Honduran migrant held at Aurora ICE detention center granted asylum

Honduran migrant held at Aurora ICE detention center granted asylum

Two dozen people rallied outside the detention facility in Aurora to call for the release of Carla Medina, a Honduran mother of two who has been detained for more than six months after delivering a DoorDash order to Buckley Space Force Base. Although she won her asylum case Thursday, Medina remains in federal custody for now.

Still, she and her supporters considered the judge’s decision to be a victory.

“I’m still in shock,” Medina said to the crowd over a video call from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility. “I’m going to be able to reunite with my family very soon.”

Pablo Acosta holds his phone to a microphone so his wife, Carla Azucena Medina Hernandez, can speak to the crowd during a press conference and rally outside the GEO Detention Facility in Aurora, Colorado, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/JS)

The news conference took place on the same day as her asylum hearing in immigration court. Medina’s lawyer, Andrew Younkins, said she won her case, but the government reserved the right to appeal on a single issue: whether there were extraordinary circumstances as to why Medina’s asylum application was not filed within one year of entry.

He said the judge found that such circumstances were present. But the move means Medina may be held for at least 30 more days, if not longer, depending on whether the government files an appeal.

The court’s decision had not been updated online by the Executive Office for Immigration Review as of 7:30 p.m. Thursday, according to public case information.

Medina told JS in an interview from the ICE facility last month that she left Honduras in 2023 out of fear of domestic violence and threats made by her ex-husband. Medina said her family also sought to flee gang violence, and her husband, Pablo Acosta, 29, was escaping political persecution.

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They entered the country using CBP One, a mobile app offered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, to schedule an appointment at a port of entry to seek asylum.

As of Thursday evening, Medina still sat in the ICE detention center. She was first detained by federal immigration officials Oct. 23 while delivering a DoorDash order to Buckley, she said. According to Medina, she was in the asylum process and had her work permit on the day she was picked up.

She said that after she was stopped by security officers at the gate, ICE officers arrived, and she was detained. She said officers told her that she had a deportation order, but Medina hasn’t seen it to date.

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