The American Civil Liberties Union and US Representative Joaquin Castro said that Rosa Maria Hernandez was returned to her family yesterday. Her parents brought her into the US from Mexico in 2007, when she was a toddler, and they live in the Texas border city of Laredo.
A cousin who is an American citizen took Rosa Maria from Laredo to a children's hospital in Corpus Christi on October 24, where she was scheduled to have emergency gallbladder surgery.
Border Patrol agents followed Rosa Maria and the cousin to the hospital, then took the girl into custody after the surgery and transported her to a facility in San Antonio for unaccompanied immigrant minors, under the custody of the US Department of Health and Human Services.
The Border Patrol has said it had no choice but to detain Rosa Maria, arguing that she was considered an unaccompanied minor under federal law, the same as a child who crosses into the United States alone without legal permission.
"She never should have been in this situation in the first place," ACLU lawyer Michael Tan said yesterday. "There is no reason Border Patrol had to target a child."
While Rosa Maria has been reunited with her family, she still faces the threat of deportation. Tan said that Border Patrol agents had issued Rosa Maria a notice to appear in immigration court, but that the case had yet to move forward.
Leticia Gonzalez, an attorney for Rosa Maria's family, said the 10-year-old had the mental capacity of a child closer to 4 or 5 years old due to her cerebral palsy. Priscila Martinez, an activist at the Workers Defence Action Fund, said the child had started to show signs of socially withdrawing while in detention and refusing to eat her favourite kind of bread.
Federal immigration authorities have faced strong criticism from advocates and some Texas Democratic congressmen over their handling of the case.
"Staking out the hospital room of a young, sick girl and keeping her away from her family is not a humane treatment for her," Castro said.
But US Customs and Border Protection said in a previous statement after she was detained that "there is no discretion with regard to the law whether or not the agents should enforce the law."
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