Rodriguez v. Noriega

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Rodriguez v. Noriega

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                   DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                

Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez,       File No. 23-cv-3911 (ECT/JFD)         

        Petitioner,                                                     

v.                                    OPINION AND ORDER                   

Maria Luisa Sanchez Noriega,                                              

        Respondent.                                                     

M. Boulette and Laura Elaine Kvasnicka, Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, Minneapolis, 
MN, for Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez.                          
Maria Luisa Sanchez Noriega, pro se.                                      
________________________________________________________________________  
   Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez (“Father”) alleges Respondent Maria 
Luisa Sanchez Noriega (“Mother”) removed their child, R.R.S., from Mexico in violation 
of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction.  Father 
seeks the child’s return to Mexico so that custody questions may be decided by a court 
there.  Mother wishes to maintain custody of R.R.S. in Minnesota.  R.R.S. will be ordered 
returned to Mexico because Father proved that Mother wrongfully removed the child, and 
Mother has not carried her burden of proving any affirmative defense.     
                              I1                                        
   Mother and Father are the parents of minor child R.R.S.  Tr. 7:18–23; P-2.  R.R.S. 
was born in Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico in 2018.  Tr. 8:1–2; P-2.  She lived in Culiacan 

from her birth in 2018 until May 2021.  Tr. 27:8–11.  R.R.S. is a citizen of Mexico and 
does not have legal status in the United States.  Tr. 8:21–22, 14:19–16:9.   
   Mother and Father never married or lived together.  Tr. 27:20–28:4.  In Culiacan, 
R.R.S. resided with Mother and R.R.S.’s half-brother.  ECF No. 29 at 2; see Tr. 112:2–3 
(“[S]he has always lived with us since she was born, her brother and I at home.”).  Until 

2021, R.R.S. received childcare and medical care in Culiacan, and was pre-enrolled to 
attend  school  there.    Tr.  8:23–9:12,  27:8–19.    R.R.S.  has  many  family  members  in 
Sinaloa, including paternal aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, and great-grandparents, 
and maternal aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents.  Tr. 71:15–72:3.   
   Mother and Father were employed in Culiacan, and R.R.S. attended a daycare 

facility in Culiacan on weekdays.  Tr. 29:9–23, 50:19–22, 59:3–18, 72:23–73:2.  Each 
weekday after daycare, R.R.S. would be cared for at the residence of a paternal relative 
until Mother’s workday ended.  Tr. 36:6–10, 51:9–20.  The record is unclear as to the 
frequency with which R.R.S. went to her paternal grandparents’ home, her paternal great-
grandparents’  home,  or  her  paternal  aunt’s  home  after  daycare.    See  Tr.  9:16–9:20 

                                                                        
1    This  opinion  describes  the  factual  findings  and  legal  conclusions  required  by 
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)(1). “P-#” exhibits are Father’s trial exhibits.  Cited 
page  numbers  refer  to  the  offering  party’s  stamped  exhibit  page  numbering,  unless 
otherwise specified.  The sealed evidentiary hearing transcript (“Tr.”) is docketed at ECF 
No. 28.  The transcript will be cited by transcript page number and line.   
                                                                          
(grandparents); Tr. 51:9–16 (great-grandparents); Tr. 53:12–24 (aunt).  Regardless, the 
record shows R.R.S. was cared for by Father’s family every day following daycare, and 
Father testified that he visited R.R.S. every day after he finished work.  Tr. 36:6–10; see 

also Tr. 51:9–20.  Father also described the care he provided to R.R.S. during these visits, 
including feeding and bathing R.R.S., playing with her, and bringing her to family events.  
Tr. 29:16–30:5, 33:19–34:2, 36:11–19; see also Tr. 59:8–18.  Mother disputed Father’s 
account of the frequency of his visits with R.R.S.; Mother testified that Father saw R.R.S. 
once every three weeks.  Tr. 14:5–10.  Mother and Father agree that each of them 

contributed financially to R.R.S.’s care, including food, diapers, and other necessities.  
Tr. 78:24–79:14.  All agree R.R.S. was loved and cared for in Culiacan.   
   In  April  2021,  Mother  informed  Father  she  intended  to  remove  R.R.S.  from 
Mexico and take her to the United States “because you could lead a better life here.”  
Tr. 37:4–38:5.  Father told Mother he did not give permission to her to remove R.R.S. 

from  Mexico.    Tr.  37:14–38:5,  42:25–43:9;  P-10.    In  a  text  message,  Mother 
communicated to Father that she would not remove R.R.S. from Mexico without Father’s 
authorization.  P-10.                                                     
   Regardless, on May 11, 2021, Mother removed R.R.S. from Mexico.  Tr. 12:6–11.  
That day, R.R.S. was supposed to be dropped off following daycare at the house of 

Father’s parents, but R.R.S. did not arrive.  Tr. 43:10–15.  Father attempted without 
success to contact Mother by telephone, and Father’s parents went to Mother’s house but 
were met with no response.  Tr. 43:16–19.  Later that day, Mother called Father from an 
unknown  number  and  informed  him  she  had  taken  R.R.S.  to  the  United  States.  
Tr. 43:20–23.                                                             
   Mother and R.R.S. first relocated to Texas.  Tr. 12:15–17.  Father learned Mother 

and R.R.S. were in Texas through the family of R.R.S.’s half-brother.  Tr. 44:15–45:11.  
Father contacted attorneys, Mexican authorities, and the Office of Foreign Affairs in 
Mexico to attempt to secure R.R.S.’s return to Mexico.  Tr. 46:2–10, 61:16–62:8.  On 
November 5, 2021, about six months after R.R.S.’s removal, Father filed an application 
with  Mexican  authorities  requesting  R.R.S.’s  return  under  the  Hague  Convention.  

Tr. 46:11–47:16; P-4.  Father credibly testified it took him until November 2021 to file 
the application with Mexican authorities because the authorities “had a lot of questions, a 
lot of requirements for [him], things that [he] needed to gather and fill out,” and, “on top 
of that, it was the pandemic.”  Tr. 47:1–16.  Around May 2022, a year after removal, 
Father identified and retained a Texas lawyer to initiate legal proceedings in the United 

States.  Tr. 62:9–17.  However, before Father filed a petition for R.R.S.’s return in a 
Texas court, Mother and R.R.S. left Texas.  Tr. 62:18–63:25.              
   In the summer of 2022, Father learned through Facebook that Mother and R.R.S. 
had moved from Texas to St. Paul, Minnesota.  Tr. 63:5–19, 64:13–22.  Father alerted the 
Mexican Office of Foreign Affairs of R.R.S.’s whereabouts and wrote the Office every 

two weeks requesting updates on his case.  Tr. 64:23–65:12.  Father eventually obtained 
counsel in Minnesota and initiated these proceedings.  Tr. 65:13–16.      
   Mother  and  R.R.S.  have  lived  in  St.  Paul  since  the  summer  of  2022.    See 
Tr. 64:17–22, 112:22–23, 124:11–17.  While in St. Paul, R.R.S. attended preschool from 
2022 to 2023, and kindergarten from 2023 to the present.  Tr. 123:3–12.  R.R.S. has 
attended the same daycare for after-school, holiday, and summer care since November 
2022.  Tr. 124:11–17.  R.R.S. also receives medical, dental, and ophthalmological care in 

