Cesar Alex Carrillo, left, with his young daughter and wife, leading a 2016 march to urge the release of a migrant worker. Credit: Courtesy of Migrant Justice
Cesar Alex Carrillo pulled up at the McDonald’s in Colchester early on March 15. Carrillo, 23, and his wife, Lymarie Deida, 21, were on their way to the Chittenden County courthouse. Carrillo faced a DUI case, but they weren’t worried. The couple already knew from a previous hearing that Carrillo’s misdemeanor DUI charge would be dismissed.

They ate a leisurely meal as snow fell outside. Carrillo paid for a homeless man’s breakfast, Deida said. Afterward, Deida lay her head on her husband’s chest as they sat in the car. The previous Sunday, they had found out that Deida was pregnant.

“He said, ‘This year’s going to be a good year,'” she recounted in an interview Wednesday with Seven Days.

Just hours later, at 9 a.m., Carrillo was pulled over by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and arrested.

Carrillo was the first of three Migrant Justice advocates who were detained last week in Burlington on immigration-related charges. Carrillo’s cousin, Enrique Balcazar, and Balcazar’s girlfriend, Zully Palacios, were also detained. All three were being held in the Strafford County detention facility in Dover, N.H., which also serves as a county jail.

It’s been a bewildering and exhausting week for Deida, who is a U.S. citizen. She agreed to talk to Seven Days at the Burlington offices of the advocacy group Migrant Justice. She arrived with her and Carrillo’s 4-year-old daughter, Solmarie, and her mother, Marisol Rivera. She wore her long black hair parted down the middle and spoke with a calm self-assurance that belied her 21 years.

Deida gave the following account of her early life and how she came to marry her husband: She was born in Williston, and attended local schools. She was raised speaking both Spanish and English by her Puerto Rican parents.

She met Carrillo in 2010 in a Spanish-language church her family runs in Williston. Deida was 15 at the time. When they went to Denny’s for their first date, Carrillo fumbled with his utensils to cut his steak.

They hadn’t planned on a long-term relationship. Then Deida got pregnant. She was 17 when she sat Carrillo down and handed him the results of a pregnancy test. He slumped “as if his soul went out of him,” she said.

But they stuck together. Deida gave birth to Solmarie at age 18. Her mother and husband took turns caring for the girl while Deida finished high school in Williston, Deida said. The couple lived with her family, and later in an apartment with Balcazar and Palacios, she added. The two married on January 22, 2016.

Carrillo worked on dairy farms, in maintenance and in construction, his wife said. Deida worked at the front desk of a local hotel. They could pay the bills and still manage to send money to his family in Tabasco, Mexico, according to Deida.

She said her husband had come to the U.S with his mother when he was 16, and that he was used to providing for his family. His father had committed suicide when he was 12, leaving him to care for his brother and two younger sisters, Deida said.

“Some kids are trying to buy a bicycle. He’s providing for his family,” Deida said. “He’s very respected in Mexico.”

Deida described Carrillo as charismatic, the figure who lights up any room he enters. Deida’s mother, Marisol Rivera, 54, butted in: “Funny, too,” she said in Spanish. She sighed. “The injustice of it hurts me,” she said.

Two months ago, the couple bought a trailer in North Hero, Deida said. “It was a fixer-upper,” Deida said, but she was pleased; it was their own space and Carrillo was a handyman with the skills to make it homey.

They never had a full conversation about deportation, she said.

“Of course I was worried about it, on and off,” Deida said. In the 15 years her family had run the church, she hadn’t known anyone who had been deported. Besides, she added, “I’m the type of person, I don’t like to talk about things like that. I’d tell him, ‘Don’t worry, it won’t happen to us.'”

She said they had started paperwork that could have begun the path to Carrillo’s legalization, but never submitted it. That’s her biggest regret, Deida said. She said her husband had never had run-ins with ICE.

Last week, as the two looked for a parking space in front of the Edward J. Costello Courthouse, a tan unmarked SUV pulled in front of Carrillo’s car, blocking their path, she said.

