Luis Ischiu v. Gomez Garcia

274 F. Supp. 3d 339
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 14, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. TDC-17-1269
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 274 F. Supp. 3d 339 (Luis Ischiu v. Gomez Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luis Ischiu v. Gomez Garcia, 274 F. Supp. 3d 339 (D. Md. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

THEODORE D. CHUANG, United States District Judge

When a parent flees to another country with a child in contraventipn of the other parent’s custody rights, the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (the “Hague Convention”), Oct. 25, 1980, T.I.A.S. No. 11,670, 19 I.L.M. 1501, generally requires the child’s immediate return so that custody rights can be determined in the child’s country of habitual residence. In this case,, Wiliam Estuardo Luis Ischiu (“Luis Ischiu”) alleges that his wife, Nely del Rosario Gomez Garcia (“Gomez Garcia”), wrongfully removed their minor child, W.M.L.G., from their native country of Guatemala to the United States. He has filed a Petition under the International Child Abduction Remedies Act (“ICARA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9001-9011 (2012), seeking W.M.L.G.’s return to Guatemala under the Hague Convention. Upon consideration of the Petition, the submitted briefs, and the evidence presented during a bench trial, the Petition is denied.

BACKGROUND

Over the course of a two-day bench trial on July 19 and 21, 2017, Gomez Garcia offered the following witnesses: Evelyn Karina Leiva Magariño, an attorney and expert witness on Guatemalan law; Gomez Garcia; Dr. Lorna Sanchez, a clinical psychologist who evaluated Gomez Garcia; and Blondina Gomez Garcia, the Respondent’s sister, who testified by video conference from Guatemala. Luis Ischiu presented the following witnesses: Professor Joel Alfonso Lopez Mendez, an attorney and expert witness on Guatemalan law; Julia Elena Ischiu, the Petitioner’s mother; Sonia Marilu Diaz Paschual, the wife of Mario Alejandro Luis Ischiu, one of the Petitioner’s brothers; Sergio Annibal Luis Ischiu,. the Petitioner’s brother; Veronica Elizabeth Figueroa Calderon, the wife of Sergio Luis Ischiu; Alberto Luis Escobar, the Petitioner’s father; and Luis Ischiu. With the exception of Luis Ischiu, all of the Petitioner’s witnesses testified by vi-deoconference from Guatemala. At the request of the Respondent, the Court also conducted an in camera, on-the-record interview of W.M.L.G. on July 25, 2017. Based on this testimony and the documentary evidence presented, the Court makes the following findings of fact.

Gomez Garcia met Luis Ischiu when she was 17 years old. She had to take two buses to go to school, and when at a transit point in Luis Ischiu’s hometown, Luis Ischiu approached her. After dating for two years, they were married in 2009, when she'was 19 and Luis Ischiu was 29, Gomez Garcia went to reside in a family compound with Luis Ischiu, his parents, and Luis. Ischiu’s brothers, them -wives, and their children.

. Gomez Garcia testified that from, the time that she married Luis Ischiu and moved into the family compound, his attitude toward her changed. He did not allow [343]*343her to sleep with him, except when he wanted to have sex with her, and instead required her to sleep in the living room. Her mother-in-law required her to wear the clothes of someone from the Mayan indigenous group to which Luis Ischiu belonged and did not allow her to wear the clothes that she, a member of the Ladina ethnic group, used to wear. Although all’of the wives of Luis Ischiu’s brothers were also Ladina, Gomez Garcia’s mother-in-law disfavored W.M.L.G. because he was light-skinned and looked like Gomez Garcia. Gomez Garcia was required to work for the family cable business seven days a week, with a half day on Sunday; she had to attend church during the remaining half day. She brought W.M.L.G. to work with her and carried him on her back. Although she was technically paid a below minimum wage amount of 500 quetzales per month, the equivalent of $70, the money was spent by others on household needs, so she did not compile any savings of her own.

In 2016, Gomez Garcia was sexually assaulted by members of *her husband’s family, specifically, Luis Ischiu’s father and brother. On multiple occasions, Luis Is-chiu’s father tried to have sexual contact with her. Specifically, when no other adults were present, he went into the kitchen, came up to Gomez Garcia, held her tight to him, and touched her private parts. Luis Ischiu’s brother Carlos also sexually molested her in the same manner. When Gomez Garcia told Luis Ischiu about the sexual abuse, he did nothing to defend her and instead threatened her that she must not speak to anyone about it. At other times, Luis Ischiu physically assaulted her. On one occasion, she discovered that he was having an affair and confronted him. He then hit her on her back, knocking her to the ground. He told her that his activities were none of her business and that her role was to be his servant and to-take care of their son. In another incident, when she asked him about a message on his cell phone from another woman, he kicked her and she was unable to defend herself. Another time, Luis Ischiu struck Gomez Garcia in the face while W.M.L.G. watched.'Both Luis Ischiu and his brothers verbally abused Gomez Garcia with profane language, including in front of W.M.L.G. ’ According to ' Gomez Garcia, W.M.L.G. was aware when Luis Ischiu assaulted her. She testified that as a result of that exposure, and his disfavored treatment within the family compound, he generally appeared sad and troubled.

Although Garcia Gomez believed that everyone in the household knew she was being assaulted, no one in the family came to her aid. She had nowhere else to go. Gomez Garcia’s parents and other relatives lived a 30-minute drive away, and she did not have access to a car. On one of the few occasions when Gomez Garcia saw her relatives, her sister observed that she had bruises on her arms. On multiple occasions, Luis Ischiu and his family members threatened to kill her if she. tried' to leave the home and to.take W.M.L.G. away. On two occasions, Gomez Garcia attempted to commit suicide. The first time, she drank rat poison. When she told Luis Ischiu, he offered to take her to the doctor, but she declined because she had already vomited the poison. The second time, she tried to overdose on pills. He suggested that she drink a lot of water and try to vomit. After she vomited, he offered to take her to, the doctor, but she again declined. Other than searching the house for poison and pills, Luis Ischiu took no steps to prevent any future suicide attempts. Neither he nor any of the members of his family sought any medical or mental health treatment for Gomez Garcia as a result of these suicide attempts. Rather, Luis, Ischiu’s reaction was that she must not love him and W.M.L.G. if she wanted to kill herself.

[344]*344When she finally gathered up the courage to leave in November 2016, she fled to her parents’ home. She then applied for and received a Security Measures Order against Luis Ischiu from a Guatemalan court. The November 23, 2016 Order, effective for a period of six months, prohibited Luis Ischiu from contacting Gomez Garcia at home or work and from harassing or intimidating any member of her family; ordered that he pay provisional child support; and provisionally suspended Luis Ischiu’s guardianship and custody rights over W.M.L.G. The Order also warned that Luis Ischiu would be charged with disobedience if he continued to attack and mistreat Gomez Garcia or her family.

Although Luis Ischiu was given two days to respond to the Order and did so, the court left the Order in place without alteration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 F. Supp. 3d 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luis-ischiu-v-gomez-garcia-mdd-2017.