St. Paul.  Tr. 113:10–25, 125:3–8.  R.R.S. has befriended children at school and children 
of Mother’s friends.  Tr. 115:4–8.                                        
   R.R.S. has a disability that affects her speech, gross motor skills, and balance.  
Tr. 118:11–121:1.  She has difficulty being understood in both English and Spanish, 
running and jumping, and using the bathroom.  Id.  Through her school, R.R.S. receives 

speech therapy and other treatment every day.  Tr. 121:2–19.  R.R.S.’s speech issues have 
improved through therapy.  Tr. 110:18–24, 120:17–19.  R.R.S.’s disability prevents her 
from  participating  in  sports  and  other  extracurricular  activities,  but  she  enjoys  other 
activities such as going to museums and playing in the snow.  Tr. 114:9–25, 120:21–
121:1.                                                                    

   Father has communicated with R.R.S. in video calls since R.R.S.’s 2021 removal.  
Tr. 66:3–15.    Father  tries  to  speak  with  R.R.S.  every  day,  but  two  or  three  days 
sometimes pass between their calls.  Id.; Tr. 86:17–21.  While Father was in St. Paul for 
the evidentiary hearing in this case, he spent a day with R.R.S.  Tr. 95:6–9.  Otherwise, 
Father has not seen R.R.S. in person since May 8, 2021.  Tr. 36:20–21.    

   R.R.S. continues to live with Mother and R.R.S.’s seventeen-year-old half-brother 
in St. Paul.  Tr. 112:22–113:5.  Mother, who also lacks legal status in the United States, 
Tr. 16:10–17:14, manages a fast-food restaurant.  Tr. 115:9–19.  She has worked in that 
job since August 2023.  Id.  Mother has weekends off from work and spends that time 
with her children.  Tr. 110:25–111:8.  Since moving to St. Paul, Mother also has done 
janitorial work and has taken classes to learn English.  Tr. 111:9–11, 115:24–116:2.  
Father works at a government office in Culiacan “where they deal with taxes,” and has a 

temporary, weekend job at a sports club.  Tr. 73:16–23, 77:2–14.          
   On December 29, 2023, Father filed a verified petition for return of R.R.S. under 
the Hague Convention,2 the International Child Abduction Remedies Act (“ICARA”), 22 
U.S.C.  §§  9001–11,  and  the  Minnesota  Uniform  Child  Custody  Jurisdiction  and 
Enforcement Act (“UCCJEA”), Minn. Stat. § 518D.101 et seq.  Pet. ¶¶ 1, 31.  The same 

day, Father filed an ex parte motion for an accelerated hearing and a request for a 
temporary  restraining  order,  seeking  to  enjoin  Mother  from  removing  R.R.S.  from 
Minnesota pending expedited proceedings on the Petition.  ECF No. 3.  On January 12, 
2024, a temporary restraining order was issued, enjoining Mother from removing R.R.S. 
from Minnesota for fourteen days.  ECF No. 10.  A show-cause hearing was held on 

January 31, 2024; at this hearing, Mother agreed not to remove R.R.S. from Minnesota, 
and case management deadlines were established in consultation with the parties.  An 
evidentiary hearing on the merits of the Petition was held April 8, 2024, ECF No. 24, and 
both parties filed post-hearing briefing, ECF Nos. 29, 31.                




                                                                        
2    The United States and Mexico are signatories to the Convention.  Status Table, 
Hague      Conference     on      Private    International   Law,         
https://www.hcch.net/en/instruments/conventions/status-table (last visited May 5, 2024). 
                              II                                        
                              A                                         
   “The Hague Convention ‘generally requires courts in the United States to order 
children  returned  to  their  countries  of  habitual  residence,  if  the  courts  find  that  the 

children have been wrongfully removed to or retained in the United States.’”  Rodriguez 
v. Molina, 
96 F.4th 1079, 1082
 (8th Cir. 2024) (quoting Chafin v. Chafin, 
568 U.S. 165, 168
 (2013)).  Hague Convention cases are not custody disputes.  Hague Convention, art. 
19; see Ruiz v. Tenorio, 
392 F.3d 1247
, 1250 (11th Cir. 2004) (“The court’s inquiry is 
limited to the merits of the abduction claim and not the merits of the underlying custody 

battle.”) (citation omitted).  Proceedings under the Convention are “not to establish or 
enforce  custody  rights,  but  only  to  provide  for  a  reasoned  determination  of  where 
jurisdiction over a custody dispute is properly placed.”  Barzilay v. Barzilay, 
600 F.3d 912
, 916–17 (8th Cir. 2010) (internal citations and quotations omitted).  And the Supreme 
Court has cautioned that “courts in Hague Convention cases must strive always to avoid a 

common tendency to prefer their own society and culture.”  Galaviz v. Reyes, 
95 F.4th 246
, 257 (5th Cir. 2024) (quoting Soto v. Contreras, 
880 F.3d 706, 711
 (5th Cir. 2018)) 
(cleaned up).                                                             
   As  the  petitioner,  Father  bears  the  initial  burden  of  establishing,  by  a 
preponderance of the evidence, that R.R.S. was wrongfully removed or retained within 

the Convention’s meaning.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(1)(A).  The Convention provides that a 
child’s removal or retention is wrongful if “it is in breach of rights of custody attributed 
to a person. . ., either jointly or alone, under the law of the State in which the child was 
habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention,” and if the petitioner was 
“actually exercis[ing]” those rights at the time.  Barzilay v. Barzilay, 
536 F.3d 844, 847
 
(8th Cir. 2008) (quoting Hague Convention, art. 3).  To prevail on his Petition, then, 

Father must prove three things by a preponderance of the evidence: “First, he must show 
[Mexico] was [R.R.S.]’s habitual residence prior to removal . . . .  Second, he must show 
the removal of [R.R.S.] violated his custody rights under [Mexican] law.  Third, he must 
show he was exercising his parental rights before [R.R.S.] was removed.”  Tsuruta v. 
Tsuruta, 
76 F.4th 1107, 1110
 (8th Cir. 2023) (citing Barzilay, 
600 F.3d at 917
).   