Carrillo objected, and clung to Deida when an immigration agent approached. Carrillo was under arrest for immigration-related charges, the agent said. Deida said she urged Carrillo to get out of the car. The agent told Deida, who has only her driver’s learning permit, to follow them to the ICE office in St. Albans.

Later, she said, she was allowed 15 minutes with her husband. The hope had drained out of his eyes, she said, and he told her, “Just come with me to Mexico.” Deida said she told him that’s not an option, and that as soon as she left, she called Migrant Justice.

Carrillo was held on $21,000 bail. He was transferred temporarily to the Northwest State Correctional Facility in Swanton before being transported by van to Dover on Sunday.

After the arrest, Deida said, her facade of calm collapsed. She became violently ill on Saturday, vomiting uncontrollably. She was hospitalized. Her blood pressure went up, and at 4:30 a.m. Sunday morning, she miscarried, she told Seven Days.

Distraught, she said, she recovered at her mother’s house. In her less realistic moments, she imagines that she’ll walk into a room where Carrillo will be slouched on the couch, playing on the Xbox, forgetting to check the beans cooking on the stove, she said.

She said she tries not to read the negative comments posted on news articles about the situation. She jumps whenever her phone rings.

She said she is helping Solmarie cope as well. During the interview, the 4-year-old buried her face in her mother’s shoulder.

Some people have come out in support, Deida said: Migrant Justice workers and volunteers have been “amazing.” Middlebury College students made a host of cardboard signs for protesters to hold at a rally. When Deida went shopping at Walmart, a woman recognized her from TV news coverage, and gave her a hug. “During the day, I’m a mask,” she said. “During the night, I’m all torn up.”

She said Carrillo and Balcazar were being held in a 25-bed unit in the Dover facility. When Deida sent him money, she said, he shared the ramen noodles and deodorant he bought with Balcazar. Earlier this week, he sent her a message on a tablet provided for inmates to share: “Thank you for being my rock.”

Deida recounted how on Monday, she had spoken before more than 200 attendees at a rally for the detainees in front of the Statehouse. “I was terrified,” she said. She read them a message from her husband: “Thank you for your support. Keep on with the fight.”

Both Carrillo and Deida have been in contact with Matt Cameron, the Boston-based immigration lawyer representing the three detainees. Cameron is working to build a case that the trio should be released on minimum bond, $1,500. Then come the removal proceedings, which could take years.

The worst-case scenario, Deida said, is that if Carrillo were deported to Mexico, she thinks he could return legally within a year — because he’s married to a U.S. citizen and has a child. “I believe our family shouldn’t be separated by a wall or a border or a fence,” she said.

Whatever happens, Deida plans to attend, with her family and other Migrant Justice advocates, the bail hearing in Boston, which they expect to be held next Monday. “We’ll make our presence known,” she said.

Deida grinned. “We’re going to have a really big banner.”

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Katie Jickling is a Seven Days staff writer.

9 replies on “A Wife Vows to Fight Her Husband’s Deportation”

  1. Seven Days STILL has reported neither the details of Carrillo’s DUI arrest nor why the Chittenden County States Attorney dismissed the charges. Very safe to assume those inconvenient details would undermine the tear-jerker propaganda in this “journalistic report.” Cold harsh advice to teens: don’t get pregnant if single and unemployed, especially by unemployed illegal immigrants. Pretty much a sure-fire way to guarantee a wasted life of tragic struggle and poverty.

  2. Just love to see the compassion coming from people like wahrhelt, don’t you? The immediate assumption that something fishy is going on here, and that a person presumed innocent is actually guilty? We’ve come a long way from the birth of this nation, when the ideals of our forefathers were the reason for our existence.

  3. There is nothing in this article that makes me feel sorry for Carrillo or his family. It’s actually too bad that he didn’t apply for US citizenship because we need more US citizens with good family values. However, he can not expect sympathy for being a criminal. He committed a crime everyday since 2010 while being here illegally. Then he was arrested for driving under the influence – he was brought to an American court, given a hearing (like a citizens with rights), and his DUI charges were “dismissed.” Can someone please tell me why he SHOULDN’T be deported???? If this article was supposed to make be feel sorry for him, it didn’t.

