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NBC News
a day ago
- NBC News
Immigrant victims of domestic violence scared to seek help amid ICE deportation threat
A woman who claims she was assaulted by her boyfriend is now in a detention center in Louisiana after he called the police to accuse her of assault and then contacted Immigration and Customs Enforcement and told them she didn't have legal immigration status, the woman's mother alleged to Noticias Telemundo. In a separate case from April, a Salvadoran woman in Houston called 911 to report being a victim of domestic violence. Legal records reviewed by the Houston Chronicle indicate that police then called ICE. The women's stories are not unique, activists and experts tell Noticias Telemundo, explaining that in some cases abusers use immigration status to control or abuse their victims — who come from all socioeconomic backgrounds. Experts say victims are more fearful now amid the Trump administration's immigration crackdown and recent immigration raids. Isaret Jeffers, founder of the Tree Collective, which supports farmworkers in the Tampa, Florida, area, said several undocumented women farmworkers have told her they're enduring abuse from their partners for fear that reporting them will lead to their deportation. Isabel Martínez, manager of the social services program at the Tahirih Justice Center, focused on helping victims of gender-based violence, said women fear that 'not only will nothing happen to the abuser, but now I will have to be deported, or be detained, or get into trouble if I call the police.' Since January, Martínez said, women have told her organization that they'd decided they couldn't call the police and were too afraid to call the group because they feared it would have to call the police and report the abuse. 'Since the deportations began and they're targeting people more severely, that's where we've seen people become more afraid,' Martínez said. 'They're thinking twice about reporting.' Though women represent 84% of victims of spousal abuse and 86% of victims of intimate partner abuse, according to the Department of Justice's Bureau of Statistics, anyone can be a victim of abuse, regardless of gender, age, sexual orientation or national origin. Fear of reporting — and deadly consequences Immigrant victims' fear of reporting crimes against them is not new. As early as 2019, the Tahirih Justice Center said its social workers had observed that women often refused to report gender-based violence for fear of deportation. In a national survey released by the Alliance for Immigrant Survivors this June, 76% of immigrant advocates reported that victims of domestic violence were afraid to call the police for fear of ICE. It also found that half of immigration advocates had worked with immigrants who had dropped their criminal or civil cases for fear of deportation. A similar study of two U.S. hospital emergency departments (one in San Francisco and one in Oakland, California) found almost 1 in 5 (19%) domestic violence victims avoided going to the police for fear that the police would report them to immigration authorities. Francesco Duberli, CEO and founder of Survivors Pathway, a Miami-based center that offers counseling and legal help for survivors of domestic violence, sexual abuse and human trafficking, said that 'what we're seeing is an exaggerated, and also very sad, increase in the psychological aspect of being terrified of immigration authorities.' ICE reopened the Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) office, created during Trump's first administration. Its main focus is to provide help to victims of crimes perpetrated by immigrants and to 'acknowledge and serve the needs of victims and families who have been affected by crimes committed by individuals with a nexus to immigration violations,' according to its website. Under one of the 'frequently asked questions,' it states that it 'provides releasable information to all victims of crime with a nexus to immigration, regardless of the immigration status of the victim.' Noticias Telemundo contacted ICE and the Department of Homeland Security about the office, but didn't receive a response. VOICE said it did not have a spokesperson available and referred any questions to its website. A failure to report domestic abuse can have fatal consequences: More than 50% of homicides committed by intimate partners were preceded by violence, and in cases where the victim is a woman, the figure rises to 75%, according to studies by the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Houston, an immigrant woman who is not being identified because she fears reprisals told Noticias Telemundo of a November 2024 incident in which she felt her life was in danger. She recalled clutching the steering wheel while driving as her partner was grabbing it and threatening to kill her. She said the man, who is her child's father and had been drinking, poured a drink on her and then punched her in the stomach and later in the head, rendering her unconscious for a time. She said she later drove to a friend's house, called the police and reported the violence. The police arrested him, and upon his release from jail on that charge, he was detained by ICE and eventually deported. In November, following the violent episode, the woman, a Mexican immigrant, applied for a U visa for victims of crimes such as domestic violence, and is awaiting its approval. Immigrant victims' challenges, risks Certain factors make it hard for immigrant victims of domestic violence to leave or report their abusive situations, including being financially dependent on their abuser and having children who depend on them. The Houston woman's partner threatened to take away her son, and the stress affected both her and her baby. 