   The Convention includes several affirmative defenses.  Hague Convention, arts. 
12, 13, 20; 
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2).  “Wrongfully removed or retained children ‘are to be 
promptly  returned  unless  one  of  the  narrow  exceptions  set  forth  in  the  Convention 
applies.’”  Rodriguez, 96 F.4th at 1082–83 (quoting 
22 U.S.C. § 9001
(a)(4)).  Relevant 
here, a court is not bound to return the child if there is “a grave risk” that return “would 

expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an 
intolerable situation.”  Hague Convention, art. 13b.  The respondent must prove the 
grave-risk defense by clear and convincing evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(A).  Also, 
if more than one year has elapsed between the child’s removal and the commencement of 
return proceedings, a court must order the child’s return “unless it is demonstrated that 

the child is now settled in its new environment.”  Hague Convention, art. 12.  The 
respondent  has  the  burden  of  proving  this  so-called  “well-settled  defense”  by  a 
preponderance of the evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(B).  If an affirmative defense 
applies, a court retains discretion to order the child’s return.  Hague Convention, art. 18; 
see Tsai-Yi Yang v. Fu-Chiang Tsui, 
499 F.3d 259, 271
 (3d Cir. 2007).     
                              B                                         

   Father has carried his initial burden of establishing by a preponderance of the 
evidence that R.R.S. was wrongfully removed.  (1) It seems undisputed that Mexico was 
R.R.S.’s habitual residence before removal.  “A child’s habitual residence is the place 
where a child is at home, at the time of removal or retention.”  Tsuruta, 
76 F.4th at 1110
 
(internal quotations omitted).  Father has introduced R.R.S.’s Mexican birth certificate, 

showing she was born in Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico.  P-2.  Mother and Father agree 
R.R.S. resided in Culiacan from her birth in 2018 until her removal in 2021.  Tr. 11:25–
12:2, 27:8–11.  There is no indication in the record that R.R.S. lived anywhere other than 
Culiacan before removal.                                                  
   (2) Father has proven he had custody rights under the laws of Sinaloa.  The 

Sinaloa  Code  provides  that  “[p]arental  authority  on  the  children  is  exercised  by  the 
parents.”  P-5 [Sinaloa Code, art. 350].  It also provides that “[i]n the event of separation 
of the persons exercising parental authority, both shall continue to comply with their 
duties and may agree on the terms of its application, particularly in matters related to the 
guardianship and custody of the minor children.”  P-5 [Sinaloa Code, art. 351] (emphasis 
added).    Where,  as  here,  Father  and  Mother  are  separated,  “both  shall  continue  to 

comply” with their parental duties.  Courts have found such rights under Mexican law to 
constitute “rights of custody” under the Hague Convention.  See, e.g., Whallon v. Lynn, 
230 F.3d 450, 459
 (1st Cir. 2000).  The same conclusion is appropriate here.   
   (3) Father has established he was “actually exercising” his parental rights before 
R.R.S.’s removal.  Though the Hague Convention does not define “exercise,” courts have 
found that custody rights are exercised “whenever a parent with de jure custody rights 

keeps, or seeks to keep, any sort of regular contact with his or her child.”  Friedrich v. 
Friedrich, 
78 F.3d 1060, 1065
 (6th Cir. 1996) see also, e.g., In re Ahumada Cabrera, 
323 F. Supp. 2d 1303, 1312
 (S.D. Fla. 2004) (“[C]ourts have found that in the absence of a 
ruling from a court in the country of habitual residence, a court should liberally find 
‘exercise’ where a parent keeps or seeks to keep any sort of regular contact with his or 

her child.”).  Father’s testimony that he saw R.R.S. every day was credible.  Regardless, 
Mother agrees that Father saw R.R.S. at least every three weeks in Culiacan and that he 
has continued to talk with R.R.S. via video calls nearly every day while she has been in 
the United States.  Tr. 14:5–10, 66:3–15.  There is no serious question that Father kept 
regular contact with his child—before and after removal—and, as such, exercised his 

custody rights.3                                                          
   To summarize, the record evidence shows Mexico was R.R.S.’s habitual residence 
prior  to  removal,  that  Father  had  custody  rights  under  Sinaloa  law,  and  that  Father 
exercised his parental rights.  Father thus has established that R.R.S. was wrongfully 

                                                                        
3    Mother disputes that Father exercised his custody rights while all parties were still 
in Culiacan.  Tr. 14:1–4.  Mother’s arguments primarily focus on which parent did more 
for R.R.S.—who paid for care, whether buying milk and diapers was “enough to support 
the  child,”  Tr.  79:9–17—rather  than  whether  Father  kept  or  sought  to  keep  regular 
contact with R.R.S.  Friedrich, 
78 F.3d at 1065
.  Mother’s arguments in this regard do 
not address the right question.  Mother concedes Father regularly spent time with R.R.S. 
in Culiacan.  Tr. 14:5–15.  That is enough to establish that Father “actually exercised” his 
rights.                                                                   
removed.  Since Father has met his burden, the Convention “generally requires” R.R.S. to 
be returned to Mexico, unless a defense applies.  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1082
.   
                              C                                         

   Mother asserted one affirmative defense in her Answer explicitly—that R.R.S. 
would face a grave risk of serious physical or psychological harm if she were returned 
under Article 13 of the Hague Convention.  Answer [ECF No. 18] at 2.  In support of this 
defense, Mother claimed: “The city of Culiacan, Sinaloa has a high level of risk in 
organized  crime  and  the  great  psychological  damage  that  R.R.S.  can  suffer  when 

separated from the mother, [ ] R.R.S. is very well adapted in school, friends and activities 
[s]he does every day.”  
Id.
  Though Mother categorizes this as a single affirmative 
defense under “Art. 13(1)” of the Convention, Mother’s specific allegation that R.R.S. is 
“well adapted” in St. Paul is better understood to also raise the “well settled” defense 
under Article 12.                                                         

                              1                                         
   Article 13b says a court is not bound to return a child if “there is a grave risk that 
his or her return would expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise 
place the child in an intolerable situation.”  Mother must prove the defense by clear and 
convincing evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(A).  Clear and convincing means “highly 
probable.”  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
 (citing Colorado v. New Mexico, 
467 U.S. 310, 316
 (1984)).  This standard requires “more than a preponderance of the evidence but less 
than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”  Olson v. Snap Prods., Inc., 
29 F. Supp. 2d 1027, 1036
 (D. Minn. 1998) (citation omitted).                                  
   “Whether the respondent has established ‘a grave risk of harm under the Hague 
Convention is a mixed question of law and fact.’”  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
 (quoting 
Acosta v. Acosta, 
725 F.3d 868, 874
 (8th Cir. 2013)).  A court “must engage in ‘a fact-

intensive inquiry’ to determine whether the respondent has proved a grave risk of harm, 
which  requires  ‘careful  consideration  of  several  factors,  including  the  nature  and 
frequency of the abuse [and] the likelihood of its recurrence.’” 
Id.
 (quoting Simcox v. 
Simcox, 
511 F.3d 594, 608
 (6th Cir. 2007)).  Cases finding the grave risk exception has 
been met “often involve the use of physical force [against the child] that is repetitive or 

severe.”  Galaviz v. Reyes, 
95 F.4th 246
, 260 (5th Cir. 2024).  But external factors, such 
as war, famine, or disease, may constitute a grave risk as well.  Friedrich v. Friedrich, 
78 F.3d 1060, 1069
 (6th Cir. 1996).                                          
   Examples are instructive.  In Colon v. Mejia Montufar, 
470 F. Supp. 3d 1280
 (S.D. 
Fla. 2020), a federal district court in Florida applied the grave-risk defense in the context 

of gang activity in Guatemala.4  There, the child had been threatened on two separate 
occasions by members of the MS-13 gang.  Colon, 470 F. Supp. 3d at 1286.  Gang 
members tried to recruit the child and threatened to harm him if he did not join.  Id.  
“Further, they told him that if he told anyone, then they would kill him and his family.”  
Id.    After  the  child  had  been  removed  from  Guatemala  to  the  United  States,  gang 

members appeared at the child’s house in Guatemala looking for him.  Id. at 1287.  
                                                                        
