I sat facing each person who made their call. It was incredibly uncomfortable. As soon as I’d pass the phone over, the person would break down in tears. There was nowhere else to look except in their eyes or down @ my lap. I wanted nothing more than to console them, but couldn’t.
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One of the women I was processing came from Cuba. Border patrol took her passport & sent her back to Mexico. She called her sister & explained how she had nothing. She is unable to receive money without her passport and has nothing but the clothes on her back. She was hysterical.
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I asked my contact how often and why this happens - they didn’t know, but said it happens quite frequently. Can someone please look into this for me? How can this be legal?
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We had to tell the woman secretly that we could help her find a place to stay, as the facility doesn’t allow it. So we told her to wait for us outside. Without shelter, she’d be on the streets with no money, no identification, no phone, and not a clue of what to do.
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Things unfortunately took a turn for the worse. We left the facility and walked back to the parking garage for our car. The Cuban woman was standing near a bus stop outside and we told her to keep waiting for us. When we pulled out, she was walking w/ a man on his phone.
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The man was well-dressed in pressed pants and I’m guessing in his 60’s. We told the woman to get in our car. She told us, “This man says he can find a safe place for me to be. He says he can help me until I find out what to do.” This all took place right in front of the facility.
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My contact said we couldn’t get caught taking someone by the facility or we wouldn’t be allowed back to. So we quickly drove around the block to get in front of the Cuban woman again. By the time we made it around, the woman was gone. She was kidnapped right in front of us.
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There are two different kinds of groups who prey on the most desperate once they are sent back... coyotes & polleros. I asked my contact how to spell the latter and they requested I not even say the name out loud.
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We are now attempting to reach out to her sister who she spoke with earlier. At least to pass on a message of where a safe location would be for her to meet up with us at. It is hard to describe this feeling.
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Replying to @andrewkimmel
Are these people being taken for prostitution or ransom from US relatives? How are they ending up where they are?
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Prostitution. This woman was in her 30’s & was trying to reach her sister in the US. I came across a horrific article from 2010 that goes into what they do w/ women. Again, this isn’t a new problem, but it only gets worse when the US turns more away.https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jan/11/mexican-woman-border-child-traffic …
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andrew.kimmel@gmail.com