'That was the saddest part of this whole process,' the woman said. 'He was a baby, he was a 1 1/2-year-old. If I didn't eat, he didn't want to eat either. He knew when I was sad. He knew when I was crying. And you say, 'How could such a little person know I'm sick?'' Leaving a partner and filing a complaint with the court system 'requires reflection and asking, 'What's going to happen next? How do I pay the rent? How do I feed my children?'' said Duberli, of Survivors Pathway. If the children belong to the abuser, he can file for legal custody, which can cost thousands of dollars. 'It's a conglomeration of socioeconomic and psychological factors, and when you put them all together, you realize they become an immense wall that prevents immigrants from seeking justice,' he said. Low-income women have a higher incidence of domestic violence. Of the women who sought legal assistance after experiencing intimate partner violence, 85% lived at or below 200% of the federal poverty level, according to a 2024 study by the University of Cambridge. Victims also fear that their partner will attack them further if they report it, or they feel ashamed and believe they're to blame for their situation. A key factor, according to therapists, is victims' self-esteem: As the Texas immigrant woman described it, 'Feeling like you're nobody' as psychological abuse escalates, with taunts like 'What are you going to do without me?' and 'How are you going to get ahead?' she said. Some victims have suffered abuse in home countries where domestic violence is more normalized and they're used to abusers having impunity, Duberli said. Martínez, of the Tahirih Justice Center, said the first step to leaving an abusive relationship is to break the strong psychological control the perpetrator can have over the victim. 'You don't deserve abuse,' she said. It's also common for immigrant victims to lack a support network of family or friends in a country with a foreign culture and language. Some immigrants face greater risk if they rely on an abusive spouse to obtain legal status, as the American Immigration Council (AIC) has stated on its website, since abusers can use immigration status as a 'tool to silence their victims' and may delay, withdraw or fail to file petitions for their relatives or threaten to report them to authorities. Emergency exits: The U visa and the VAWA petition For victims of violent crimes such as domestic abuse who can demonstrate cooperation with authorities in the investigation or prosecution of the crime, there is the U visa. If approved, the applicant receives a work permit valid for four years, and after three years, they can apply for permanent residence (green card). However, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services recently told Noticias Telemundo that 'a good faith determination on a pending application for U nonimmigrant status does not protect a foreign national from immigration enforcement.' Duberli said victims can also file a petition under the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). Those who file a complaint, Duberli explains, can continue their immigration process without the abuser's involvement or knowledge. In the case of the Texas immigrant woman, she cooperated with authorities regarding the crime, a key step to getting her U visa status approved and regularized. For now, the woman said, 'I continue working on myself, on my self-esteem — I continue with everything. Moving forward.'
Yahoo
10-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Texas allows certain children to get married. Lawmakers may close that loophole.
LUFKIN — Child marriages in Texas could end this year, as state lawmakers debate a proposal that would close a loophole from a 2017 law that allows certain 16- and 17-year-olds to wed. House Bill 168 by state Rep. Jon Rosenthal, a Houston Democrat, would also nullify all existing marriage licenses involving minors, including those who move into the state after being married elsewhere. The Texas House could vote on the matter as early as Saturday. For it to become law, the legislation would also need approval from the Senate. Marriage among teenagers is rare after lawmakers took steps in 2017 to curb the practice. Still, Rosenthal believes the practice must be abolished entirely. 'My first concern was with a handful of marriages that we have in this state over the last few years where 40- to 50-year-old men are marrying 16 to 17 year old girls,' Rosenthal said. 