Sabbagh Soterano v. Oropeza Aponte

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJune 2, 2023
Docket1:23-cv-20581
StatusUnknown

This text of Sabbagh Soterano v. Oropeza Aponte (Sabbagh Soterano v. Oropeza Aponte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabbagh Soterano v. Oropeza Aponte, (S.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA Case No.: 1:23-cv-20581-PAS ADEL JOSE SABBAGH SOTERANO Petitioner, v. LUISELENA OROPEZA APONTE Respondent. ee ORDER ON PETITION FOR RETURN PURSUANT TO THE HAGUE CONVENTION THIS MATTER is before the Court on a Verified Petition to Return Children to Venezuela, pursuant to the Hague Convention of the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (“the Convention”), and the International Child Abduction Remedies Act (ICARA”), 22 U.S.C. § 9001 et seq. Petitioner, Adel Jose Sabbagh Soterano, (“the Father”) seeks the return of his son A.S.O. and his daughter R.S.O (collectively “the Children”) to Venezuela. DE 1. The Father alleges that the Respondent Luiselena Oropeza Aponte (“the Mother”) wrongfully removed the Children. Jd. The Father asserts that he was exercising custodial parental rights under Venezuelan law and the Convention and ICARA mandate the immediate return of his Children. Jd. The Mother argues one of the Hague Convention exceptions apply, specifically that the Father was not exercising custodial rights, that the Children would be at risk of harm if they were to return, or because the Father’s filing is untimely, the Children are well-settled and object to returning to Venezuela. DE 17 at 4-7. The Court conducted a three-day evidentiary hearing from April 10, 2023 and through April 12, 2023. in which both sides presented testimony! and evidence, as well as

1 At the three-day evidentiary hearing, the Mother, the Father, Dr. Miguel Firpi, a qualified child psychologist, and Dr. William Rafael Medina, a Venezuelan legal expert, testified.

in camera discussion? with the Children. The Court also conducted a status conference on April 19, 2023 following the Mother’s April 18, 2023 immigration hearing. The Court considered the parties’ pleadings, exhibits, testimony, arguments, proposed findings of facts and conclusions of law [DE 46; DE 47], the in camera discussion with the Children, and the parties’ joint expert’s evaluation of the Children. The expert’s evaluation of the Children was stipulated to and submitted into evidence as Exhibit S. I. FINDINGS OF FACT a. The Parents’ Relationship The Children in this matter are the result of the Father’s extramarital affair and have never lived with their parents as a family. The Father and Mother are both from Barquisimeto, Venezuela and have known each other for more than twenty years. DE 42 at 104:15; DE 43 at 92:11-13. The Father is fourteen years the Mother’s senior. DE 43 at 92:15. The Father is a businessman,? and the Mother worked in her father’s business in Venezuela. Ex. S at 3. The Father and Mother began an intimate relationship in 2004 which lasted about a year when the Mother was about twenty-one years old. DE 42 at □

104:18; DE 43 at 93:14 — 94:4-5. The Father does not have children with his wife with whom he has been in a relationship with for about thirty-five years and married in 2008 or 2009. DE 42 at 104:20-22; DE 43 at 94:15. Despite the Father’s marriage, the Mother and Father began a more “formal” relationship in 2010. DE 43 at 94:10. The parents never

2 Dr. Firpi was present at the in camera discussion. A.S.O. is very comfortable speaking in English. A Spanish interpreter assisted the Court when communicating with R.S.O., who is more shy about speaking in English. However, R.S.O. became more comfortable as the discussion continued. 3 The Father testified that he used to have a furniture and household appliance store which he had to close down. DE 42 at 125:23 — 126:5. The Father testified that he is currently self-employed in the same line of work. Id. However, it is unclear from the record what exactly the Father does currently, because he only testified to what he used to do for work, specifically buy home appliances from Miami, Florida that he would ship to Venezuela. Id. at 126:12-22. The Father does not frequently travel to the United States anymore. Id.

lived together when they both resided in Venezuela. Ex. S at 3. The Mother always lived with her parents. Ex. § at 3; DE 43 at 96:22-23. Their first child, R.S.O., was born in 2014. DE 31 at 6. Their second child, A.S.O., was born in 2016. Id. There is no dispute that they are the natural parents of the Children. Id. at 4. Under Venezuelan law, unmarried parents living in separate households have equal parental rights and responsibilities. DE 43 at 78:11-14. The parents’ relationship experienced many ebbs and flows. There is no evidence to suggest that the parents’ relationship status impacted the Father's time or contact with the Children. However, if the Father was “unhappy” with the Mother, he would refrain from bringing groceries and other items to the Children. DE 43 at 101:23-25. The relationship between the two became increasingly more tense and the Father became verbally abusive with the Mother. DE 44 at 75:17. The maternal grandmother forbade the Father from entering their home in Barquisimeto because of how poorly the Father treated the Mother. Ex. S at 7. The Father installed a GPS tracking device on the Mother’s car in 2012 without her knowledge. DE 43 at 9:2-5. The Father testified that the tracking device was for “safety.” DE 42 at 174:20-21. However, the Mother believed it was the Father's attempt at controlling her whereabouts. Ex. S at 8. The Father would appear at locations where the Mother already was and would ask who she was with. DE 44 at 10:20-22. At one point, the Father sent the Mother a picture of various guns, and told the Mother he understood why a man would kill his partner. Jd. at 17:8-10; 91:5-8. The Mother became fearful that the Father would kill her. Id. at 91:7-8. A few months before the Mother and Children left Venezuela, she and the Father were no longer in a relationship. Id. at 91:15. b. Children’s Life in Venezuela from 2014 to 2021 The Children were both born in Barquisimeto, Venezuela and lived there until around July 8, 2021. DE 31 at 6; DE 46 at § 3; DE 47 at 2. In Venezuela, the Children

always lived with their Mother and their maternal grandparents. DE 43 at 102:21-23. The Father materially supported the children by paying for food, clothing, school, health insurance, and after school activities. DE 46 at { 5. The Children saw their Father frequently. The Father took A.S.O. to baseball practice a few times. DE 42 at 60:7-11. The Mother took A.S.O. to baseball practice most of the time. Ex. S at 6. The Father took the Children horseback riding once. DE 42 at 60:7-11. The Children were too young to participate in other extracurricular activities. Id. at 124:20-22. The COVID-19 pandemic also limited the types of activities the Children could participate in. Id. at 41:3-10. The Mother dropped off the Children at school every day. DE 44 at 7:2-4. The Father would pick the Children up from school, but not every day. DE 42 at 125:17. When the Children spent time with their Father after school, it was usually spent at the Father's apartment or their paternal grandmother’s home. Jd. at 109:25-120:2. When the Children were with their Father, he cooked for them, bathed them, and spent quality time with them. DE 44 at 65:24. The Father did not help the Children with their homework. Ex. S at 23. The Children always returned to their Mother’s house around 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. DE 42 at 171:18. The Children stayed with their paternal grandmother for one week when the Mother went to Caracas, Venezuela, and in that timeframe the Father only spent two □

nights with the Children. Ex. S at 6. Other than that occasion, the Children never spent an overnight with their Father. Id. The Father never sought to formalize a custody arrangement with the Mother, and was in agreement with the way the time was spent

when the Children were in Barquisimeto.

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Bluebook (online)
Sabbagh Soterano v. Oropeza Aponte, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabbagh-soterano-v-oropeza-aponte-flsd-2023.