Foreign domestic violence victims seek asylum in Wash.

TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - Clara Flores-Aguilar says the beatings began days after she gave birth to her first son.
The pain wouldn't stop for more than two decades. Eyes swollen with tears, Flores-Aguilar said she endured death threats, injuries to her children, a hot oil scalding, a stab wound on her leg and continuous public humiliation at the hand of her alcoholic and drug-abusing husband. She recites a litany of abuse that only stops when she flees from Honduras, first in the mid-2000's and again two months ago. The 50-year-old is thousands of miles from Honduras, but whether she can start anew in the United States was not known on a recent January afternoon.
Flores-Aguilar was being held at the Tacoma Detention Center as she waited a decision by an immigration judge to allow her asylum case to proceed. For that to happen, the judge must believe her story of abuse.
"I just wanted to escape again," Flores-Aguilar told The Associated Press in Spanish, adding that in August she left a successful small deli behind after her husband said he'd kill her and himself at the end of the year. "I trust in God that he takes all of this into consideration. I don't want to go back."
It's an uphill legal battle. Seeking asylum because of past domestic violence abuse has not been a successful road to take because immigration judges have traditionally declined such requests, attorneys said. But recent court cases have given these women hope.
"We've been having a little more luck with these cases," said Ashley Huebner, an attorney at the National Immigrant Justice Center. "Historically, there's been significant fear and hesitation by a lot of adjudicators."
Flores-Aguilar is not alone in Tacoma.
Around 100 women from Central America applying for asylum have been processed through the Tacoma Detention Center over the past two years, said Betsy Tao, an attorney for the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project who works at the detention center.
ICE officials couldn't immediately say why there's a small surge of these women in Tacoma, though it may have to do with the way the agency transfers immigrants in custody around the nation. Two years ago, after an influx of Somali asylum seekers came to the U.S. at different ports of entry, large groups of them were transferred to Tacoma.
Asylum requests from Central American women at the nation's ports increased from 95 in fiscal year 2010 to nearly 200 this past year, according to data from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration and Services processes far more asylum requests, but their available data does not include requests from Central American women based on domestic violence.
Considering all the types of migration to the United States, these women represent a tiny blip and the numbers are too small to make broad conclusions. But in a place like the Tacoma Detention Center, the women stand out among the hundreds being detained.
Tao said it's not her organization's call to judge whether the stories the women tell are true. They provide the same legal information on what happens now that the women are in custody.
Under law, filing a frivolous asylum claim can lead to a lifetime bar on entering the United States.
One of the last key court cases for domestic violence victims seeking asylum came from a Guatemalan woman named Lesly Yajayra Perdomo in 2010.
She argued in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that violence against women was so rampant in Guatemala she would face the risk of murder if she was sent back. At least 4,400 women were killed in Guatemala between 2000 and 2010 and fewer than 3 percent of the cases are solved, according to the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at the University of California's Hastings College of the Law.
At issue in the Perdomo case was defining a "particular social group" that is persecuted and qualifies for political asylum in the United States. Women who fear genital mutilation or victims of domestic abuse have been deemed "social groups" and granted asylum.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered immigration judges to seriously consider granting asylum to Guatemalan women who fear they will be killed.
Recently, advocates launched a campaign to include changes to asylum law in the immigration reform President Barack Obama and Congress are formulating. They want to ensure gender-based asylum claims constitute part of a "particular social group."
That's far away from Flores-Aguilar.
For her, life had one more tragic event. She says her father died of an infection after his small intestines were perforated during a routine hernia surgery. He had decided to undergo surgery because he had taken in Flores-Aguilar's oldest daughter into his house. She didn't find out until she had been taken into custody.
"If I had never come here, he wouldn't have gotten the surgery," she said, crying. "He wouldn't be dead. Why?"
On Feb. 1, an immigration judge deemed Flores-Aguilar's story credible and she was released from the detention center.
She now awaits the final asylum decision.
The pain wouldn't stop for more than two decades. Eyes swollen with tears, Flores-Aguilar said she endured death threats, injuries to her children, a hot oil scalding, a stab wound on her leg and continuous public humiliation at the hand of her alcoholic and drug-abusing husband. She recites a litany of abuse that only stops when she flees from Honduras, first in the mid-2000's and again two months ago. The 50-year-old is thousands of miles from Honduras, but whether she can start anew in the United States was not known on a recent January afternoon.