'While it was only a couple or a few cases a year, I just saw that as horribly egregious.' Opponents to the legislation told a House committee in April that legal avenues for young people to get married were important for teen mothers. At least one legal expert also suggested the provision that nullifies out-of-state marriages violated the U.S. Constitution. [New state law seeks to reduce the number of child brides in Texas] The proposal is backed by the Tahirih Justice Center, a national nonprofit advocacy group that has advocated for the abolition of child marriages nationwide. Since the center's campaign began 10 years ago, 13 states and Washington D.C. have outright banned child marriage. The center also backed the successful campaign to drastically limit the types of marriages involving minors allowable in Texas in 2017. The change to Texas law dramatically reduced the number of people under 18 getting married. The 2017 change required a minor to be emancipated before they were married. The rates of child marriages declined significantly, according to data from the Texas Department of Health and Human Services. There were more than 200 marriages involving minors in Texas in 2016 alone. There were less than a dozen marriages involving minors in 2021, the latest data available. 'We always knew that this law would need to be revisited, because it is an imperfect law, even if it's having a really positive effect,' said Casey Swegman, Tahirih's director of public policy. 'One child married is too many, and the only way to get to that is to set a bright line of 18.' Victims of child marriages feel the consequences for the rest of their lives, even if they do divorce, according to a report by Child USA, a nonprofit think tank for policies on children's issues. Girls who marry before 19 are 50% more likely to drop out of school than their unmarried counterparts. By and large, these girls will have more children, fewer lifetime earnings and experience more intimate partner violence. Brigitte Combs, a survivor of a 1984 child marriage that took place in Hays County, has become an advocate to end the practice. She has been outspoken in Virginia and Washington, D.C., where they passed laws prohibiting such marriages. She wants to see her home state put an end to the practice that set her life on a much more difficult, and often terrifying, trajectory. Combs' mother first attempted to marry her off at 11, she said. Two years later, she met the 35-year-old man who would become her husband. He bought her her first milkshake and took her to her first movie. She was pregnant and married by 15. 'I was scared,' Combs said. 'I was scared because now we're doing this legal thing. I was standing there and the judge, she even asked me if this was something I wanted to do. What am I going to say? No? No. This is not what I want to do. My parents were standing there.' Opponents in April argued that minors ought to be permitted to marry, especially if they're pregnant. 'I do not think that single-parent households are as beneficial to raising children as a two-parent household. Please oppose this bill,' George Brian Vachris, a former high school teacher from Houston ISD, said at a hearing. Cecilia Wood, a family law attorney from Austin, argued it took away parental rights. Marriages involving minors were legal in all 50 states until 2017, according to Unchained At Last, a survivor-led nonprofit organization dedicated to ending forced marriage and child marriage in the U.S. Between 2000 and 2018, more than 40,000 Texas children – mostly girls – were married, the organization reported. Tahirih and other organizations took up the mantle to end the practice, which has resulted in 13 states outright banning child marriages. Other states, like Texas, installed stricter guidelines for marriages involving minors. The age floor in Texas was raised to 16, and the law requires the child to be emancipated first. But Texas' emancipation laws don't offer much protection for the children they impact and there is no guidance from the state on how to determine the best interest of the child, Swegman said. 'Anyone who's getting married in Texas now represents the most vulnerable, most groomed and most coerced person,' Swegman said. 'They had to get through this process of emancipation for the purposes of being married as a child.' Young women still married men several decades their senior in the last few years. In 2021, the latest data available, one Angelina County girl married a man 20 years her senior. And in 2020, a girl from Kaufman County married a man 31 years her senior. Rosenthal was prepared to narrow the legally acceptable age gap between those wishing to marry minors to three years or less, and saw widespread support among his colleagues. But his mind changed when he spoke with advocates. 'The statistics are staggering,' Rosenthal said. 'The divorce rate is super high. The suicide attempt rate is high. These young ladies that get married, especially in rural areas, even with the sort of consent and support of their families, often feel trapped in the marriage.' Disclosure: Texas Department of Health and Human Services has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!


