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Colorado couple fighting to keep adopted daughter from being deported

Posted at 8:01 PM, Aug 15, 2018
and last updated 2018-08-15 20:01:14-04

Amy and Marco Becerra thought they had done everything right. They fell in love with an orphaned little girl in Peru, adopted her and brought her home.

Amy and Marco Becerra thought they had done everything right. They fell in love with an orphaned little girl in Peru, adopted her and brought her home.

But now the Colorado couple is fighting to keep their daughter from facing deportation at the end of the month.

The Becerras, both US citizens, were living in Peru in 2014 when they met the newborn girl they would name Angela. They fostered, then adopted her and eventually brought the girl back to their home in Aurora, Colorado, on a tourist visa. Amy Becerra works for the state of Colorado, while Marco Becerra, who is also a citizen of Peru, works for the federal government.

“She changed our lives. We became parents. And so it was no longer about our needs. It was what was best for Angela,” Amy Becerra said. “And coming back to the US was best for Angela hands down, largely because of education.”

READ: The Becerras put together this story of Angela.

But the couple’s plan to raise Angela, now 4, in Colorado is in jeopardy. Angela’s tourist visa expires at the end of the month and US Citizenship and Immigration Services has denied the child’s application for citizenship.

Unless there is some intervention, Angela will become an undocumented immigrant and face deportation.

“It’s inconceivable that a child of two citizen parents would have to live out their life as an undocumented alien in this country,” Amy Becerra told CNN affiliate KDVR.

The couple is stunned by the state of events and anxious about their future. But they are hopeful that the case will be resolved in their favor.

Amy Becerra said a US immigration official in Missouri told her Angela’s case has been reopened. Meanwhile, Rep. Mike Coffman said he will intervene on the family’s behalf.

Coffman, a Republican in an increasingly diverse metro Denver district, said in a statement that he met with Amy Becerra on Friday and since has worked on “getting answers.”

He said he was planning to meet Wednesday with the immigration agency’s regional director and has requested documentation on the case from the US Embassy in Lima and the State Department.

“I have full confidence that once this case is reviewed closely,” Coffman said, “we will have good news for the family — Angela is not going anywhere.”

From a Peruvian orphanage

The Becerras met Angela when she was just 12 days old and living in an orphanage.

“On that very day they literally placed her in our hands,” said Amy Becerra, who volunteered at the orphanage. “The orphanage director said, ‘Hey, wait a minute, will you guys take care of her?'”

The little girl had been abandoned by her mother, who lived in extreme poverty and had a developmental disability, Amy Becerra said.

“She needed medical care. Her first year of life she was often sick,” Amy Becerra said. “But medical care, diapers, formula, whatever needs she had, we took care of it.”

The couple was granted a provisional adoption in October 2014. The adoption was finalized in July 2017, leading the couple to make plans to return to the United States, Amy Becerra said. Angela was issued a six-month tourist visa early this year.

“We complied with the laws in both countries,” Amy Becerra said.

Fighting for citizenship

In its August 8 denial, the immigration agency said the couple “failed to demonstrate” that they had “legal custody” of Angela for two years before filing the petition for citizenship, Angela Becerra said.

The USCIS has not responded to a request for comment.

The denial also said the couple failed to demonstrate that the adoption does not fall under the Hague Convention. That’s an international treaty on adoptions forged to save children from being kidnapped and whisked across borders.

But the couple argues that the 2014 provisional adoption constitutes legal custody.

“It said we had not demonstrated we had full legal custody prior to July 2017,” Amy Becerra said. “But we had it prior to October 2014. We had it in four different court documents.”

She said the family will have to move back to Peru or keep Angela in the United States as an undocumented immigrant while they continue fighting for citizenship.

“I’ve encountered nothing but incompetency and conflicting information,” Amy Becerra said of the fight so far.

Still, they are keeping their fingers crossed.

If they get word that her citizenship is approved, Marco Becerra said, “We’re going to make a big party. A big, big party.”