Flores-Aguilar was being held at the Tacoma Detention Center as she waited a decision by an immigration judge to allow her asylum case to proceed. For that to happen, the judge must believe her story of abuse.
"I just wanted to escape again," Flores-Aguilar told The Associated Press in Spanish, adding that in August she left a successful small deli behind after her husband said he'd kill her and himself at the end of the year. "I trust in God that he takes all of this into consideration. I don't want to go back."
It's an uphill legal battle. Seeking asylum because of past domestic violence abuse has not been a successful road to take because immigration judges have traditionally declined such requests, attorneys said. But recent court cases have given these women hope.
"We've been having a little more luck with these cases," said Ashley Huebner, an attorney at the National Immigrant Justice Center. "Historically, there's been significant fear and hesitation by a lot of adjudicators."
Flores-Aguilar is not alone in Tacoma.
Around 100 women from Central America applying for asylum have been processed through the Tacoma Detention Center over the past two years, said Betsy Tao, an attorney for the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project who works at the detention center.
ICE officials couldn't immediately say why there's a small surge of these women in Tacoma, though it may have to do with the way the agency transfers immigrants in custody around the nation. Two years ago, after an influx of Somali asylum seekers came to the U.S. at different ports of entry, large groups of them were transferred to Tacoma.
Asylum requests from Central American women at the nation's ports increased from 95 in fiscal year 2010 to nearly 200 this past year, according to data from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration and Services processes far more asylum requests, but their available data does not include requests from Central American women based on domestic violence.
Considering all the types of migration to the United States, these women represent a tiny blip and the numbers are too small to make broad conclusions. But in a place like the Tacoma Detention Center, the women stand out among the hundreds being detained.
Tao said it's not her organization's call to judge whether the stories the women tell are true. They provide the same legal information on what happens now that the women are in custody.
Under law, filing a frivolous asylum claim can lead to a lifetime bar on entering the United States.
One of the last key court cases for domestic violence victims seeking asylum came from a Guatemalan woman named Lesly Yajayra Perdomo in 2010.
She argued in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that violence against women was so rampant in Guatemala she would face the risk of murder if she was sent back. At least 4,400 women were killed in Guatemala between 2000 and 2010 and fewer than 3 percent of the cases are solved, according to the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at the University of California's Hastings College of the Law.
At issue in the Perdomo case was defining a "particular social group" that is persecuted and qualifies for political asylum in the United States. Women who fear genital mutilation or victims of domestic abuse have been deemed "social groups" and granted asylum.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered immigration judges to seriously consider granting asylum to Guatemalan women who fear they will be killed.
Recently, advocates launched a campaign to include changes to asylum law in the immigration reform President Barack Obama and Congress are formulating. They want to ensure gender-based asylum claims constitute part of a "particular social group."
That's far away from Flores-Aguilar.
For her, life had one more tragic event. She says her father died of an infection after his small intestines were perforated during a routine hernia surgery. He had decided to undergo surgery because he had taken in Flores-Aguilar's oldest daughter into his house. She didn't find out until she had been taken into custody.
"If I had never come here, he wouldn't have gotten the surgery," she said, crying. "He wouldn't be dead. Why?"
On Feb. 1, an immigration judge deemed Flores-Aguilar's story credible and she was released from the detention center.
She now awaits the final asylum decision.
Was at a Fred Meyer store and was surprised that many many were speaking in mexican, both the adults (probably illegal) and their anchors. There did not appear to be any attempt to speak english by either the adults or the children. Saw them in several aisles I was in and never a word in english.
So much for assimilation into the US, but hey illegals don't want to assimilate they want a freeride.
Illegal alien sob story of the week complete with illegal alien poster suitable for framing.  Thank you, media.
We have got to stop being the solution for people in other countries. We have these laws because people stood up and said "enough".
Why don't these people try doing that in their own country? Can you imagine our ancestors, running off to some other country, every time something they didn't like happened? Yes it's a crime here (sometimes) to beat your spouse. Stay in your country and fight for those laws there.
Someone had to do that fight here, before it became a crime...
I think we need to take this welcome sign down>>>>> Â Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!
