Monday, September 5, 2016

Our Story

Since this nightmare is still going on, I decided to write out our story in one blog for those who are new.

My name is Keith Hupke. I am a citizen and national of the United States.

My wife’s name is Olga Ondena Rickley Hupke. In early 2004, she was a single mother of 2 children without a job and not able to feed her children. She made the decision to leave her children with family in Honduras and make the journey north to the United States so she could send money to feed her family. My wife is the bravest person I know. She does not talk about her journey across Mexico or what happened during it, but she endured the hardship for her children.

My wife came to the United States from Honduras on February 1, 2004. She was arrested and taken to the INS’s Eagle Pass office where she was finger printed, photographed and given paperwork. She received a Notice to Appear and was released. My wife’s notice to appear did not state a date or time to reappear.

Fast forward to December of 2005, Hurricane Katrina had devastated Louisiana and I had been working as a Relief Worker with Safe Harbor International in New Orleans. I met my future wife and was impressed by her beauty and her heart to help others. I proposed to her on Valentine’s Day in 2006. Olga came back with me to California and we were married at Calvary Chapel Rancho Santa Margarita on June 17th of 2006.

After the marriage we went to an Immigration Lawyer and started the process of bringing her two children to the United States and to get counsel on clearing up her immigration status. This would be a lengthy process but we were confident that things would work out. The children received their Visas after a year and came to the U.S. in 2007. Our blended family included my son, Alex (now 26) from a previous marriage and her daughter, Amy (now 24) and son, Eduardo (now 14). In May of 2009, our daughter Alicia was born. 

In 2011, Olga and I hired a lawyer to help Olga become a lawful permanent resident.  I filed an I-130 petition on Olga’s behalf on July 21, 2011, which was approved.  However, our lawyer discovered that she was ordered removed in absentia in 2004 and told us that she could be detained and deported to Honduras. 

We received notice the first week of May 2012 that USCIS wanted to see us in Santa Ana, California on the 1st of June. We were surprised and thought maybe we would not have to have her leave the country for Honduras. Our lawyer called us a few days later and told us that if Olga showed up for the appointment on June 1st she would be taken into custody and placed in a detention center. We needed to have her leave the country before the appointment and I would attend the meeting alone.  So, on May 24, 2012, the day after our daughter’s 3rd birthday my wife had to self-deport herself to Honduras.  I traveled to Honduras with Olga, Eduardo, and Alicia and then returned for the meeting with USCIS.

My meeting with USCIS on June 1, 2012 was exactly what the lawyer had said. USCIS claimed they were only checking to see if we had a valid marriage, although when USCIS found out my wife was not with me they changed the office to meet me in (ICE officers would no longer be needed to arrest her). They already had copies of our bank statements, family photos and everything else that was needed to prove our marriage was valid.

Our next step was to wait for our appointment at the U.S. Embassy in Honduras. We finally received the appointment for October 16th of 2012. I flew down and we went to the appointment expecting to hear that my wife was not eligible for a Visa, but could apply for the waiver program. Instead we heard that my wife was not eligible for entry into the U.S. for 3 reasons and one of them had a penalty of a 5 year ban that was not able to be waived. I was shocked and speechless as I questioned the State Department Officer as to what we were to do as a family. I asked her if she would have her children grow up Honduras and she replied no.

After calling my lawyer, I found out that they were banning my wife for failure to appear at her deportation hearing. My lawyer questioned us and asked if she had ever received any other paper work that had a date to appear. The answer was, NO.

After the Embassy appointment, I needed to return to the United States because I had a job in California and brought back Eduardo since he was enrolled in school and needed to start the 5th grade. Olga and Alicia stayed in Honduras.

I hired another lawyer in San Antonio, TX to fight the 5 year ban Olga received for failure to appear. In August of 2013, the Judge reopened and dismissed the charges against Olga.

On September 17, 2013 an I-601 Application for Waiver of Ground of Inadmissibility was filed and received by DHS, USCIS Nebraska Service Center. 

At the time Olga left for Honduras, I was working long shifts at a nuclear plant in California (sometimes I worked from 6am––6pm and other times I worked all night from 6pm––6am).  Therefore, I was not available to provide the kind of round the clock care that a three-year-old child would need.  That is why we decided that it was best for Alicia to stay with Olga in Honduras until Olga could return to the United States. 

In May of 2014 our lawyer requested the help of the Ombudsman at the USCIS office.  He was contacted by the Ombudsman office in August of 2014 that they were closing the case due to CIS informing the Ombudsman on the 20th of August that a decision had been made.  We waited till mid-September and still did not receive any communications from the USCIS office. The Ombudsman’s office was contacted again and reopened the case.

