US judge orders Trump administration to facilitate deported college student's return


FILE PHOTO: Babson College student Any Lucia Lopez Belloza poses wearing a mortarboard after graduating from high school in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., in 2025. massdeportationdefense.org/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo

BOSTON, Feb 13 (Reuters) - A ⁠U.S. federal judge on Friday ordered the Trump administration to facilitate the return ⁠of a Honduran college student who was deported in violation of a court ‌order, a step the government had previously refused to take.

Boston-based U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns gave the administration two weeks to enable the return of Any Lucia Lopez Belloza, a student from Babson College in Massachusetts who ​was deported after being detained at Boston's Logan Airport ⁠while traveling to spend the Thanksgiving ⁠holiday with her family in Texas.

"Wisdom counsels that redemption may be found by acknowledging and fixing ⁠our ‌own errors," Stearns wrote. "In this unfortunate case, the government commendably admits that it did wrong. Now it is time for the government to make amends."

Stearns, who was ⁠appointed by Democratic President Bill Clinton, said he had hoped ​to avoid holding anyone in ‌civil contempt by giving the administration a chance to correct what it called ⁠a "mistake."

But the State ​Department last week called the judge's recommendation to issue her a new student visa "unfeasible," and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement declined to facilitate her return, prompting Friday's order.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which ⁠includes ICE, and Lopez Belloza's lawyer did not immediately ​respond to requests for comment.

The 20-year-old college freshman is a Honduran national who was brought to the U.S. by her mother, who was seeking asylum, when she was 8 years old. Babson ⁠is located in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

Lopez Belloza has said she was unaware she was subject to a final order of removal, which was the basis for her arrest.

She was flown to Honduras on November 22 even though her lawyer had secured a court order in Massachusetts on ​the previous day barring Lopez Belloza from being deported or ⁠transferred out of the state for 72 hours. She remains in Honduras with her grandparents.

A lawyer ​for the government at a hearing last month apologized ‌for the violation of the court's order, attributing ​it to a "mistake" by an ICE officer who did not properly flag it.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Chris Reese, Ethan Smith and Jonathan Oatis)

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