Hartford Courant

Honduran woman’s federal suit reinstated

Says she was repeatedly raped by ICE agent in state during 7-year ordeal

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — A federal appeals court on Tuesday reinstated a lawsuit brought by a Honduran mother who says she was repeatedly raped and impregnate­d for years by an immigratio­n agent who threatened to get her deported if she didn’t obey him.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled that the woman’s seven-year ordeal in which she was raped up to four times a week was so extraordin­ary that a Connecticu­t judge erred when she dismissed the lawsuit last year after concluding it wasn’t filed within the required three years after the attacks occurred.

The 2018 lawsuit in federal court in New Haven sought $10 million in damages for trauma from 2007-14. It named as defendants Wilfredo Rodriguez, a former Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officer, ICE, the Department of Homeland Security and two senior DHS officials.

The 2nd Circuit said the four years that the woman waited to file a lawsuit was reasonable in part because Rodriguez allegedly told her shortly after raping her a final time that he would kill her if she spoke about her ordeal.

“Sexual abuse perpetrate­d by an ICE agent against an undocument­ed immigrant may give the assailant’s threats a similarly immobilizi­ng effect as those of a prison official against someone in their custody,” the 2nd Circuit said.

The appeals court said that the woman, identified in court papers only as Jane Doe, “testified that Rodriguez violently raped her on a regular basis for a period of seven years, scarred her with acts of physical violence, treated her like his ‘slave,’ and threatened to further harm and even kill her.”

It added: “Three times during the

course of Rodriguez’s abuse, Doe attempted suicide, and three times she terminated a pregnancy caused by his rapes.

And even if these circumstan­ces alone were not enough to impede Doe from coming forward, there was also the fact that Doe was an undocument­ed immigrant while Rodriguez was a government official with the power to hasten the deportatio­n of her and her family members.”

The woman filed her lawsuit four years after Rodriguez left ICE, after which no more contact with the woman occurred, the appeals court said.

The woman disclosed the attacks to authoritie­s only after an ICE agent in spring 2018 telephoned her to speak about her father’s applicatio­n for asylum, the 2nd Circuit said.

According to the court, the woman told the agent that her community learned that she was serving as an informant for U.S. authoritie­s when she refused to perform a sex act on Rodriguez inside an ICE van one day, and he retaliated by opening the door and exposing her to a crowd of people who saw she was a cooperator.

The agent told her to get a lawyer, which she did, leading to the lawsuit, the appeals court said.

“As she tells it, Doe was stuck choosing between the devil and the deep blue sea — one course risking her life, the other risking her father’s,” the court said in a decision written by Judge Alison J. Nathan.

“In this light, we cannot say that a reasonable district court judge engaging in fact-finding could only conclude that Doe’s fear of retaliatio­n was illusory or surmountab­le all along simply because she eventually managed to tell her story when circumstan­ces changed,” Nathan wrote.

The woman said the assaults began after she was told there was an order of deportatio­n against her, and Rodriguez offered her a chance to remain in the country if she provided informatio­n about other Hondurans who were in the U.S. illegally, the court said.

After starting the work, Rodriguez in January 2007 asked her to meet him at a motel, where he demanded sex, she testified. When she protested that she was married, he kept a firearm at her ribs as he raped her, the 2nd Circuit said.

Christina Sterling, a spokespers­on for lawyers representi­ng the government, declined comment.

A lawyer for Rodriguez did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment.

Attorney George Kramer, who represents the woman, said he had expected to win the appeal, particular­ly after Rodriguez pleaded the Fifth Amendment when he was questioned.

He said his client’s informatio­n had led to the capture of hundreds of individual­s in the U.S. illegally.

Married with two grown children, she has moved repeatedly to protect herself, though she remains in Connecticu­t, he said.

His client, he added, remains traumatize­d.

“You never get over it,” Kramer said. “She’s not in good shape.”

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