May 10, 2010

Traffic stop puts KSU student in jail as an illegal immigrant/ICE releases illegal KSU student

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Marietta Daily Journal

Traffic stop puts KSU student in jail as an illegal immigrant
by Kathryn Dobies

May 1, 2010

KENNESAW – Kennesaw State University student, Jessica Colotl, 21, will be heading back to her home country of Mexico after her worst nightmare came true when her undocumented status was discovered following a routine traffic stop by university police on her way to class.

On March 29, at about 11 a.m. as Colotl was pulling her gold Honda Civic into a parking lot on KSU’s campus, she was stopped for what KSU Officer J.K. Kimsey described as impeding the flow of traffic. When Kimsey asked the senior student to present her driver’s license and she was unable to, he “cut her a break” according to KSU officials, and asked her to come to his office the following day with the license, instead of arresting her on the spot.

According to Colotl’s friends, however, the police officer wasn’t very accommodating. Instead, they said he demanded she report to his office the next day, even going as far as threatening her that “he would go issue an arrest warrant and look for her during her classes,” stated a press release written by two of Colotl’s friends and fellow sorority sisters, Claudia Caycho and Lila Parra.

Caycho and Parra both said that as instructed, Colotl reported to Officer Kimsey’s office on March 30 in hopes that she could explain to him her situation.

Colotl is an undocumented citizen who has lived in the U.S. since she was 7 years old. Her parents came to Atlanta illegally in 1996 from southern Mexico to escape a life of severe poverty. While friends say the family moved around most of Colotl’s childhood, she eventually graduated from Lakeside High School in DeKalb County with a GPA of 3.8, according to Parra. She enrolled at KSU and began taking classes there in the fall of 2006 as a freshman.

For the university’s part, KSU officials said Colotl came to them not as an undocumented citizen, but as a Georgia High School graduate.

Although Colotl explained the situation to Kimsey and presented him with a Mexican driver’s license and an expired Mexican Passport, the officer still arrested her for failure to present a valid driver’s license and took her to Cobb County Jail where she was eventually released to Immigrations Customs Enforcement in Atlanta.

Parra, who met Colotl at the university in 2007, said that as a high schooler Colotl realized her parents brought her to the country illegally and decided to file for documents for herself and a younger sibling. But Parra said she still has yet to receive them.

“Her parents, they didn’t have that higher education, essentially her parents are ignorant,” Parra said. “She took it upon herself to do that for herself and her younger sibling. She was like, ‘I’ve been here forever, I consider America my country.'”

Friends say once she was in jail, Colotl was able to obtain legal representation with Kazuma Sonoda, of the Sonoda Law Firm, an immigration attorney in Atlanta. Sonoda did not return repeated phone calls on Friday regarding his client.

Arlethia Perry-Johnson, Special Assistant to the President for External Affairs at KSU said the university learned about Colotl’s case on April 29 from administrators in its Student Success and Enrollment Services division and its chief diversity officer. Perry-Johnson said the school has been in direct contact with the national president of Colotl’s sorority as well as her attorney. But the university stands by Kimsey and claims the officer followed the correct protocol when addressing the situation.

“She (Colotl) was arrested on the subsequent day; the officer could have arrested her on the first day,” Perry-Johnson said. “The officer actually cut her a break by allowing her to come back and present the license that she said she had. … None of that negates the very unfortunate situation that our student is now faced with.”

Caycho, a friend of three years and University of Georgia graduate who met Colotl through their Latin sorority Lambda Theta Alpha, said that Colotl was denied bond because she refused to sign papers without her attorney present. She was then taken to a larger immigration jail in Gadsden, Ala. on the night of April 1.

On April 25, Caycho, who currently works at an immigration law office in Atlanta, visited Colotl at the Gadsden prison and spoke to her through the jail’s video chat. She said Colotl was hoping to get bond to return to KSU for the next few months until she graduates in Dec., but that hope is now only memory.

On Wednesday, Colotl had an immigration hearing in Atlanta and was denied bond, but granted voluntary departure, instead of being deported. According to Caycho, Colotl will have to leave the county in 20 days via her own transportation, but she will be able to return to her home region on southern Mexico. If she would have been deported, she would have been taken back to Mexico and dropped off anywhere south of the border, making it difficult for her to get in touch with her father who is currently living in Mexico.

“Literally she just wanted to graduate and then she was just going to go back home,” Parra said. “Her ultimate goal was to do things right, because she knew the way her parents brought her here was not right. It’s sad because it’s probably 85 percent into the school year; we’re starting finals next week. She’s not leaving for another 20 days, so she could have even finished out the semester.”

Perry-Johnson said the president of KSU, Dr. Daniel S. Papp, even provided an affidavit of support to Colotl’s attorney, stating that she is a student in good standing with the university and reporting that the university wanted to do anything they could, within the law, to help her obtain a college degree.

