Honduras

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Maria’s Path to Asylum Approved

Maria left her town in northern Honduras two days after her cousin was murdered. She and her two daughters spent four weeks moving north before crossing into the United States and presenting themselves for asylum at the border.

Her case took six months. That is unusually fast. It was fast because the legal team Deport Defense connected her with had argued similar cases before, knew the documentary record her testimony would need, and prepared her for the merits hearing in a way that left nothing to chance.

The judge granted asylum on a Tuesday afternoon in December 2024. Maria and her daughters now have legal status, the right to work, and a road to permanent residency. The continuing fund — the one that helped pay her attorney’s fees — now goes toward sibling petitions for her brother and his family, who are next in line.

When the judge said the word 'granted', my daughter squeezed my hand so hard I thought it would break. She didn't let go for an hour.

Allocating Your Impact

55%
Legal Aid

Attorney fees, filings, and court costs.

25%
Operational Support

Case management, translation, and travel.

20%
Long-term Support

Family stability and integration.

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