed into the US from Mexico illegally. Before she was issued a Notice to Appear, she had no statutory right to an attorney in immigration proceedings, the CBP spokesperson said. Once the notice was issued, she was given the opportunity to speak with her attorney, the spokesperson said.
'At all times, agents followed the law and adhered to CBP procedures,' the spokesperson said. 'No entitlements were denied.'
Tim Bentley, a spokesperson for Tucson Medical Center, said he had no comment on the situation as privacy laws prevent the hospital from sharing patient information. CNN has also reached out to the office of Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs for comment.
'The office is actively engaging with federal and local officials to gather further information,' Hobbs' office said in a statement to CNN affiliate KOLD. 'While she supports securing the border, Governor Hobbs has been clear in her opposition to inhumane immigration enforcement practices. The governor will continue fighting to protect the constitutional rights of every Arizonan and keep our communities safe.'
Custody of the woman was transferred to ICE on Saturday morning, according to the CBP spokesperson. 'The child remains with the mother,' the spokesperson said.
Still, Campos waited days to hear whether she would be released before hearing the news later that day and calling Erika, who 'has confirmed that she and her baby are fine.' Campos said none of this would have happened 'if things had been done in a humane way from the very beginning.'
Campos said his client is seeking asylum in the US due to her fear of returning to violence in Guatemala. Local authorities were unwilling or unable to help her, so she had no option but to flee the country, he said. The next step in her case should be a credible fear interview, when she will be allowed to make her asylum case, he added.
'That's what we wanted from the very beginning … a simple opportunity to appear before an impartial decision maker, an immigration judge, where she's allowed to provide evidence to sustain her claim, provide testimony, particularly provide witnesses to also corroborate her version of the events, to have an attorney in those proceedings,' he said.
While immigration officials said it was Erika's choice whether she would bring her US citizen newborn with her to Guatemala, Campos said it is 'clearly no choice at all' because she does not have family or friends in the US.
'Parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children or CBP will place the children with someone the parent designates. DHS takes its responsibility to protect children seriously and will continue to work with federal law enforcement to ensure that children are safe and protected,' a CBP spokesperson told CNN.
But Campos says the child could face dangerous conditions. 'Given that the terrible prospect of the violence she faced in the home country, we would be exposing a US citizen child newborn to that same kind of threat,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
21 hours ago
- Sky News AU
CNN questions Nancy Pelosi over insider trading allegations
Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney has reacted to CNN question former House speaker Nancy Pelosi over insider trading allegations levelled by US President Donald Trump. 'That's the reaction of a Democrat who's never had to answer a tough question before on CNN,' Mr Mulvaney told Sky News host James Morrow. 'She was stunned that they would even ask her that. 'This is the Clinton News Network. You're not supposed to ask me those questions on this.'

Sky News AU
2 days ago
- Sky News AU
Ghislaine Maxwell will plead the Fifth in Epstein House testimony - unless these demands are met: defence lawyer
Ghislaine Maxwell will plead the Fifth Amendment in response to a congressional subpoena to testify about deceased sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein — unless several demands are met, according to a Tuesday letter from her attorney obtained by The Post. Defense lawyer David Oscar Markus told the Republican-led House Oversight Committee that his client's statements under oath 'could compromise her constitutional rights, prejudice her legal claims, and potentially taint a future jury pool.' 'Accordingly, our initial reaction was that Ms. Maxwell would invoke her Fifth Amendment rights and decline to testify at this time,' Markus wrote to Oversight Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.). 'However, after further reflection, we would like to find a way to cooperate with Congress if a fair and safe path forward can be established.' The demands listed in the letter include two items that Markus deemed non-negotiable: a grant of immunity for Maxwell and testifying outside the Florida federal prison where she's been serving a 20-year sentence since 2022 for conspiring with Epstein to abuse young girls. Before that, the 63-year-old had spent nearly two years in a Brooklyn detention facility, which her attorney called 'one of the worst' prisons in the US. The committee should also provide copies of its questions in advance, Markus said, 'to identify the relevant documentation from millions of pages that could corroborate her responses.' And Oversight lawmakers were asked to meet with Maxwell only 'after the resolution of her Supreme Court petition and her forthcoming habeas petition.' 'Of course, in the alternative, if Ms. Maxwell were to receive clemency,' Markus hinted, 'she would be willing—and eager—to testify openly and honestly, in public, before Congress in Washington, D.C.' 'The Oversight Committee will respond to Ms. Maxwell's attorney soon, but it will not consider granting congressional immunity for her testimony,' a committee spokeswoman said in a statement to the Post. Maxwell is currently appealing her 2021 conviction and sentencing, as the Trump administration seeks to fend off criticisms from both the left and the right on its handling of a 'systematic review' into Epstein's crimes, his influential 'clientele' and the mysterious circumstances surrounding his death. Epstein, 66, was found dead in his Manhattan lockup on Aug. 10, 2019, after having been charged with abusing dozens of minors — some as young as 14 years old. Multiple investigations — including by the DOJ's Office of Inspector General and independent medical examiners — have ruled Epstein's demise a suicide, while laying out what former Attorney General Bill Barr referred to as a 'perfect storm of screwups' allowing it to happen. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche peppered Maxwell with questions for two days last week during which she was reportedly granted limited immunity. The UK-born convict could have been charged with lying for any false statements she made, Markus revealed to reporters after the sitdown at the Talahassee, Fla., US attorney's office, apparently pointing to the limits of that immunity. Maxwell was given a shield from future prosecution based on her interview responses, a concession known as proffer immunity, sources told ABC News last week. The Department of Justice expressed skepticism about Maxwell's truthfulness during her prosecution, writing in court filings in 2022 that she displayed a 'significant pattern of dishonest conduct' and didn't take responsibility for her sickening crimes. Markus maintains that Epstein's attorneys were told that 'no potential co-conspirators would be prosecuted' based on his statements to prosecutors following his July 2019 arrest on sex trafficking charges. Maxwell still discussed '100 different people' linked to Epstein and was 'asked about every possible thing you could imagine — everything,' her attorney added. 'This was the first opportunity she's ever been given to answer questions about what happened,' he said. 'The truth will come out about what happened with Mr. Epstein and she's the person who's answering those questions.' 'No one is above the law — and no lead is off-limits,' Blanche had posted on X July 22, when he announced plans to interview Maxwell. Originally published as Ghislaine Maxwell will plead the Fifth in Epstein House testimony - unless these demands are met: defence lawyer

Sky News AU
3 days ago
- Sky News AU
‘A problem for Israel': US support for Netanyahu drops sharply
Filmmaker Ami Horowitz reacts to a sharp shift in US public opinion against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as a new poll shows his net favourability plunging to negative 23 points. 'Those polls are real, that's not a fake spinning by CNN, it's a problem for Israel,' Mr Horowitz told Sky News host Rita Panahi. 'The issue that Israel really has is that they are fighting this victimhood and emotion-based narrative, and those are very hard things to fight. 'There's no question that the media is helping push alive these images and narratives.'