In re J.E.

74 A.3d 1013, 432 N.J. Super. 361
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 9, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 74 A.3d 1013 (In re J.E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re J.E., 74 A.3d 1013, 432 N.J. Super. 361 (N.J. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

MENDEZ, A.J.S.C.

On March 22, 2013, M.B.G. (“petitioner”) filed an emergent action seeking an order setting forth special findings as antecedent to the application by her minor sons, J.E. and J.C.,1 for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (“SIJS”) under 8 U.S.C.A. § 1101(a)(27)(J) and 8 C.F.R. § 204.11. Petitioner also seeks an order of custody.

The core issue presented is whether there is a sufficient basis for the court to exercise jurisdiction to make special findings antecedent to an application for SIJS, pursuant to 8 U.S.C.A. [364]*364§ 1101(a)(27)(J) and 8 C.F.R. § 204.11, when the children already are in a safe placement with petitioner. For the reasons placed on the record and as outlined below, the court grants petitioner custody of her two minor sons, J.E. and J.C. The court also makes the special findings needed for the boys to qualify for SIJS, allowing them to petition the United States Customs and Immigration Services for SIJS pursuant to 8 U.S.C.A. § 1101 (a)(27)(J) and 8 C.F.R. § 204.11.

I.

Facts and Procedural Background

Based on the verified representations made in the petition and the proofs adduced in the hearing conducted in this matter, the court makes the following findings of fact. Petitioner is the biological mother of her minor sons, J.E. and J.C. Petitioner is a citizen of El Salvador and her two sons are citizens of Honduras. Petitioner arrived in the United States sometime in 2000 and has resided in Hammonton, Atlantic County, New Jersey continuously since then. Petitioner was first granted Temporary Protected Status (“TPS”) in the United States on February 5, 2002, and she has obtained an extension of her TPS on an annual basis. Petitioner’s current TPS is set to expire on September 9, 2013; unless her TPS is extended once again, she will have no lawful basis to remain in the United States past its expiration date.

In the late 1990’s, petitioner was residing in Honduras. She eventually married J.E.S.H., a citizen of Honduras, and, from that union, J.E. and J.C. were born, also in Honduras. Petitioner’s minor sons J.E. and J.C. are presently sixteen and fifteen years old, respectively; J.E. was born in 1996, and his younger brother J.C. was bom in 1997. Petitioner’s marriage to J.E.S.H. was less than ideal, resulting in their separation when the boys were less than four years old.

Immediately following petitioner’s separation from her husband, she stayed in Honduras with her mother and sister. During this [365]*365time, petitioner had legal custody of J.E. and J.C. She testified concerning one particularly frightening incident where her husband tried to kill her; he thrice shot at her, fortunately, without striking her, because she refused to allow him to take J.E. and J.C. from her. Fearing for her life, petitioner fled Honduras without her two sons. She entered the United States sometime during the year 2000.

J.E. and J.C. remained in Honduras with their father and, later, their stepmother, M.D.H (“stepmother”). After arriving in the United States, petitioner applied for TPS on June 8, 2001, and was granted temporary status on February 5, 2002. She now resides with her boyfriend, with whom she has a ten year old daughter, along with her two sons J.E. and J.C., in Hammonton, Atlantic County, New Jersey.

The boys’ life in Honduras with their father and stepmother was brutal. J.E. testified that his stepmother would routinely beat him and his brother J.C., using belts, cables, sticks, and her bare hands. Those beatings left marks and bruises. He testified that his father did nothing to protect him and his brother from this abuse. The children provided compelling testimony about their father’s involvement in drug trafficking and how their father made no effort to shield them from his criminal activity. Their father often would engage J.E. to deposit large, unexplained sums of money in the bank. Both boys routinely witnessed their father and his associates with large arsenals of guns, and witnessed a large container with a white substance being stored in their father’s house.

The boys’ father was shot and killed by his enemies/associates on May 10, 2011, during a shoot-out also involving the police and other drug traffickers.2 The police arrested several of the drug [366]*366traffickers who killed the boys’ father. On the heels of J.E.S.H.’s murder, the boys’ stepmother fled out of fear that she was in danger, leaving the boys behind. The boys telephoned their mother, petitioner, and she made arrangements for the boys to hide at their aunt’s house, where they remained in hiding for some fifteen to twenty days.

The reason for these precautions was palpable: their father’s enemies knew who the boys were and, to some extent, where they could be found. The boys explained that, in order to silence them as possible witnesses and because the drug traffickers likely believed that the boys might one day seek revenge for their father’s death, the boys reasonably feared that they also would be killed if the drug traffickers discovered their location. J.E. and J.C. testified that, while in hiding at their aunt’s house, they regularly would see a vehicle belonging to one of their father’s enemies parked outside. The boys provided credible testimony that they are afraid for their lives if they return to Honduras.

In order to keep the boys safe, petitioner and her family in Honduras arranged for the boys to leave Honduras and be taken to Guatemala; the family engaged the services of a “coyote,” that is, someone engaged in the business of smuggling persons across borders.3 J.E. and J.C. fled Honduras in August 2011, seeking ultimately to reunite with their mother in the United States. Once they arrived in Guatemala, they were abandoned by the “coyote” and left to their own devices. The boys — then ages thirteen and fourteen — made the remainder of their two-week trip to the United States by themselves, sleeping in bus terminals when they could and generally making do. On or about September 8, 2011, the boys entered the United States by way of Texas, [367]*367after traveling primarily by bus through Guatemala and Mexico. Upon arriving in the United States, the boys surrendered themselves to the immigration authorities, and were remanded to a juvenile facility in Houston, Texas for approximately two months. The boys ultimately were released to petitioner’s custody in Hammonton, New Jersey on October 28, 2011; the immigration authorities determined it would be best that the boys be placed with their mother, petitioner, who already was in this country under a TPS, a crucial fact in this case.

The boys have resided safely with petitioner, her boyfriend, and the boys’ half-sister since October 28, 2011. Both boys are attending school, learning the English language, and thriving. Their current status in the United States is undocumented, and they are seeking SIJS in order to obtain legal resident status in the United States. They have expressed the strong desire not to be returned to Honduras, and to remain with petitioner.

On March 22, 2013, petitioner filed her petition, seeking the special findings needed for a later application for SIJS as well as for a custody determination. On April 8, 2013, the court conducted a plenary hearing on that application and, via an interpreter, received the testimony of petitioner and the boys, as well as some additional documentary proofs.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.3d 1013, 432 N.J. Super. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-je-njsuperctappdiv-2013.