She Was Deported in Error. Her Child Was Left Behind.
4 Articles
4 Articles
She was deported in error. Her child was left behind.
FULTON, N.Y. — On a recent evening in Fulton, New York, an industrial town that straddles the Oswego River, Maribel Lopez’s three children huddled around a cellphone glowing on the kitchen table. She smiled at them from thousands of miles away, wiping away tears.
One recent afternoon, in Fulton, New York, an industrial city that extends to both sides of the Oswego River, Maribel Lopez’s three sons clung around a mobile phone that shone on the kitchen table. She smiled at them thousands of miles away, and wiped her tears. “Chito, Chito, handsome,” Lopez called her youngest son, Jorge, 2 years old, who was sitting on his brother’s lap, Milton, 23. The boy did not respond to his nickname and only glanced at…
One recent afternoon in Fulton, New York, an industrial city straddling the Oswego River, Maribel Lopez's three children huddled around a glowing cell phone on the kitchen table. She smiled down at them from thousands of miles away, wiping away tears. […]
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