On October 30, 2014, we found out that USCIS had made a decision to deny my wife a VISA. They said the reason for the decision would be mailed to us. We received the paper work on November 4th and USCIS has denied her VISA for three reasons.

•             First for being in the U.S. for over a year without a VISA, that has a 10 year ban but can be waived if I can prove it would be a hardship for the children and I to be separated for her. This one we have all the paper work done and have been told should be no problem.
•             Second for failure to appear for her hearing in Texas. We had that case reopened last in 2013 and all charges were dismissed. We just have to point this out to the Government.
•             Third, and this one is a new one for us and the one we have to fight, they said when she entered the United States she was smuggling in another person. This charge carries a lifetime ban from being able to come to the United States.

When Olga was in Mexico, she was instructed by the Coyote that when she crossed the border to stand on the other side with a young man and say that he was her nephew. If she did not do this, she was informed by the Coyote that she would be sent back across the border by ICE and the Coyote would leave her to the dogs in Mexico. Not wanting to risk being raped and lose the money that was spent to get to the U.S., she did as she was instructed. Now she is banned for Human Trafficking.

Imagine for a few moments if you were a young woman in a foreign country fearing for your safety and only wanting to do what was best for your family, what would you have done? Until we walk in someone else’s shoes we can’t truly understand what they were feeling.

Our lawyer filed an appeal with the Nebraska USCIS office that made the ruling in November of 2014. In December of 2014 due to financial stress of trying to support two households, we decided to sell our home in California. I sent Eduardo to live with his grandparents and finish out his 7th grade in Florida.  

In February of 2015 the house sold in California (I had to have Olga go to the U.S. Embassy in Honduras to have paperwork notarized since legally she owned the property with me) and became an expat living in Honduras. Eduardo finished 7th grade in Florida and moved to Honduras in June of 2015.

We are now all living together in Honduras and the children are enrolled in school. Honduras is the murder capital of the world. Our city of 200,000 had 450 murders last year. My children know what dead bodies look like and know if I shout drop to get on the ground.

In August of 2015 we received notice from USCIS that they denied our appeal. Our lawyer said this was strange as they never heard Olga’s side of the story. When Olga was interviewed at the embassy in Honduras, they never asked her about the human trafficking charge. The USCIS, when processing the paper work after we won our appeal for the failure to appear charges, is the agency that brought up these charges. Olga was denied due process because she was not in the United States.

Our lawyer said we had two options, 1) Appeal to the Circuit Court on the Due Process. This would be expensive and the embassy can choose to ignore this. 2) See if we can get the Embassy in Honduras to listen to our story. We chose option number two.

After many attempts to get an appointment at the US Embassy, I decided to get some help. In July of 2016, I stopped by my Congresswoman’s office while I was in California. I requested their assistance on arranging an appointment at the U.S. Embassy in Honduras. Their office listened to our nightmare and agreed to help.

In August of 2016, they wrote to the embassy and the embassy replied that we needed to take the case up with USCIS. They then wrote to USCIS. USCIS decided that the case was so complex that they called the Congresswoman’s office to explain that the case was closed. The Congresswoman’s office then requested the embassy interview Olga since she was banned from entering the country and not questioned on the charges. The embassy responded that Olga was asked during her interview in October 2012 and admitted smuggling a person into the country. What!!!!

I was at the interview at the U.S. Embassy on October 16, 2012 and we were never asked ANY questions about smuggling anyone. I have the email from the embassy stating the reasons Olga was initially denied her Visa and that was not listed. Why would someone from the embassy say this? I sent a copy of the email to the Congresswoman’s office and the embassy was contacted again. The response was, take it up with USCIS. USCIS has an office in El Salvador so now I am trying to get an appointment there even though they say that the case is closed. 

I would like to see if I can get a letter from the man who crossed the border with Olga and have him state that she did not pay for him to come to the U.S. and they were following instructions that the coyotes gave them when they crossed into Texas.

The only reason my wife is out of this country is because we came forward and tried to correct her status. If we never went to a lawyer we would still be a family living together in our house in California living under the radar waiting for immigration reform. My wife never received government aid or healthcare. We paid for that ourselves like responsible citizens.  

My wife is the bravest person I have met and I love her very much. When we exchanged vows it was for better or worse till death do us part. Since I am still breathing I will fight this ban.

“Never, never, never give up!” Winston Churchill

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