@KKStJohn It's from a poem at the bottom of a statue.  It (and any parts of it) are used/referenced/included exactly..... ZERO times in official US immigration law. In other words, it has no bearing on what our official immigration policy is or should be.
Besides, the conditions that led to the creation of such a poem over 100 years ago don't necessarily exist anymore. Times have changed. There are not unlimited number of jobs for prospective immigrants, we are living on borrowed money, and we don't take very good care of a lot of the most needy in our own country. Â "Charity begins at home".
@ThePosterFormerlyKnownAsPhredEÂ And by the way, the 'statue' you refer to is The Statue of Liberty.Â
@ThePosterFormerlyKnownAsPhredEÂ Â SHEESH, who doesn't know that? Â Why must you always go into tutorial mode with your posts over other's comments? Â It's a constant with you.Â
Waaa Waaa Waaa.. This is not our problem.. She wants to come to the U.S. and live on my dime.. I am near retirement and threatened about my "entitlement " money.. Which I paid... And we have these hard luck stories that will further erode the American dream.. If you can not support yourself don't come here.. Period ! this is the same approach every county on the planet takes, it's time we wise up..
I have no problem allowing in all the 18-22 year old, childless, latin-american women. This is pre-emptive, we let them come to America before they are married so that they can find men here who won't beat them.Â
Where can we americans go
@Bert Canada?
She needs a berka
If we allow foreign domestic violence victims to seek asylum in The USA, then at least we should allow about a few hundred million people to re-habitat here.Â
@tptpttp In the most recent poll on international aspirations to migrate to the US, the current estimate is *down* to about 150 million (way down from just a few years ago). But, even with an added 150 million new people in the country with the flip of a switch, the open borders people can pretty much destroy the country overnight by trying to accommodate such a large influx in a narrow window of time.  Hell, we can't even integrate a paltry 1.5 million each year without big problems.  I agree with your point - there should be limits on these things and we shouldn't just fling open the doors to anyone and everyone trying to escape from a problem elsewhere.
BYE-BYE or perhaps Adios.
Deportation is in order, here illegally in any manner its time to go back where you came from. The increase in such applications is because of the village idiot in the WH.
Enjoy your US taxpayer ridehome.
@FreerideNOTÂ The open borders apologists and sympathizers are grasping for [yet another] avenue to allow illegal persons to get in / stay in the country. Â "It isn't over until the illegal alien wins" - that just about sums it up.
Phred
We the legal taxpaying citizens of the US win when the borders are closed, all illegals are deported and America becomes America for the legal citizens of the United States.Â
Imagine that....I work with a Hispanic male (legal) who told me Hispanic men are very violent with their women.
I respectfully disagree with your post, they are not only violent with their women, they are violent with men also. If you don't think so, check the death rate in Mexico.
@minniemouse I have known several men and women from various parts of Mexico/Central America and South America.  The ones I know, would absolutely NOT seriously try to refute that statement.  In fact, several of the women have confided to me, that the chance to live free of the 'machismo' aspect of life back home is a big draw in coming to the US.  While the substandard treatment of women is of course tragic, I will remind once again (as I have on several occasions previously) that NOT ALL CULTURES ARE 'EQUAL', and that, sometimes, CULTURAL DIFFERENCES MATTER. Â
The best outcome for the affected persons in all of those countries is to.. CHANGE YOUR SOCIETY/CULTURE TO SIGNIFICANTLY TREAT WOMEN BETTER! Â Don't just allow people to run away from the problem. Â We have fought through the problem (and others like it) here, and the best solution is one where people can grow and thrive in their own native place(s).
Phred
I know a mexican male (legal) that had a legal issue. In an interview he was quite candid about his macho attitude and his hatred of gays and lesbians. His married life was in turmoil and divorce proceedings were filed, as it turned out his aggressive nature came to the forefront when he was drinking, otherwise just a nice guy. What is the mexican national drink?
@FreerideNOTÂ Keela
Min
So does that mean that the US taxpayers should take in all of the abused souls of the world? No they can stay in their homeland and fight for change. Sorry the door is closed as is my wallet.
@FreerideNOT And as soon as they get here guess what the first thing they want to do, you guessed it, bring the abuser here to live with them.. And once again America is a sucker
i could probably put her up for 2 weeks..if she obeyed.
