Marco Flores was 17 years old when he killed the man who had been molesting him since he was a boy. Prosecutors were swayed by the abuse Flores suffered and agreed that to some extent he had been driven to this crime. (Suzanne Kreiter / The Boston Globe via Getty Images) |
BY AMY REED-SANDOVAL | Marco Flores and his mother migrated to the U.S. from El Salvador for a better future. When Marco was 9, a neighbor began sexually abusing him, which continued until Marco was 14. Eventually, Marco’s mother told him the neighbor would soon be moving into their home to babysit his 6-year-old nephew. Convinced that this was the only way to protect his nephew from the abuse he had endured, teenage Marco murdered Jaime Galdamez. Marco accepted a plea deal and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
Now in his early 30s, Marco has served his time and is set to be released—and immediately deported back to El Salvador. Two lawyers are fighting for him to remain. A feminist understanding of immigration ethics offers a better understanding of the moral challenge in question—underscoring why Marco Flores deserves to remain in the United States. (Click here to read more) |