The names of the couples in this story have been changed to protect their identities.
If Juan and Juana were going to stage a fake marriage to help Juan get his green card, the two of them figured, they might as well treat some friends to a great meal.
They invited eight of their closest pals — four guys, four girls, people whom they could trust with a felony — to dinner at Thai Nakorn in Garden Grove. A dress code was enforced: men in suits, or at least long-sleeved shirts, and women in dresses. No slacks, no heels, no curry.
Over plates of nam sod and fried trout, washed down with beer, Juan and Juana enjoyed an evening out with amigos. She wore an off-white strapless dress; he, a suit bought off the rack at Men's Wearhouse, his first.
Juana's friend snapped photographs throughout the night — at one point, Juan stood up to propose a toast so the friend could take the shot, but he merely posed for the camera, mouth open and said nothing. Everyone laughed, as the disposable camera flashed and whirred onto the next frame.
The following day, the group drove to the Old Orange County Courthouse in Santa Ana, wearing the same clothes from the faux banquet. They posed for pictures at the western entrance of the historic building, on the steps near the marriage license office. In pairs, just the guys, just the girls, just the couple, everyone together. Juan even pulled off the garter belt from Juana's thigh for a photo — the first time he ever placed his hands within a foot of her nether regions. Friends developed the photos at CVS Pharmacy, the better to play the part of poor kids in love.
A week later, Juan and Juana sat down for an interview with an officer in the Santa Ana offices of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, the government agency that handles requests by migrants to enter this country. They weren't nervous — years of close, platonic friendship meant they knew each other's stories, and they had consulted with friends and relatives who had staged fake weddings as well. They were prepared. The penalties for marriage fraud are automatic deportation for the offending immigrant, a ban from ever applying again for legal entry into the United States, up to five years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine. But not even those made them sweat. Much.
They showed the officer the pictures from Thai Nakorn, from family gatherings. Holding hands. Kissing.
The agent's questions were accusatory when they weren't outright skeptical.
"Where were your parents for such an important ceremony?" she asked the two.
"In Mexico."
"Wouldn't they have flown up for the occasion?"
"Yes, but we're having the actual celebration down there."
"What about other family?"
"They know this is just a civil ceremony and will fly down to Mexico for the real celebration."
"And when is that?"
"Near Christmas."
"But that's six months away."
"We know, but that's when our families go down to visit."
"Why not hold it here?"
Juan and Juana didn't look at each other — instead, they literally bit their tongues. The officer silently flipped through the photos. After about an hour of questions and photo-browsing, the officer put the pictures down. "That was a really nice dress you wore, Juana," she said. "Hope your wedding in Mexico goes well."
There would be no more investigations, the two thought. The ruse was a success. That night, Juan and Juana invited their respective lovers over to their apartment for a celebration.
The banquet hall at the Quiet Cannon in Montebello is in bedlam. An 18-piece banda sinaloense, its brass section and bass drum so loud you can hear the music from the parking lot down the hill, booms through "La Víbora de la Mar" ("The Sea Snake"). It's a jaunty children's tune played during Mexican weddings that finds grown men and women engaging in a version of "London Bridge Is Falling Down," except participants race around the dance floor progressively faster and faster, hands interlocked, under the arms of the bride and groom.
Josefa claps along with the crowd. This is her favorite part of weddings, but she hasn't joined any snaking lines for the past couple of months. The 24-year-old is still single, still searching for a guy who will sweep her off her feet like a bad Anne Hathaway flick. But she must subsume her heart's desires for the foreseeable future — she has a fiancé.
Jose is holding her hand, awkwardly. He wears a long-sleeved checkered shirt, wrinkled khakis and black dress shoes. His brow is moist; they've danced all night, but close observation of the two would've revealed no romantic chemistry.
Jose is gay. Nevertheless, the two are getting married. A 26-year-old illegal immigrant who came to this country when he was 13, Jose hasn't been back to his native Mexico City since leaving. He's assimilated down to his love of Beyoncé and horn-rimmed glasses. He did everything a young migrant is supposed to do in the United States: Graduated high school near the top of his class and finished college magna cum laude.
Have you ever heard the word ignorace? Hahaha
these two people are very interesting...
