Toth v. Toth-Ledesma

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 29, 2024
Docket3:23-cv-01258
StatusUnknown

This text of Toth v. Toth-Ledesma (Toth v. Toth-Ledesma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toth v. Toth-Ledesma, (M.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

| IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT | FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA | ALEX TOTH and GLADYS : No. 3:23cv1258 | MARTINEZ-TOTH, : | Petitioners : (Judge Munley) □□□ : ALEXANDRIA TOTH-LEDESMA and | MICHAEL LEDESMA, :

| MEMORANDUM | Before the court is a petition (Doc. 1) filed by Alex Toth (“Father”) and | Gladys Martinez-Toth (“Mother,” collectively “Parents”) for the return of their | daughter [in to the United Mexican | States (“Mexico”) pursuant to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of Child | Abduction art. 11, Oct. 25, 1980, T.1.A.S. No. 11,670, 1343 U.N.T.S. 89 (“Hague | Convention” or “Convention”) and the International Child Abduction Remedies Act (“ICARA”), 22 U.S.C. §§ 9001 et seq. Respondents Alexandria Toth-Ledesma (“Paternal Grandmother’) and

| Michael Ledesma (“Paternal Grandfather,” collectively “Paternal Grandparents”) | oppose the petition. (Doc. 15). | is presently located with Paternal | Grandparents in Monroe County, Pennsylvania within the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania. Paternal

Grandparents assert an affirmative defense to the return of aa to Mexico, maintaining that there is a grave risk that her return would expose her to physical or psychological harm. The court conducted a full evidentiary hearing on June 12, 2024. (See Doc. 37, Hearing Transcript (“H.T”); Docs. 39-1-39-19, Petitioners Exhs; Docs. 40-1— 40-17, Respondents Exhs.). Having reviewed the parties’ post-hearing submissions, including their proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, (Docs. 41-43), and having carefully considered Paternal Grandparents’ grave risk assertion in light of the numerous conflicts in the evidence and testimony, this matter is ripe for a decision and the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law: Findings of Fact a. Background 1) {EE was bor in Puebla, Mexico on I 2020. (Doc. 4-3, Exh. D to Petition, Birth Cert.). 2) Mother was born in Mexico and is a citizen of Mexico. (Docs. 39-2, Marriage Cert. 39-3, Travel Auth.). 3) | Father was born in the United States of America (“United States”) and is a United States citizen. (Doc. 37, H.T. at 12:8-9).

| 4) | | is a Mexican citizen and a United States citizen. (Doc. 39-4,

United States Dept. of State Consular Report of Birth Abroad). 5) Mother and Father were married on or about February 15, 2020. (39-2, | Marriage Cert.). 16) Mother and Father have another child, a. two years of age, who is ‘a: younger sibling. (Doc. 37, H.T. at 12:5-7). 7) | Father currently resides with Mother and naa in Villahermosa, | Tabasco, Mexico. (Id. at 11:10-12:4). | 8) Mother, Father, and a share the residence with other family

| members, a maternal grandmother Gladys Martinez (“Maternal

| Grandmother”), as well as aa : uncle and cousin. (Id.) |9) | Father has resided in Mexico since 2016. (Id. at 12:10-12). | 10) Paternal Grandmother and Paternal Grandfather reside in Kunkletown, Monroe County, Pennsylvania. (Id. at 123:22-23). | 11) Paternal Grandmother works for the United Nations in finance and human | resources relative to peacekeeping missions. (Id. at 151:18-21). 12) Mother works as a graphic artist. (Id. at 91:18-92:1). | 13) Father was unemployed at the time of the hearing. (Id. at 12:15-16). |

| 14) He previously provided remote marketing services to small businesses | located in the United States and other English-speaking countries. (Id. at 19:20-

| 24). | 15) Father speaks Spanish and English. (See id. at 19:24-20:7). 116) Mother and Maternal Grandmother speak Spanish and are not fluent in

| English. (Id. at 89, 120:10-13).

