Current:Home > Scams'Terror took over': Mexican survivors of US shooting share letters 5 years on -TruePath Finance
'Terror took over': Mexican survivors of US shooting share letters 5 years on
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 09:47:02
EL PASO, Texas – Anxiety, fear, anguish, depression, insomnia, stress, panic attacks.
In a lined notebook, Josefina Mireles itemized in blue pen the list of symptoms she still wrestles with five years after surviving the Aug. 3, 2019, mass shooting at a Walmart here. It was the deadliest attack on Hispanics in modern U.S. history. Carrying a semiautomatic rifle, the shooter drove 700 miles from a Dallas suburb to kill "Mexicans."
Twenty-three people died, and dozens were injured.
Mireles was among the tourists from Mexico shopping that Saturday morning at a store so close to the U.S.-Mexico border that Ciudad Juárez is visible from the parking lot. Like many of the Mexican nationals at the store that day, she agreed to cooperate with U.S. law enforcement and sought a special visa to help her do just that.
She and 49 other Mexican survivors of the shooting are still waiting for an answer.
In letters collected by their immigration attorneys and shared with USA TODAY, four survivors described the traumas they still face and plea with the U.S. government to review their petitions – which are stuck in a backlog of more than 344,000 applications nationwide.
"It's frustrating to not be able to breathe when you have an anxiety attack," Mireles wrote, recalling the horror she witnessed, in a letter provided to El Paso's Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center. "The memory of trying to get safe as I fled, hearing the shots and the screams and the people running for a way out, the wounded, some of them already dead, terror took over me and I lost awareness as I fled."
A visa designed to make communities safer
Congress created the U visa two decades ago. It's meant to provide stability for immigrant victims of crime who have suffered mental or physical abuse and who agree to help law enforcement investigate and prosecute crimes.
The U visa doesn't allow a path to citizenship but it does allow victims to live and work lawfully in the U.S.
"Congress created the U visa certification process to encourage immigrant victims of crimes to come forward and cooperate with law enforcement, recognizing that all cooperation makes communities safer for everyone within our borders," said Elora Mukherjee, a law professor at Columbia University.
But congress capped the number of U visas issued annually at 10,000. A U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman said the agency has met the cap each of the past 15 years.
More:White supremacist to spend rest of life in prison for 2019 Walmart mass shooting
"It’s an overprescribed program and the backlog keeps getting longer and longer," said Allegra Love, supervising attorney for community programs at Las Americas. "The tradeoff isn’t happening. They are participating in prosecuting crimes and our government isn’t providing them with any tangible (immigration) benefit."
In 2021, the Biden administration created a process by which U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services agents can review U visa applications, determine whether an applicant qualifies for relief and issue a temporary work authorization while the applicant waits. The process, called a bona fide determination, can also protect the applicant from deportation.
The circumstances of the El Paso shooting victims vary.
Some are traumatized or physically injured and need access to the mental health and physical therapy services they can only get in the United States, said Love. Others just want the opportunity to live or work in the U.S. that the U visa affords, given that they cooperated with law enforcement. In some cases, the cooperation is ongoing.
“I think they suffered,” Love said. “They did their end of the bargain in terms of supporting law enforcement in this huge tragedy.”
'Any instance or image makes us remember'
The letters share a common thread: memories of trauma experienced in Texas, and a desire to return to with the right to live, work or study. All but one of the families who have applied for the U visa after the shooting live in Mexico.
Jazmin Ávila Rodriguez said her family of five witnessed the Walmart shooting. Five years on, they are still triggered by the memories of that day.
"Being there, having all my family members witness the act, hasn't been an easy process," she wrote in a narrow notebook using polite, formal Spanish. "Any instance or image makes us remember the moment given that it was traumatic to watch it happen, to see so many victims, people hurt or killed."
She brings her kids to therapy, she wrote. The family talks about what they went through, to deal with the trauma together.
"It's for this reason that we ask," she said, "in the most sincere manner, to be heard in our petitions."
Lauren Villagran can be reached at [email protected].
veryGood! (4992)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Deshaun Watson gets full practice workload, on path to start for Browns
- Chicago and police union reach tentative deal on 20% raise for officers
- Deputies find 5-year-old twins dead after recovering body of mother who had jumped from bridge
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- A new memoir serves up life lessons from a childhood in a Detroit Chinese restaurant
- Watch Bad Bunny Give a Cheeky Nod to Kendall Jenner in Saturday Night Live Promo
- Lions' Amon-Ra St. Brown pays off friendly wager he quips was made 'outside the facility'
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Man previously dubbed California’s “Hills Bandit” to serve life in a Nevada prison for other crimes
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Get $90 Worth of Olaplex Hair Products for Just $63
- Saints again fizzle out tantalizingly close to pay dirt in a 2nd straight loss
- Fired at 50, she felt like she'd lost everything. Then came the grief.
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- A new memoir serves up life lessons from a childhood in a Detroit Chinese restaurant
- AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
- Five U.S. bars make World's 50 Best Bars list, three of them in New York City
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Case dropped against North Dakota mother in baby’s death
'Fighting for her life': NYC woman shoved into subway train, search for suspect underway
The Challenge: USA Season 2 Champs Explain Why Survivor Players Keep Winning the Game
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
15 Self-Care Products to Help Ease Seasonal Affective Disorder
Oklahoma attorney general sues to stop US’s first public religious school
Deputies find 5-year-old twins dead after recovering body of mother who had jumped from bridge