4    Though the grave-risk defense was not established in Colon, the petition was 
denied, and the child was not ordered returned to Guatemala because evidence showed 
the child, then twelve years old, was mature enough to object to being returned.  Colon, 
470 F. Supp. 3d at 1295–98; Hague Convention, art. 13.                    
Ultimately, the child’s brother was forced to join the gang in the child’s place.  Id. at 
1287 & n.8.  The Colon court found the respondent (the child’s mother) had not carried 
her burden of establishing a grave risk of harm to the child.  The court focused on the 

heavy burden the respondent faced, noting: “‘Grave risk’ means something more than 
serious risk, but it does not have to be immediate.  The level of risk and danger required 
to trigger this exception has consistently been held to be very high.”  Id. at 1292 (citations 
omitted).    The  court  found  there  was  no  evidence  the  child’s  brother’s  MS-13 
involvement posed a grave risk to the child or created a “zone of danger” that might 

expose the child to harm.  Id. at 1293.  The court also found that, because over one year 
had passed since the child was threatened by gang members, there was no evidence gang 
members would continue to target the child.  Id. at 1294.  The court further noted a lack 
of evidence that any harm posed was specific to the child.  Id. (“Critically, there is no 
evidence that that the men sought to recruit [the child] for any reason other than the fact 

that gangs seek to recruit young males to join their gang.”).  The court found the threats 
were an “isolated event,” indicating “that the risk of harm is not likely to resurface.”  Id.  
In all, the court found it was not “highly probable” that the child would face a grave risk 
of harm if returned to Guatemala.                                         
   Similarly,  drug  cartel-related  violence  has  been  rejected  as  the  basis  for  a 

grave-risk defense in a federal court in Texas.  In Bernal v. Gonzalez, 
923 F. Supp. 2d 907
 (W.D. Tex. 2012), the respondent (the children’s father) argued there was a grave 
risk of harm if his children were returned to Sinaloa, Mexico, due to the “ongoing cartel 
violence.”  Bernal, 
923 F. Supp. 2d at 920
.  The court noted the “high threshold” for 
establishing the grave-risk defense and found it had not been met.  
Id. at 921
.  Though 
respondent testified about observing dead bodies in a river, and the children testified 
about being stopped by cartel members, witnessing “a tense situation in which an armed 

man pointed a gun directly at the driver of [a] vehicle,” and more, the court found that the 
respondent  did  not  establish  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  a  grave  risk  to  the 
children.  
Id.
                                                            
   Here, Mother points to the “high level of organized crime” as the basis for the 
defense.  Answer at 2.  In testimony, Mother asserted she “lost two brothers in a violent 

way,” but she did not provide details in her hearing testimony.  Tr. 112:4–13.  It is true 
that Mother was personally affected by violence in Sinaloa when she was threatened in 
connection with robberies of the service station where she worked.  Tr. 106:4–107:19.  
While working at the service station, Mother witnessed a murder in the parking lot.  
Tr. 116:18–24.  Mother testified that she suffered armed robberies “maybe once a week,” 

including when she was pregnant or when R.R.S. was at work with her.  Tr. 116:25–
117:4.  Mother asserted that in a “wave of violence in Culiacan” in March 2024, five 
families—including children—were kidnapped.  Tr. 98:19–99:2.  She stated that her own 
brother-in-law and nephew were kidnapped in 2019, despite being uninvolved in drug 
trafficking.  Tr. 99:5–10.  Father testified he believes R.R.S. will be safe in Culiacan.  

Tr. 74:21–75:19.                                                          
   Mother has not carried her burden with respect to the grave-risk defense.  The 
ongoing violence and threat of organized crime in Sinaloa is of course a serious concern.  
Regardless, the assertions do not establish a grave risk of harm to R.R.S. in the relevant 
sense.  It does not appear from the evidence presented that R.R.S. was ever threatened or 
harmed directly or specifically.  Tr. 123:16–22.  It has been about three years since 
Mother and R.R.S. lived in Sinaloa, and there is no indication any person or group would 

target them if they returned.  Moreover, “[t]he level of risk and danger required to trigger 
this exception has consistently been held to be very high.”  Colon, 470 F. Supp. 3d at 
1291; see also Bernal, 923 F.2d at 920.  The record evidence does not establish a high 
probability that R.R.S. faces serious physical or psychological risk if she is returned.  
Hague Convention, art. 13; Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
.                   

                              2                                         
   Mother’s  assertion  that  “R.R.S.  is  very  well  adapted  in  school,  friends  and 
activities [s]he does every day [in Minnesota],” Answer at 2, will be construed to advance 
the “well settled” defense under Article 12 of the Hague Convention.  See also Tr. 14:16–
18.  Under Article 12, when more than a year has elapsed between the child’s removal 
and the petitioner’s commencement of return proceedings,5 a court must return a child 

“unless it is demonstrated that the child is now settled in its new environment.”  Hague 
Convention,  art.  12.    That  demonstration  must  be  made  by  a  preponderance  of  the 
evidence, 
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(B), meaning “the greater weight of evidence.  It is the 
evidence which, when weighed with that opposed to it, has more convincing force and is 

                                                                        
5    “[T]he  term  ‘commencement  of  proceedings’,  as  used  in  article  12  of  the 
Convention, means, with respect to the return of a child located in the United States, the 
filing  of  a  petition  in  accordance  with  subsection  (b)  of  this  section.”    
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(f)(3) (emphasis added).  Subsection (b), in turn, discusses filing a petition as 
commencing  a  civil  action  in  a  court  with  jurisdiction.    Father  filed  the  Petition  in 
December 2023, more than two years after R.R.S.’s removal in May 2021.    
more probably true and accurate.”  Smith v. United States, 
726 F.2d 428, 430
 (8th Cir. 
1984) (recounting the district court’s definition and finding no error).   
   In determining whether a child is well-settled in her new environment, courts 

consider the totality of the circumstances.  da Silva v. de Aredes, 
953 F.3d 67, 75
 (1st Cir. 
2020); see also Neng Nhia Yi Ly v. Heu, 
294 F. Supp. 2d 1062, 1066
 (D. Minn. 2003) 
(“[T]he  court  is  permitted  to  consider  any  relevant  factor,  including  the  particular 
circumstances surrounding the child’s living environment.”).  The Hague Convention is 
silent  regarding  what  factors  should  be  considered  when  analyzing  the  well-settled 