Associated Press
06-05-2025
- Politics
- Associated Press
Adults can still marry teens at 15 after death of proposed ban in Hawaii
Fifteen-year-olds can't get a driver's license or vote in elections, but they can get married in Hawaiʻi – one of a shrinking number of states that allows underage marriage. A bill that would've outlawed the practice, raising the legal age of marriage to 18 without exceptions, passed the Hawaiʻi House of Representatives this year but failed to gain traction in the Senate. It's the seventh year in a row Hawaiʻi lawmakers have considered a child marriage ban without passing legislation despite a push by national advocacy groups to end the practice. Under Hawaiʻi law, 16- and 17-year-olds can get married with parental permission, and youth as young as 15 can marry with a judge's approval. 'It's a shame, first and foremost for the children of Hawaiʻi who remain in danger of child marriage and all the harm that comes along with it,' said Alex Goyette, public policy manager for the Tahirih Justice Center, a nonprofit advocacy group for women and girls. The bill's main obstacle in the Legislature is Sen. Joy San Buenaventura, who chairs the health and human services committee and declined to give the measure a hearing. In a statement, the senator said marriage can provide benefits to youth who are trying to escape an abusive family situation, are pregnant or want to get on their partner's health insurance. 'I am always leery of national advocacy groups who just want to notch Hawaiʻi as a win without taking into account the culture and circumstances here,' San Buenaventura said. More than 800 minors got married in Hawaiʻi between 2000 and 2022, according to Hawaiʻi Department of Health data analyzed by the advocacy organization Unchained At Last. The vast majority – 686 of them – were girls marrying adult men. Most of the child brides were 16 or 17, but seven of them were as young as 15. On average, Hawaiʻi youth married adults between three and five years older than them, according to Unchained At Last's data analysis. In written testimony , the health department characterized most of the state's underage marriages as 'teens marrying teens.' However, the law puts no limits on the age of an adult spouse and there were outliers in which teens married adults 10 to 21 years their senior, the health department testified. Child marriage in Hawaiʻi is rare, and getting rarer. From 2005 to 2014, there were 329 underage marriages involving residents, and from 2015 through 2024, there were 90, the health department told Civil Beat. In one 10-year sample of 230,000 marriages in which both partners claimed Hawaiʻi residency, the health department identified only 216 – 153 brides and 63 grooms – who were minors. At a rate of 0.09%, Hawaiʻi isn't one of the states where these marriages are most common. Still, national groups are seeking to end child marriage entirely. They argue the arrangements can trap youth in relationships that may be exploitative and difficult, legally and practically, for them to escape. 'Even if 49 other states ban child marriage,' Goyette said, 'all American kids are still vulnerable as long as a predator can buy a plane ticket to Hawaiʻi.' A Bride At 15 For Iris Lorenzo, getting married at 15 meant she had to grow up fast. The ʻAiea resident was a sophomore at Kamehameha Schools in 1975 when she met the man who would become her husband, Edward 'Bully' Lorenzo. He was 21. Bully proposed just a few months after the couple connected at a local car show. 'He just felt it was right,' she said, 'that I was the right one.' Iris said she was scared but said yes at the urging of her mother, who was in poor health and worried her only child would be orphaned. Iris' parents were both older, she said, and her father had health issues. 'She was kind of like, trying to have me grow up, but also have somebody who would take care of me and be there for me,' Lorenzo told Civil Beat. 'Mom said, 'This would be good for you.'' Being a married high schooler was tough, Lorenzo said. She almost immediately got pregnant and had her first son, which made preparing for her final exams a major challenge. 'I'm like, 'Baby, please, go to sleep, so Mommy can study,'' she recalled. 'It was difficult. I'm not going to lie.' At 16, she had another baby. At 17, another. In between the second and third, somehow, Lorenzo was able to graduate from Kamehameha. But by then, she was socially isolated. All her friends abandoned her after she got married, she said, so her husband was the only person she could confide in. 'That is the one thing that hurt me,' she said. The couple ultimately had five children, a dozen grandkids and a long and happy marriage, Iris said. This June would've marked their 50th wedding anniversary, but Bully unexpectedly passed away in November. 'My husband and I lived 50 wonderful years together,' she said. 'We had struggles, but we worked through it. And not once did we talk about divorce.' Looking back though, Iris, now 65, said she wouldn't necessarily recommend her path to today's youth. If it were up to her, people would wait until at least 21 to get married, she said. At that point, she said, they've finished high school and are better equipped to decide what they want in life. 'I would tell parents you have to let your kid experience everything a child and student needs to experience before they're pressured into making a decision to either get married or start their career,' she said. 