  4. A comment from someone who uses the German word “wahreit” which can translate to the English “truth”?!?… English not good enough for you, Heinrich?… if you don’t want to use regular English like a good ‘Murican then you can just giiiiit out!!!!

  5. Just want to give kudos to Seven Days for allowing direct commenting and promoting robust freedom of speech, without requiring registration or log-in via some other “free” third-party data-mining and data-selling site like Face-book or G-mail.

    Until this week, Vermont Public Radio did the same but unfortunately announced yesterday that, based on comments no different than the 4 below, they can no longer allow direct commenting. They will only allow commenting via third-party registration sites.

    The debate around immigration is obviously very contentious. Classic “wicked” problem in that there are legitimate competing values on both sides. That said, inhibiting free speech beyond profanity or direct personal attacks is not the answer. As embodied and defended by former Seven Days contributor Judith Levine or HBO’s Bill Maher on the left; or the half wack-job/half-harmless Milo Yiannopolus on the right, the answer generally to speech we disagree with is more speech. Not to label it “hate speech” and then try to censor it or end commenting altogether (as VPR’s parent web-site, NPR did last year).

    We saw the recent attack on speech at Middlebury, which, rather than marginalizing Charles Murray and his views, perhaps elevated him and made the students, who physically attacked the speaker and (liberal) moderator, simply appear unable to handle the First Amendment.

    Sad time in America when even public radio seeks to narrow the opportunity for its own community members and donors to learn from each other or dialogue with their generally outstanding journalists. Not everyone wants to create 500 different on-line accounts or use third-party sites like Facebook for commenting. Over the years, I have been informed and educated and had my views challenged by the journalism from VPR and from Seven Days. I look forward to continuing to do so at Seven Days!

  6. To explain to “E Greene” and “Wahrheit” why Carrillo should not be deported: the United States is a signatory to the Helsinki Accords of Auguest 1, 1975,signed by 35 Euopean nations, the Soviet Union, the USA, and Canada. Article VII of the Helsinki Final Act provides for reunification of families divided by an international border, the object being that family unification (and reunification) was and is an inherent human-right that transcended any internal national law. Bottom line: the US cannot “deport” and thus bust up a family, the other members of which are residents or citizens of the US.

    Although the US Senate took some ten years to ratify the Helsinki Accords, in fact they are ratified, and for Mr. Greene (and Mr. Wahrheit) Treay law is the highest level of law; Treaty law supersedes all other law, including law confirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court. To illustrate: The US Government was obliged to return the child Elian Gonzalez to his father in Cuba after his mother took him to Miami and drowned in the attempt. The 11th Circuit held that the US, as a signatory to the Helsinki Accords, was obliged to remove Elian from his relatives in Miami and take him back to his father in Cuba. Janet Reno, the Attorney General (hence, minister of justice in the US scheme) under Bill Clinton, ordered a raid to remove Elian at gunpoint, whch they did. That was in JUne 2000. Elian went back to Dad in Cuba.

    Trust this explains.

  7. Wolfganger: Dream on Wolfganger! Obviously if this phantasmagorical legal scenario you created re the primacy of international law vs US sovreign law were true, President Obama would never have wholeheartedly endorsed the aggressive enforcement of US immigration law, which he did. Remember, one-world, no-border types like yourself angrily dubbed Obama “The Deporter In Chief.” But you are welcome to dream on, my friend. We are still a sovreign nation, much as it frustrates you.

  8. There are thousands of these sad stories. This one is poorly crafted and far too heavy handed on the sympathy ploy but all the same, Carrillo evidently had opportunity to become a citizen which he ignored. Deportation is a natural consequence of staying in a country too long. The same thing would happen to me if I overstayed a visa in France, for example.

    Carrillo seems like a good person and hopefully he can get the citizenship thing worked out so he can rejoin his family in the United States. Because he didn’t already take care of the citizenship thing, he put himself in this position, though.

  9. Is anyone at ICE capable of even a shred of empathy? How do these ICE agents sleep at night, knowing their Gestapo tactics have caused this poor woman (AN AMERICAN CITIZEN) to have a miscarriage?

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