defense.  Courts have nonetheless identified various factors, including:  
        (1)  the  age  of  the  child;  (2)  the  stability  of  the  child’s 
        residence  in  the  new  environment;  (3)  whether  the  child 
        attends school or day care consistently; (4) whether the child  
        attends  church  [or  participates  in  other  community  or    
        extracurricular  school  activities]  regularly;  (5)  the      
        respondent’s employment and financial stability; (6) whether    
        the child has friends and relatives in the new area; and (7) the 
        immigration status of the child and the respondent.             
Lozano  v.  Alvarez,  
697 F.3d 41, 57
  (2d  Cir.  2012)  (alteration  in  original)  (citation 
omitted); see also de Jesus Joya Rubio v. Alvarez, 
526 F. Supp. 3d 1186
, 1202–03 (S.D. 
Fla. 2021) (articulating similar factors).  “The United States Department of State has 
declared that ‘nothing less than substantial evidence of the child’s significant connections 
to the new country is intended to suffice to meet the respondent’s burden of proof’ under 
the well-settled defense.”  Luis Alfonso V.H. v. Banessa Cristina A.Z., 
512 F. Supp. 3d 633
, 645 (W.D. Va. 2021) (quoting Hague Int’l Child Abduction Convention; Text and 
Legal Analysis, 
51 Fed. Reg. 10,494
, 10,509 (March 26, 1986)).  On this evidentiary 
record, the better answer is that R.R.S. is not “well settled” in St. Paul.   
   It  is  true  that  one  consideration  favors  finding  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  in 

St. Paul: R.R.S. has attended school and daycare consistently in St. Paul since arriving 
here in mid-2022.  She is close to completing two grade levels—pre-kindergarten and 
kindergarten—in the St. Paul public school system.  Tr. 123:3–12.  R.R.S. has received 
therapy for her disabilities from her school.  Tr. 121:2–19.  Mother testified that R.R.S. 
receives this care for roughly thirty minutes of every school day.  
Id.
  And R.R.S. has 

attended the same daycare facility since November 2022.  Tr. 124:11–17.   
   Other considerations cut in the opposite direction or are neutral:   
   (a) It is difficult to understand how R.R.S.’s age should affect the analysis.  R.R.S. 
     is six years old and has been in the United States for nearly three years, enough 
     time for the well-settled defense to be considered, and enough time to become 

     well settled.  Hague Convention, art. 12; see de Jesus, 526 F. Supp. 3d, 1202–
     04 (finding a child who lived in the United States less than two years to be well 
     settled); see also Neng Nhia Yi Ly v. Heu, 
294 F. Supp. 2d 1062, 1066
 (D. 
     Minn. 2003) (finding that a seven-year-old child removed from France was 
     well-settled in St. Paul and noting the child “ha[d] spent more than half her 

     young life in Saint Paul,” and “has only vague memories of France”).  At the 
     same time, R.R.S. spent half her life in Culiacan and one year in Texas. 
   (b) It is easy to say that R.R.S. has not experienced meaningful stability in her 
     young life.  It is difficult to tell whether R.R.S.’s St. Paul residence is stable.  
R.R.S. was not brought directly to St. Paul from Culiacan.  She was brought 
first to Texas in May 2021, Tr. 12:15–17, meaning she has spent roughly two-
thirds of her time in the United States in Minnesota, Tr. 64:17–19, 112:22–23, 

124:11–17.    No  record  evidence  shows  whether  Mother  and  R.R.S.  have 
moved within St. Paul, how long they have resided at their current apartment, 
or how long they intend to remain there.  Apart from Mother’s desire for 
R.R.S.  to  continue  receiving  services  through  the  St.  Paul  public  schools, 
Mother has not identified a specific tie or connection to St. Paul or Minnesota 

that would give her a strong incentive to continue residing here with R.R.S., as 
opposed to another city or location in the United States.          
(c) R.R.S.  has  no  church,  extracurricular,  or  other  organization-grounded 
connections in St. Paul.                                           
(d) Clearly, Mother is hard-working and committed to providing for R.R.S., but 

the nature of her employment is ordinarily understood to be impermanent and 
not enduring.                                                      
(e) Though R.R.S. has formed friendships at school, the record lacks information 
regarding the number or qualities of those relationships.  Apart from Mother 
and her half-brother, R.R.S. has no relatives in Minnesota.        

(f) Mother  and  R.R.S.  do  not  have  legal  status  in  the  United  States,  and  no 
evidence suggests that either of them might seek—or be positioned to seek—
legal status in the foreseeable future.  Tr. 8:21–22, 14:19–17:14.  There is no 
reason to think that Mother or R.R.S. faces a near-term risk of removal or 
     deportation.    Regardless,  it  would  be  a  mistake  to  think  that  Mother  and 
     R.R.S.’s lack of legal status favors finding that the well-settled defense applies 
     here.  It cuts the other direction.6                               

   To  summarize,  I  find  that  Mother  has  not  shown  by  a  preponderance  of  the 
evidence that R.R.S. is well-settled in St. Paul.  Though evidence of R.R.S.’s school and 
daycare  attendance  favors  finding  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  here,  this  evidence  is 
outweighed by the absence of other community connections, the absence of any family in 
the community, R.R.S.’s (and Mother’s) lack of lawful immigration status.  Evidence 

relevant  to  the  stability  of  R.R.S.’s  St.  Paul  residence,  Mother’s  employment  and 
financial stability, and R.R.S.’s age does not support a conclusion one way or the other as 
to the well-settled defense’s applicability.                              
                                                                        
6    Courts have considered how much weight to give a child’s lack of legal status in 
the  well-settled-defense  analysis.    While  “no  court  has  held  it  to  be  singularly 
dispositive,” courts “have consistently found immigration status to be a factor when 
deciding whether a child is settled.”  Lozano v. Alvarez, 
697 F.3d 41, 57
 (2d Cir. 2012), 
aff’d sub nom. Lozano v. Montoya Alvarez, 
572 U.S. 1
 (2014); see also da Silva, 933 F.3d 
at 75–76.  In da Silva v. de Aredes, 
953 F.3d 67
 (1st Cir. 2020), for example, the First 
Circuit affirmed a district court’s determination that a removed child was not well-settled 
in  the  United  States.    Though  the  district  court  found  the  child  had  “developed 
meaningful relationships and lasting emotional bonds with a community in East Boston,” 
it also determined that the child’s “unsettled” immigration status in the United States, her 
mother’s  difficulty  in  finding  stable  employment,  the  child’s  constant  tardiness  and 
absence from school, and her adjustment disorder due to a lack of family, weighed in 
favor of finding the child not settled.  da Silva, 953 F.3d at 75–76.  In Lozano, the Second 
Circuit affirmed a district court’s determination that a removed child was well-settled in 
New York though the child lacked legal status in the United States.  697 F.3d at 56–58.  
Important to the court’s affirmance, there was no evidence showing that the mother or 
child faced a threat of deportation, and evidence showed the mother was exploring how 
to gain legal status.  See 
id.
 at 46–48, 58.  These cases teach that a child’s immigration 
status  is  not  dispositive,  but  rather  one  factor  to  be  considered  alongside  others  to 
determine whether a child is well-settled in her new environment.         
                              D                                         
   If  the  conclusion  that  Mother  failed  to  prove  the  well-settled  defense  was 
incorrect, I would still order R.R.S. returned to Culiacan notwithstanding the well-settled 

defense’s applicability.7  Recall that a court retains discretion to order a removed child’s 
return even if the well-settled affirmative defense applies.  Hague Convention, art. 18; 
Tsai-Yi Yang, 
499 F.3d at 271
.  I would reach this decision for essentially two reasons.   
   (1)  Mother’s  ability  to  credibly  argue  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  in  St.  Paul 
depends on the time it has taken Father to pursue R.R.S.’s return, but that delay is not 