'Nowadays, kids, they're not ready for being adults. At all. I was basically ready to be an adult when I was 15. But I look at my grandkids. No, they're not ready. Experience being a kid.' Marriage Puts Kids At Risk, Advocates Say Ten years ago, child marriage was legal in all 50 states. In 2015, Unchained At Last began spotlighting the issue, and in the years since has organized female protesters wearing wedding dresses and chains in front of statehouses. The group points to a 2016 U.S. Department of State report that calls child and forced marriage a human rights abuse and to research showing a correlation between early marriage and lost educational attainment and income potential. Since 2018, 13 states and Washington, D.C. have moved to ban marriages involving minors. Two other states – Maine and Missouri –have passed child marriage bans this year that are awaiting signatures from their governors. 'It costs nothing,' said Fraidy Reiss, the founder of Unchained At Last and herself a forced-marriage survivor. 'It harms no one. But it ends a human rights abuse.' Children can be forced into marriage by parents or guardians who want to rid themselves of financial responsibility, Reiss said. 'In most of these cases,' she said, 'no one is even asking the kid 'Do you want to marry?' let alone 'Why do you want to get married?'' Parents also sometimes want to prevent their daughters from having premarital sex, Goyette said. 'So in their head, if the child is starting to engage in these behaviors, then what they think the right thing to do for them is to get married,' he said. Hawaiʻi's acceptance of marriages for 15-year-olds can also conflict with the state's statutory rape law, Reiss noted. The state's age of consent is 16, although there is a 'close in age' exception for individuals within five years of each other. Unchained At Last's data analysis, spanning 2000 to 2022, found at least one instance of a marriage that would violate that provision. 'That marriage certificate is a Get Out of Jail Free card,' Reiss said, 'because within marriage, that is no longer considered statutory rape if the perpetrator is no less than five years older.' In some states, minors' limited legal rights can cause problems if they want to leave home, Reiss said. Married youth who flee their spouse could be considered runaways, and those who help them could be charged with custodial interference , which is the crime of taking in a minor without the 'right to do so.' Domestic violence shelters often don't accept unaccompanied youth, Reiss said. And in some places, minors cannot file for divorce on their own. They need an adult representative. However, these concerns may not apply to Hawaiʻi. In the islands, married minors are considered emancipated individuals with all the rights and responsibilities of an adult, including entering into legal proceedings. And Hawaiʻi passed a law last year that allows island homeless shelters to take in unsheltered youth without necessarily informing their parents or guardians. Hawaiʻi Lawmaker Blocks Child Marriage Ban Hawaiʻi's legislation, House Bill 729 , had widespread support in the House of Representatives, with more than two dozen introducers. While it was promoted by national groups, it also had support locally from the Hawaiʻi Commission on the Status of Women and local chapters of Zonta International, a women's rights organization. It received almost unanimous testimony in support, with the exception of one person who said marriage is 'not a function of the state' but of the church. It was sent to the Senate in early March and was assigned to the health and human services committee headed by San Buenaventura. That's where it died. In an email, San Buenaventura told Civil Beat that marriage has provided a unique opportunity for young people to access needed benefits. Hawaiʻi only passed an emancipation law in 2024, she said, allowing young people to obtain the rights and responsibilities of adulthood. 'Until last year, the only way for a teen to be independent was to get married,' she said. The senator cited the health department data showing that most cases of underage marriage involve people close in age. From that, San Buenaventura said she's drawn several conclusions. 'This means that either they want to escape an abusive situation through self-help because we had no emancipation procedure at that time OR more likely, it was a pregnant teen wanting to get married to her boyfriend,' she said. The young person could just cohabitate with their partner, but that robs them of several benefits, the senator said, including their spouse's health insurance. To that, Reiss said: 'Medicaid – not marriage.' Having minors enter into an adult sexual relationship to escape an abusive home or get health care is 'profoundly dangerous public policy,' she said. 'The idea of telling a kid who's in an abusive home 'Well, we'll get you out, let's just find you a husband,'' Reiss said, 'I mean, I grew up in an abusive home. I was forced to marry as a teen. That didn't solve the problem. That's just out of the frying pan, into the fire.' But San Buenaventura has stood firm. The lawmaker said she's heard that some medical treatments are not covered by Medicaid but could be paid for through a spouse's employer-provided health care. 'Why should the Legislature deny a pregnant teen health insurance or relegate her to taxpayer paid health insurance just because a national advocacy group claims that she is better off cohabiting without marital benefits?' the senator said. 'Remember, unlike most states, Hawaiʻi has employer-mandated health insurance.' If the relationship between the teen and their partner dissolves, San Buenaventura said the young person is better protected through marriage than cohabitation alone. The youth would potentially be entitled to spousal support, spousal Social Security, inheritance and property rights. 'All benefits denied her by cohabiting,' San Buenaventura said. Now that Hawaiʻi has an emancipation law, San Buenaventura said she wants to see how it plays out. For the moment, her view on the child marriage legislation hasn't changed. The legislative session ended on Friday, but the bill will have another chance next year. ___ This story was originally published by Honolulu Civil Beat and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.