17) Paternal Grandmother does not speak Spanish. (Id. at 167:21-25). 18) Paternal Grandfather speaks Spanish. (Id. at 168:1-5). | b. Paternal Grandparents’ First Visit to Mexico |19) Paternal Grandparents visited Mother, Father, and i in Tabasco,

| Mexico in September 2021 over a seven-day period. (Id. at 128:2-3, 150:5-11). |20) Paternal Grandmother testified that, during that trip, she observed | “constant drug use [and] drug paraphernalia all over the place[,]” including use by | Father, Mother, and ae: uncle. (id. at 128:4-14, 146:19-6). | 21) a would have been approximately eleven (11) months old at that | time. 22) Mother would have been pregnant with a sibling a at that | time.

|

123) Despite such testimony, Paternal Grandparents did not report Parents’ drug use to Mexican authorities or to child protective services agencies in Mexico. (Id. at 151:12-15). |24) If there was a question regarding a : safety during that visit, Paternal Grandparents did not intervene. c. Father’s Criminal Charges in Mexico 25) In February 2022, Mother, Father, and a visited a store in |Villahermosa, Mexico. (Id. at 34:18-36-3, 54:17-24). 126) Per Father, a security officer at the store aggressively requested that wear a mask, Father refused, and the officer denied their entrance to the store. (Id. at 34:18-36-3). 27) Father testified that he questioned the security officer’s gender. (Id.) | 28) Father reengaged the officer to ask if the officer was male or female. (Id.) | 29) The security officer used pepper spray on Father upon such questioning. | (Id.) 30) Father responded by punching the security officer in the face. (Id.) 31) a was nearby with Mother when the altercation occurred per | Father’s testimony. (Id.) 32) Mexican authorities arrested Father and he spent three weeks in jail according to his testimony. (Id. at 55:25-56:3).

|33) Per Paternal Grandmother, aa was born while Father was in prison. | (Id. at 149:9-14). |34) Paternal Grandmother testified that Father fled to Puebla, Mexico rather

| than face the charges. (Id. at 124:2-20). {35) Per Paternal Grandmother, Mother and Father (and presumably fia land a) were hiding from Mexican authorities in a small apartment at that time. (Id. at 124:21-23). |36) Paternal Grandparents did not travel to Mexico immediately following | Father’s incident with the security officer. 37) would have been approximately seventeen (17) months old at the | time of the incident. | 38) Ultimately, per his testimony, Father’s criminal matter in Mexico resolved

| when Father agreed to pay the security guard reparations through Mexico's restorative justice laws. (Id. at 35:18-22). | 39) Father proffered a document indicating that he does not have a criminal

| record in Mexico. (Doc. 39-12). d. Paternal Grandparents Bring | to the United States | 40) Per Father, he kept in touch with Paternal Grandmother through frequent Video calls. (Doc. 37, H.T. at 25:20-26:4).

| 41) Paternal Grandmother also testified that she was frequently in contact with | Father after the incident with the security officer occurred. (Id. at 125:1-6). | 42) Text messages proffered by the respondents confirm such regular communication between Father and Paternal Grandmother in May 2022. (Doc.

| 40-5). | 43) Such messages reflect a closeness between Father and Paternal

| Grandmother. (Id.)

| 44) Father was fleeing criminal charges in Mexico at that time, Paternal | Grandmother assisted Father financially per the text messages. (Id.) | 45) According to Father, Paternal Grandmother requested that i come to the United States for a vacation. (Doc. 37, H.T. at 25:23-26:15). | 46) Per Father, he agreed that i could visit Paternal Grandmother for | several months as approached her second birthday. (Id. at 26:5-19). 47) Paternal Grandmother testified that Father called her to pick up i | and her sibling a to take them to the United States because Father | planned to return there with Mother. (Id. at 124:21-23),.

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Toth v. Toth-Ledesma, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toth-v-toth-ledesma-pamd-2024.