Army officer's mother is deported as time runs out on her hope for a miracle

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Army officer's mother is deported as time runs out on her hope for a miracle
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Rocio Rebollar Gomez was removed to Tijuana while her son, who is a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army, and her attorney were trying to convince ICE to let her stay

His mother, Rocio Rebollar Gomez, is praying for a miracle before her scheduled deportation date of January 2.She was removed again twice in the mid-2000s, falling short of the requirements for one program that would have allowed her to stay because of that previous departure. Each time that she left, she crossed illegally back into the U.S. to return to her young children.

She then applied for a program for family of military members that would have allowed her to stay in the U.S. She was denied at the beginning of December. He arrived at his mother’s blue house in Lincoln Park again the Friday after Christmas after driving most of the night from his base in Arizona. He didn’t tell anyone he was coming and surprised his mother about 9 a.m. that morning.

Their differences also began to show. Cruz, in an effort to be realistic, tried to talk about options they would have if she ended up back in Mexico. His mother didn’t want to talk about it. She wanted to keep believing in her miracle. By Tuesday, she was worried that maybe she hadn’t done all that she could, maybe there was someone else to call for help. A friend took her to local organizations to ask if there was anything more that could be done.

For Cruz, the vandalism reinforced his worries that his mother, now famous from the news coverage of her case, would be even more of a target in Mexico for the cartels that had kidnapped her brother in Acapulco a few years ago. His body has still not been found. After she finished, it was his turn in front of the cameras. Her oldest daughter, McKissick, 34, came to stand with her. She gently brushed her mother’s hair with her fingers and told her to stay strong.

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