Father’s fault.  Father testified credibly that he has been working to secure R.R.S.’s return 
since she was removed.  See supra at 4.  Bureaucratic delays, the COVID-19 pandemic, 
and Mother’s efforts to conceal R.R.S.’s location all delayed Father from filing this case.  
These delays, in turn, gave Mother and R.R.S. time to settle in St. Paul.  In this situation, 
rigid  application  of  the  well-settled  defense  would  be  inappropriate.    See  Antunez-

Fernandes v. Connors-Fernandes, 
259 F. Supp. 2d 800, 815
 (N.D. Iowa 2003) (finding a 
removing parent should not benefit from the barriers another parent faced in bringing the 
petition).                                                                
   (2) The record shows beyond question that R.R.S.’s reception in Culiacan will be 
stable, highly supportive, and family centered.  The record shows that Father (along with 
Mother) is capable of caring for R.R.S.  Father has stable employment, owns a home, and 

is surrounded by extended family who also are available and able to care for R.R.S., 
                                                                        
7    I cannot say the same with respect to the grave-risk defense under Article 13.  Had 
Mother proven that defense, I would have denied Father’s petition.        
Tr. 72:4–74:1, and who are “awaiting her return,” Tr. 75:20–76:5.  It is undisputed that 
R.R.S. has an extended family network in Culiacan that she lacks in St. Paul.   

ORDER

   Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
ORDERED THAT:                                                             
   1.   Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez’s Verified Petition for Return of 
Child to Petitioner Under the Hague Convention [ECF No. 1] is GRANTED.    
   2.   R.R.S. shall be removed to Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico not later than June 7, 

2024.  Unless the parties agree otherwise, removal shall be at Mother’s expense.8   
          LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                          


Dated:  May 6, 2024                s/ Eric C. Tostrud                     
                                 Eric C. Tostrud                        
                                 United States District Court           







                                                                        
8    Father testified that he requires one month’s notice to arrange travel to Minnesota 
to accompany R.R.S. on her return to Mexico.  Tr. 24:17–20.               

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                   DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                

Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez,       File No. 23-cv-3911 (ECT/JFD)         

        Petitioner,                                                     

v.                                    OPINION AND ORDER                   

Maria Luisa Sanchez Noriega,                                              

        Respondent.                                                     

M. Boulette and Laura Elaine Kvasnicka, Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, Minneapolis, 
MN, for Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez.                          
Maria Luisa Sanchez Noriega, pro se.                                      
________________________________________________________________________  
   Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez (“Father”) alleges Respondent Maria 
Luisa Sanchez Noriega (“Mother”) removed their child, R.R.S., from Mexico in violation 
of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction.  Father 
seeks the child’s return to Mexico so that custody questions may be decided by a court 
there.  Mother wishes to maintain custody of R.R.S. in Minnesota.  R.R.S. will be ordered 
returned to Mexico because Father proved that Mother wrongfully removed the child, and 
Mother has not carried her burden of proving any affirmative defense.     
                              I1                                        
   Mother and Father are the parents of minor child R.R.S.  Tr. 7:18–23; P-2.  R.R.S. 
was born in Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico in 2018.  Tr. 8:1–2; P-2.  She lived in Culiacan 

from her birth in 2018 until May 2021.  Tr. 27:8–11.  R.R.S. is a citizen of Mexico and 
does not have legal status in the United States.  Tr. 8:21–22, 14:19–16:9.   
   Mother and Father never married or lived together.  Tr. 27:20–28:4.  In Culiacan, 
R.R.S. resided with Mother and R.R.S.’s half-brother.  ECF No. 29 at 2; see Tr. 112:2–3 
(“[S]he has always lived with us since she was born, her brother and I at home.”).  Until 

2021, R.R.S. received childcare and medical care in Culiacan, and was pre-enrolled to 
attend  school  there.    Tr.  8:23–9:12,  27:8–19.    R.R.S.  has  many  family  members  in 
Sinaloa, including paternal aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, and great-grandparents, 
and maternal aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents.  Tr. 71:15–72:3.   
   Mother and Father were employed in Culiacan, and R.R.S. attended a daycare 

facility in Culiacan on weekdays.  Tr. 29:9–23, 50:19–22, 59:3–18, 72:23–73:2.  Each 
weekday after daycare, R.R.S. would be cared for at the residence of a paternal relative 
until Mother’s workday ended.  Tr. 36:6–10, 51:9–20.  The record is unclear as to the 
frequency with which R.R.S. went to her paternal grandparents’ home, her paternal great-
grandparents’  home,  or  her  paternal  aunt’s  home  after  daycare.    See  Tr.  9:16–9:20 

                                                                        
1    This  opinion  describes  the  factual  findings  and  legal  conclusions  required  by 
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)(1). “P-#” exhibits are Father’s trial exhibits.  Cited 
page  numbers  refer  to  the  offering  party’s  stamped  exhibit  page  numbering,  unless 
otherwise specified.  The sealed evidentiary hearing transcript (“Tr.”) is docketed at ECF 
No. 28.  The transcript will be cited by transcript page number and line.   
                                                                          
(grandparents); Tr. 51:9–16 (great-grandparents); Tr. 53:12–24 (aunt).  Regardless, the 
record shows R.R.S. was cared for by Father’s family every day following daycare, and 
Father testified that he visited R.R.S. every day after he finished work.  Tr. 36:6–10; see 

also Tr. 51:9–20.  Father also described the care he provided to R.R.S. during these visits, 
including feeding and bathing R.R.S., playing with her, and bringing her to family events.  
Tr. 29:16–30:5, 33:19–34:2, 36:11–19; see also Tr. 59:8–18.  Mother disputed Father’s 
account of the frequency of his visits with R.R.S.; Mother testified that Father saw R.R.S. 
once every three weeks.  Tr. 14:5–10.  Mother and Father agree that each of them 

contributed financially to R.R.S.’s care, including food, diapers, and other necessities.  
Tr. 78:24–79:14.  All agree R.R.S. was loved and cared for in Culiacan.   
   In  April  2021,  Mother  informed  Father  she  intended  to  remove  R.R.S.  from 
Mexico and take her to the United States “because you could lead a better life here.”  
Tr. 37:4–38:5.  Father told Mother he did not give permission to her to remove R.R.S. 

from  Mexico.    Tr.  37:14–38:5,  42:25–43:9;  P-10.    In  a  text  message,  Mother 
communicated to Father that she would not remove R.R.S. from Mexico without Father’s 
authorization.  P-10.                                                     
   Regardless, on May 11, 2021, Mother removed R.R.S. from Mexico.  Tr. 12:6–11.  
That day, R.R.S. was supposed to be dropped off following daycare at the house of 