I reread the part about her last tragedy. Her father is dead because she abandoned her daughter. What a mother. What a daughter. I like the immigrants who talk about how great their home country is.
Why did not she flee to Guatemala or Mexico or somewhere else in Latin America? Â
@Oh My Because she wouldn't get FREE medical, housing, schooling and a job. As citizens of the USA, we don't get all that. We just pay for it.
@Oh My Duh.. because this is the land of suckers..
@Oh My I guess we could let our police get as bad as Mexican police at abusing illegal immigrants if we really wanted to lower the bar.
Oh
She is/was looking for a FREERIDE!!!
@Oh My When you flee a S*it hole you don't flee it to another S*it hole.
@Oh My She can't get discounted tuition in Guatemala or Mexico.
When did Immigration judges become experts in Family Law?
Next she will ask the U.S. tax payers to pay for her nasty mole removal under humanitarian grounds.
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Illegal is still illegal. Everyone has a story of woa I'm sure. I agree with fracas and the rest of us that feel this way. Next Pakistan women will all want to come here because of what happens in their country. Fix your country folks it's not our problem.
While I feel for this woman (no man, woman, child or animal should be abused), I do have to say that it shouldn't be our problem. We open ourselves up to political asylum from countries that are hell....are we now to do the same for something like domestic abuse? We have more than our own to care for. Why don't we do that? If you want to bring religion into this...why not the Catholics (of which I'm a member), Mormons, 7th Day Adventist, Baptists...whoever is over there spouting their idea of the bible, why don't they step in with the money I'm sure they all have, and create programs to end this? These male-dominated socities at the lower end of the socio-economic spectrum are following what their fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers have done. Leave the US out of it. As much as it saddens me...send her back. We just can't afford anyone else's problems dealing with a "family", domestic issue. The US needs to change in some ways. It's letting down many of it's own...we can't take on anyone else's agendas.
Another countries social problems become ours to solve??
Ludicrous !
Another angle for a free ride
Lein
There is only one freeride for illegals and the US taxpayers are forced to provide it.  Thanks to the village idiot.
Domestic abuse shouldn't allow you to get asylum in the US.
the floodgates is opening! head for high ground!
Can you trust translaters or do they have their own agenda
Ber
Believe the citizenship testing is to be recorded when there is a translator involved, which is reviewed.
@Bert No you can't. Why do I say this? My co-worker is from England. Had to fight tooth and nail and pay loads of money to become U.S. Citizen many many years ago. In his group to get citizenship came down to ya know.. the knowledge test.. ya know.. of our customs and stuff.. like what happens if VP dies.. blah blah. He said a group of Vietnamese immigrants were at his test. Had a translator. When the whole thing was done.. found out.. the translator asked the English questions in Vietnamese. They would answer like.. I don't know... and then the translator would answer the questions correctly in English as if they had said it. Got them to pass. B.S. like that is going on....
@Liberty4_WA @Bert same thing happened when my wife became a citizen here from Australia. There were non English speaking people with translators at the official swearing in ceremony. I bet it didn't cost them as much as it did us for my wife, an English speaking person, to become a citizen.Â
The churches are a big part of the immigration story and fend off the media and everyone else to protect their "flocks" of immigrants here. They're quite good at it too as no one will question them or interfere. It's a God thing I guess.
Sounds easier than crossing the border
Not like immigraation judges can ever find out the truth about these revelations of demistic abuse. How could they? Betcha now that the media has made this public, all of Central America will just be identified as a hotbed of domestic abuse, and of course the only place to go is here in the good ole USA! After all, there is no domestic abuse here, right? Will domestic abuse victims from here flee to Canada for asylum? I doubt it!Â
@jpk where do the Canadians flee to?
No one flees Canada. Canadians are very nationalistic and for the most part love their country but hate the invaders from other countries. The biggest group of unwanteds are muslims, mexicans and anyone from the mid east. Including the Tamal Tigers
They head to Norway, eh?
Can't walk there thought! Unless you can walk on water? I should also add that in those countries you are required to learn the language! (I guess I do like the Edit capability of Livefyre)Â
@jpk Sweden or Germany too. They have better social benefits then Canada or the USA.