Hey Michelle...uh, not worried about the privations immigrants go through to obtain legal immigrant status. We all go through privations for things we want every day...paying through the nose for something we want, spending hours in line for an electronic doodad, working for YEARS to have a nice retirement...working HARD is an American trait. Yeah, I know robbing that house was a felony and disrupted other people's lives, but it is SO hard to earn a living, and my kids are hungry and want things. Same principle. Immigrants who make it SHOULD be proud and SHOULD appreciate what they have. I felt the same way when I paid off my first car, got my high school and college degrees, etc. They took a LONG time, and they were WORTH it! You trying to tell me that waiting years for LEGAL immigrant status isn't worth it, or that illegal immigration is ok because the legal kind is hard? That's not only pedantic and asinine thinking, that is simply un-American thinking. Let's take the easy way, even if it's illegal. Oh YEAH, I'm sure our grandparents and their grandparents and their grandparents would approve. Ask someone who marched with Dr. King and won civil rights for all despite the horrible treatment they endured about getting things illegally. They fought the system and changed the system through reason, common sense and time. As far as I'm concerned, if these folks aren't willing to wait for something as supposedly awesome as U.S. residency status, then lock 'em up and ship 'em back. Don't need one single person like that here.
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Thank you for writing about something that has been happening for years. Yes, these fake marriages are felonies and yes, what they are doing is very illegal but I don't think many people consider what personal sacrifice immigrants endure to secure citizenship. No one cherishes the simple "rights" of citizenship and marriage like an immigrant does.
"He did everything a young migrant is supposed to do in the United States" except come here legally.
very interesting piece Gus...something that has been happening for years! i wonder what ICE's criteria is for investigating...my cousin had the "fortune" of meeting not one, but TWO mexicanitos who appeared to be good men, and then left her as soon as they emigrated. and i don't remember it even taking as long as the ones you portrayed here... nice work!
Interesting that it they interviewed in only a week after marriage. I married in China and typically the visa interview wasn't until 16 months later for my wife. That's typical. K1 (Fiancee visas) are typically a 6 to 9 month delay.
what is this aboutt
Come on!! Can't you guys keep anything quiet?!?! Especially in this time where imigrants are not being considered(latinos in general actually)...are you trying to sabotage further?!?!? Leave the topics that dont involve whistle-blowing to the Times. Period. sheesh!!!
Unfair? WOW!!! Are ANY of these people cognizant of the fact that they crossed ILLEGALLY? To make it simple, I'd say that illegal aliens have NO rights other than the right to not be assaulted, not held without charge, basic HUMAN rights. I think that most, if not all, of the people in this story honestly think that the person committing the crime is the victim - WOW!!! This is why we need a strong border fence and increased military presence with shoot-to-kill orders...once an illegal from ANY country is inside your country, the best case scenario is that you have to use valuable resources to house and feed the person while they await deportation - at worst, the sending country refuses to take them back and they sit in a cell, eating and drinking and using resources, indefinitely. The outcry would be severe and strong initially with such a policy...but with a clearly marked and difficult-to-penetrate border fence, illegal entry would be simple to deter. You cross this fence illegally, you will be shot. In Texas, we keep our personal home boundaries safe with just such deterrence...no one has broken into my home ever because I have a yard fence, a "No Trespassing" sign, and enough firepower to deter someone who disregards the notices and insists on entering my property illegally. I have guests over all the time - my friends come in, occasionally party guests who I don't know but who I have ok'd to come - JUST like immigration law. Idiot Calderon saying that he would fight to protect the rights of illegal immigrants entering his northern neighbor is indicative of this kind of thinking. No matter WHAT nationality or race you belong to, illegal immigration should be ABSOLUTELY taboo in your mind! Why is no one complaining about the Vietnamese who enter sham marriages for exactly the same reasons? Why do I not see MALDEF or LULAC championing THEIR rights? A lot of hypocrisy is out there, and ALL American citizens need to do everything in their power to make sure that NO illegal immigrants enter - or stay - in this country.
There are many illegal aliens of nationalities other than latinos. I for one know of many fake Asian marriages, one in which the US citizen was paid $100k for the sham marriage. How does one go about reporting this to ICE, who only seem to care about catching Latinos....
Carlos: Glad you enjoyed it!
I say we legalize all these mexis on the condition that the fGGt boludo who wrote this krappy article is deported to Mexico. he can be Carlos Slim's nerdy little boTTom and listen to NPR Music from tijuana.