Father’s parents, but R.R.S. did not arrive.  Tr. 43:10–15.  Father attempted without 
success to contact Mother by telephone, and Father’s parents went to Mother’s house but 
were met with no response.  Tr. 43:16–19.  Later that day, Mother called Father from an 
unknown  number  and  informed  him  she  had  taken  R.R.S.  to  the  United  States.  
Tr. 43:20–23.                                                             
   Mother and R.R.S. first relocated to Texas.  Tr. 12:15–17.  Father learned Mother 

and R.R.S. were in Texas through the family of R.R.S.’s half-brother.  Tr. 44:15–45:11.  
Father contacted attorneys, Mexican authorities, and the Office of Foreign Affairs in 
Mexico to attempt to secure R.R.S.’s return to Mexico.  Tr. 46:2–10, 61:16–62:8.  On 
November 5, 2021, about six months after R.R.S.’s removal, Father filed an application 
with  Mexican  authorities  requesting  R.R.S.’s  return  under  the  Hague  Convention.  

Tr. 46:11–47:16; P-4.  Father credibly testified it took him until November 2021 to file 
the application with Mexican authorities because the authorities “had a lot of questions, a 
lot of requirements for [him], things that [he] needed to gather and fill out,” and, “on top 
of that, it was the pandemic.”  Tr. 47:1–16.  Around May 2022, a year after removal, 
Father identified and retained a Texas lawyer to initiate legal proceedings in the United 

States.  Tr. 62:9–17.  However, before Father filed a petition for R.R.S.’s return in a 
Texas court, Mother and R.R.S. left Texas.  Tr. 62:18–63:25.              
   In the summer of 2022, Father learned through Facebook that Mother and R.R.S. 
had moved from Texas to St. Paul, Minnesota.  Tr. 63:5–19, 64:13–22.  Father alerted the 
Mexican Office of Foreign Affairs of R.R.S.’s whereabouts and wrote the Office every 

two weeks requesting updates on his case.  Tr. 64:23–65:12.  Father eventually obtained 
counsel in Minnesota and initiated these proceedings.  Tr. 65:13–16.      
   Mother  and  R.R.S.  have  lived  in  St.  Paul  since  the  summer  of  2022.    See 
Tr. 64:17–22, 112:22–23, 124:11–17.  While in St. Paul, R.R.S. attended preschool from 
2022 to 2023, and kindergarten from 2023 to the present.  Tr. 123:3–12.  R.R.S. has 
attended the same daycare for after-school, holiday, and summer care since November 
2022.  Tr. 124:11–17.  R.R.S. also receives medical, dental, and ophthalmological care in 

St. Paul.  Tr. 113:10–25, 125:3–8.  R.R.S. has befriended children at school and children 
of Mother’s friends.  Tr. 115:4–8.                                        
   R.R.S. has a disability that affects her speech, gross motor skills, and balance.  
Tr. 118:11–121:1.  She has difficulty being understood in both English and Spanish, 
running and jumping, and using the bathroom.  Id.  Through her school, R.R.S. receives 

speech therapy and other treatment every day.  Tr. 121:2–19.  R.R.S.’s speech issues have 
improved through therapy.  Tr. 110:18–24, 120:17–19.  R.R.S.’s disability prevents her 
from  participating  in  sports  and  other  extracurricular  activities,  but  she  enjoys  other 
activities such as going to museums and playing in the snow.  Tr. 114:9–25, 120:21–
121:1.                                                                    

   Father has communicated with R.R.S. in video calls since R.R.S.’s 2021 removal.  
Tr. 66:3–15.    Father  tries  to  speak  with  R.R.S.  every  day,  but  two  or  three  days 
sometimes pass between their calls.  Id.; Tr. 86:17–21.  While Father was in St. Paul for 
the evidentiary hearing in this case, he spent a day with R.R.S.  Tr. 95:6–9.  Otherwise, 
Father has not seen R.R.S. in person since May 8, 2021.  Tr. 36:20–21.    

   R.R.S. continues to live with Mother and R.R.S.’s seventeen-year-old half-brother 
in St. Paul.  Tr. 112:22–113:5.  Mother, who also lacks legal status in the United States, 
Tr. 16:10–17:14, manages a fast-food restaurant.  Tr. 115:9–19.  She has worked in that 
job since August 2023.  Id.  Mother has weekends off from work and spends that time 
with her children.  Tr. 110:25–111:8.  Since moving to St. Paul, Mother also has done 
janitorial work and has taken classes to learn English.  Tr. 111:9–11, 115:24–116:2.  
Father works at a government office in Culiacan “where they deal with taxes,” and has a 

temporary, weekend job at a sports club.  Tr. 73:16–23, 77:2–14.          
   On December 29, 2023, Father filed a verified petition for return of R.R.S. under 
the Hague Convention,2 the International Child Abduction Remedies Act (“ICARA”), 22 
U.S.C.  §§  9001–11,  and  the  Minnesota  Uniform  Child  Custody  Jurisdiction  and 
Enforcement Act (“UCCJEA”), Minn. Stat. § 518D.101 et seq.  Pet. ¶¶ 1, 31.  The same 

day, Father filed an ex parte motion for an accelerated hearing and a request for a 
temporary  restraining  order,  seeking  to  enjoin  Mother  from  removing  R.R.S.  from 
Minnesota pending expedited proceedings on the Petition.  ECF No. 3.  On January 12, 
2024, a temporary restraining order was issued, enjoining Mother from removing R.R.S. 
from Minnesota for fourteen days.  ECF No. 10.  A show-cause hearing was held on 

January 31, 2024; at this hearing, Mother agreed not to remove R.R.S. from Minnesota, 
and case management deadlines were established in consultation with the parties.  An 
evidentiary hearing on the merits of the Petition was held April 8, 2024, ECF No. 24, and 
both parties filed post-hearing briefing, ECF Nos. 29, 31.                