Caycho and Parra both said despite the bad news, Colotl remains in good spirits. She asked her two friends to tell her story and warn other illegal students to obtain their documents as soon as possible to avoid going through the same kind of nightmare.

“Yesterday in her hearing she (Colotl) said I know that the judge ruled against me and I want you guys to tell my story. I know that there’s a lot of Hispanic students out there like me,” Parra said of her friend on Thursday.

The two friends, along with the help of the Georgia-Latino Alliance for Human Rights have organized a march on the Georgia Capitol for Colotl today at 10 a.m. The event, ‘I march for Jessica,’ intends to bring attention to Colotl’s case and ask that she be allowed to finish her college career in the U.S.

“I’ve never seen anybody fight so hard for their education,” Parra said “She pays for it all on her own and pays out of state tuition. She doesn’t want to just get by – she wants to get that 4.0 GPA. …We want other students to not get discouraged by situations like this, and for them to move forward. There’s so many students, they just want to be educated, because they realize their family is not.”

HERE
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Marietta Daily Journal

May 8, 2010

ICE releases illegal KSU student

KENNESAW – Jessica Colotl, 21, an illegal immigrant enrolled at Kennesaw State University, was released on Wednesday from the Etowah County Detention Center in Gadsden, Ala., and granted a deferred action for one year to return to her studies at the university.

In a statement released Friday, KSU officials said that according to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the deferral was an act of discretion by ICE and in no way changes Colotl’s status as an illegal immigrant.

“According to the deferral letter from ICE, Ms. Colotl remains an ‘alien illegally or unlawfully within the U.S.’ and would be subject to removal proceedings if the conditions of her deferral are not met,” according to the statement e-mailed to the Journal by Fraces Harrison, the university’s director of communications.

Dr. Dan Papp, president of the university, is quoted in the release as saying, “This is great news for Ms. Colotl, her family and friends and for the KSU community. We are especially thrilled she will be allowed to continue her studies here at KSU. We would also like to thank everyone who was involved, both on campus and within the larger community, in helping Ms. Colotl.”

The university was actively trying to help Colotl while she was jailed. The university’s lawyer reached out to a former Consul General of Mexico’s consulate in Atlanta to offer assistance, and the top student affairs officer inquired with the national president of Colotl’s Latina sorority about how the school could help.

School officials have not determined when Colotl will return to classes on campus.

Colotl was stopped for a traffic violation on KSU’s campus on March 29 and cited for impeding the flow of traffic. She was arrested the following day when she could not present a valid driver’s license.

She was driving a gold Honda Accord registered in Georgia. It is not clear who owns the vehicle or whether Colotl was an insured driver of it.

Colotl was taken to Cobb County Jail, and then turned over to immigration authorities. Claudia Caycho, a friend and sorority sister of Colotl’s for three years, reported that she was taken to the larger immigration detention center in Gadsden on April 1.

Colotl reportedly had an immigration hearing in Atlanta on April 28, where she was denied bond, but granted voluntary departure. According to Caycho, at that time Colotl was ordered to leave the county in 20 days via her own transportation, instead of being deported.

In an email obtained by the Journal, dated May 6, Xochitl Bervera, communications director for the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, wrote to supporters that Colotl had been released and was back home in Duluth with her mother.

“The fight is not over,” Bervera wrote. “At this moment, we only know that ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) has granted a deferred action. Work remains in the courts before a real victory for Jessica’s freedom is won.”

In an attempt to contact Colotl, the Journal visited the home address in Duluth she provided Cobb Police on her jail book-in sheet on March 30. The woman who answered the door at the residence in Century Park Apartments said that she still receives mail in Colotl’s name, although she has lived there for five months and has never met the 21-year-old KSU student.

The Journal also tried calling an Atlanta-area code phone number Colotl provided to the jail, but the number was no longer in service. Repeated calls to her attorney, Kazuma Sonoda, of the Sonoda Law Firm, an immigration attorney in Atlanta, have gone unanswered.

Efforts to contact Bervera and Colotl’s two sorority sisters, Caycho and Lila Parra, who helped organize a march in honor of the KSU student on May 1, have also been unsuccessful.

Colotl has apparently lived in the United States since she was 7. According to her friends, Colotl’s parents came to Atlanta illegally in 1996 from southern Mexico to escape a life of severe poverty. Friends say the family moved around most of Colotl’s childhood, but she eventually graduated from Lakeside High School in DeKalb County with a 3.8 grade-point average, according to Parra. She enrolled at KSU and began taking classes there in fall 2006.

KSU officials say she was admitted to the university as an in-state student because she had graduated from a Georgia high school.

HERE