TX - Mother left newborn in dumpster because she didn't want boyfriend to break up with her - July 29, 2024

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Found a few more details on the 2023 arrest, that was actually the date of her 17th birthday.
Looking for information about the federal arrest.
Section 212 relates to someone's ability to re-apply for admission. You have to "apply for permission to reapply for admission.
Section 237 relates to reasons for deportation from US. There are these main categories:
General Crimes [seticle]
Failure to Register and Falsification of Documents [see article]
Security and Related Grounds [see article]
Public Charge [see article]
Unlawful Voters [see article]

Essentially, 212 says she was supposed to be removed because she had not applied for permission to reapply for admission (which means she had tried to cross before and was turned away, or was found in the US and was deported and needed to request the ability to try again, not just show up).
And 237 sys she had: failed to register or offered falsified documents; or provide proof she wouldn't be on the public dole (she could support herself and not need public assistance); or she voted illegally. It would be hard to envision that she posed a risk to security of the nation or did general crimes, but maybe.

The way I read it, she was arrested and supposed to be removed from the country (deported). But she somehow made it back into the country?
 
ITA. Horrible what happened to the child, but she is also a child with some kind of mental disability alone in a country where she doesn’t speak the language. Add to that a boyfriend who - going by her fear of him breaking up with her - is probably controlling and manipulative and her only source of companionship. She has probably endured trauma of her own. All these factors lead to making crazy decisions in order to survive. I feel sorry for her. I do not excuse what she did, whatsoever, but I do feel sorry for her.

where does it say she doesn't speak the language? I missed that part
 
ITA. Horrible what happened to the child, but she is also a child with some kind of mental disability alone in a country where she doesn’t speak the language. Add to that a boyfriend who - going by her fear of him breaking up with her - is probably controlling and manipulative and her only source of companionship. She has probably endured trauma of her own. All these factors lead to making crazy decisions in order to survive. I feel sorry for her. I do not excuse what she did, whatsoever, but I do feel sorry for her.
He may also not have known that she was pregnant.
 
Is it ok to explore labor trafficking in our discussion? Given the wages she earned ($500 a month), it makes me wonder...
Found this PBS film and article about labor trafficking teens from Guatemala to work in egg farms in Ohio. In payment for smuggling into the US, they would need to work off $15,000 in debt, families would be threatened, etc. When any of the teens were apprehended at the border as unaccompanied minors, the traffickers would send someone posing as a family member to take custody of them, and then deliver them to the egg farm.

I wonder, what happened to her after her arrest in April 2023? Did she go with a "relative" or did she go back into Mexico and get smuggled again? I wish we could see that arrest document from 2023.
 
Is it ok to explore labor trafficking in our discussion? Given the wages she earned ($500 a month), it makes me wonder...
Found this PBS film and article about labor trafficking teens from Guatemala to work in egg farms in Ohio. In payment for smuggling into the US, they would need to work off $15,000 in debt, families would be threatened, etc. When any of the teens were apprehended at the border as unaccompanied minors, the traffickers would send someone posing as a family member to take custody of them, and then deliver them to the egg farm.

I wonder, what happened to her after her arrest in April 2023? Did she go with a "relative" or did she go back into Mexico and get smuggled again? I wish we could see that arrest document from 2023.
What happens when ICE arrests you?
What Happens After an ICE Arrest? After an arrest, you will most likely be charged with being deportable, released on bond, and then told to appear in Immigration Court on a certain day.

I'd say she didn't appear at her IC hearing. I think this is common, according to what I have read in the Rachel Morin & Jocelyn Nungaray cases.

Yet another reason for her to try to remain invisible and not seek help.
 
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What happens when ICE arrests you?
What Happens After an ICE Arrest? After an arrest, you will most likely be charged with being deportable, released on bond, and then told to appear in Immigration Court on a certain day.

I'd say she didn't appear at her IC hearing. I think this is common, according to what I have read in the Rachel Morin & Jocelyn Nungaray cases.

Yet another reason for her to try to remain invisible and not seek help.
Thank you, that really helps clarify things for me. So she was arrested, and just disappeared into Texas. Yes, that does give another reason for staying under the radar.
 
Newsweek article from Aug 2 2024 has or confirms some more details. Teen who abandoned newborn in Texas dumpster is undocumented migrant
All quotes from article:
  • Everilda Cux-Ajtzalam, 18, went into labor, gave birth and then allegedly went back to work at the taco truck while the baby cried inside the tied-up bag on July 21.
  • A spokesperson for ICE confirmed that the 18-year-old had entered the U.S. illegally as a minor from Guatemala.
  • Cux-Ajtzalam was found to have a mental health issue within the past year, according to court documents,...
  • If convicted of the third-degree felony, Cux-Ajtzalam faces up to ten years in prison before likely removal proceedings initiated by ICE.
 

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