                                                                        
2    The United States and Mexico are signatories to the Convention.  Status Table, 
Hague      Conference     on      Private    International   Law,         
https://www.hcch.net/en/instruments/conventions/status-table (last visited May 5, 2024). 
                              II                                        
                              A                                         
   “The Hague Convention ‘generally requires courts in the United States to order 
children  returned  to  their  countries  of  habitual  residence,  if  the  courts  find  that  the 

children have been wrongfully removed to or retained in the United States.’”  Rodriguez 
v. Molina, 
96 F.4th 1079, 1082
 (8th Cir. 2024) (quoting Chafin v. Chafin, 
568 U.S. 165, 168
 (2013)).  Hague Convention cases are not custody disputes.  Hague Convention, art. 
19; see Ruiz v. Tenorio, 
392 F.3d 1247
, 1250 (11th Cir. 2004) (“The court’s inquiry is 
limited to the merits of the abduction claim and not the merits of the underlying custody 

battle.”) (citation omitted).  Proceedings under the Convention are “not to establish or 
enforce  custody  rights,  but  only  to  provide  for  a  reasoned  determination  of  where 
jurisdiction over a custody dispute is properly placed.”  Barzilay v. Barzilay, 
600 F.3d 912
, 916–17 (8th Cir. 2010) (internal citations and quotations omitted).  And the Supreme 
Court has cautioned that “courts in Hague Convention cases must strive always to avoid a 

common tendency to prefer their own society and culture.”  Galaviz v. Reyes, 
95 F.4th 246
, 257 (5th Cir. 2024) (quoting Soto v. Contreras, 
880 F.3d 706, 711
 (5th Cir. 2018)) 
(cleaned up).                                                             
   As  the  petitioner,  Father  bears  the  initial  burden  of  establishing,  by  a 
preponderance of the evidence, that R.R.S. was wrongfully removed or retained within 

the Convention’s meaning.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(1)(A).  The Convention provides that a 
child’s removal or retention is wrongful if “it is in breach of rights of custody attributed 
to a person. . ., either jointly or alone, under the law of the State in which the child was 
habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention,” and if the petitioner was 
“actually exercis[ing]” those rights at the time.  Barzilay v. Barzilay, 
536 F.3d 844, 847
 
(8th Cir. 2008) (quoting Hague Convention, art. 3).  To prevail on his Petition, then, 

Father must prove three things by a preponderance of the evidence: “First, he must show 
[Mexico] was [R.R.S.]’s habitual residence prior to removal . . . .  Second, he must show 
the removal of [R.R.S.] violated his custody rights under [Mexican] law.  Third, he must 
show he was exercising his parental rights before [R.R.S.] was removed.”  Tsuruta v. 
Tsuruta, 
76 F.4th 1107, 1110
 (8th Cir. 2023) (citing Barzilay, 
600 F.3d at 917
).   

   The Convention includes several affirmative defenses.  Hague Convention, arts. 
12, 13, 20; 
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2).  “Wrongfully removed or retained children ‘are to be 
promptly  returned  unless  one  of  the  narrow  exceptions  set  forth  in  the  Convention 
applies.’”  Rodriguez, 96 F.4th at 1082–83 (quoting 
22 U.S.C. § 9001
(a)(4)).  Relevant 
here, a court is not bound to return the child if there is “a grave risk” that return “would 

expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an 
intolerable situation.”  Hague Convention, art. 13b.  The respondent must prove the 
grave-risk defense by clear and convincing evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(A).  Also, 
if more than one year has elapsed between the child’s removal and the commencement of 
return proceedings, a court must order the child’s return “unless it is demonstrated that 

the child is now settled in its new environment.”  Hague Convention, art. 12.  The 
respondent  has  the  burden  of  proving  this  so-called  “well-settled  defense”  by  a 
preponderance of the evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(B).  If an affirmative defense 
applies, a court retains discretion to order the child’s return.  Hague Convention, art. 18; 
see Tsai-Yi Yang v. Fu-Chiang Tsui, 
499 F.3d 259, 271
 (3d Cir. 2007).     
                              B                                         

   Father has carried his initial burden of establishing by a preponderance of the 
evidence that R.R.S. was wrongfully removed.  (1) It seems undisputed that Mexico was 
R.R.S.’s habitual residence before removal.  “A child’s habitual residence is the place 
where a child is at home, at the time of removal or retention.”  Tsuruta, 
76 F.4th at 1110
 
(internal quotations omitted).  Father has introduced R.R.S.’s Mexican birth certificate, 

showing she was born in Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico.  P-2.  Mother and Father agree 
R.R.S. resided in Culiacan from her birth in 2018 until her removal in 2021.  Tr. 11:25–
12:2, 27:8–11.  There is no indication in the record that R.R.S. lived anywhere other than 
Culiacan before removal.                                                  
   (2) Father has proven he had custody rights under the laws of Sinaloa.  The 

Sinaloa  Code  provides  that  “[p]arental  authority  on  the  children  is  exercised  by  the 
parents.”  P-5 [Sinaloa Code, art. 350].  It also provides that “[i]n the event of separation 
of the persons exercising parental authority, both shall continue to comply with their 
duties and may agree on the terms of its application, particularly in matters related to the 
guardianship and custody of the minor children.”  P-5 [Sinaloa Code, art. 351] (emphasis 
added).    Where,  as  here,  Father  and  Mother  are  separated,  “both  shall  continue  to 

comply” with their parental duties.  Courts have found such rights under Mexican law to 
constitute “rights of custody” under the Hague Convention.  See, e.g., Whallon v. Lynn, 
230 F.3d 450, 459
 (1st Cir. 2000).  The same conclusion is appropriate here.   
   (3) Father has established he was “actually exercising” his parental rights before 
R.R.S.’s removal.  Though the Hague Convention does not define “exercise,” courts have 
found that custody rights are exercised “whenever a parent with de jure custody rights 

keeps, or seeks to keep, any sort of regular contact with his or her child.”  Friedrich v. 
Friedrich, 
78 F.3d 1060, 1065
 (6th Cir. 1996) see also, e.g., In re Ahumada Cabrera, 
323 F. Supp. 2d 1303, 1312
 (S.D. Fla. 2004) (“[C]ourts have found that in the absence of a 
ruling from a court in the country of habitual residence, a court should liberally find 
‘exercise’ where a parent keeps or seeks to keep any sort of regular contact with his or 

her child.”).  Father’s testimony that he saw R.R.S. every day was credible.  Regardless, 
Mother agrees that Father saw R.R.S. at least every three weeks in Culiacan and that he 
has continued to talk with R.R.S. via video calls nearly every day while she has been in 
the United States.  Tr. 14:5–10, 66:3–15.  There is no serious question that Father kept 
regular contact with his child—before and after removal—and, as such, exercised his 

custody rights.3                                                          
   To summarize, the record evidence shows Mexico was R.R.S.’s habitual residence 
prior  to  removal,  that  Father  had  custody  rights  under  Sinaloa  law,  and  that  Father 
exercised his parental rights.  Father thus has established that R.R.S. was wrongfully 

                                                                        
3    Mother disputes that Father exercised his custody rights while all parties were still 
in Culiacan.  Tr. 14:1–4.  Mother’s arguments primarily focus on which parent did more 
for R.R.S.—who paid for care, whether buying milk and diapers was “enough to support 
the  child,”  Tr.  79:9–17—rather  than  whether  Father  kept  or  sought  to  keep  regular 
contact with R.R.S.  Friedrich, 
78 F.3d at 1065
.  Mother’s arguments in this regard do 
not address the right question.  Mother concedes Father regularly spent time with R.R.S. 
in Culiacan.  Tr. 14:5–15.  That is enough to establish that Father “actually exercised” his 
rights.                                                                   
removed.  Since Father has met his burden, the Convention “generally requires” R.R.S. to 
be returned to Mexico, unless a defense applies.  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1082
.   
                              C                                         

   Mother asserted one affirmative defense in her Answer explicitly—that R.R.S. 
would face a grave risk of serious physical or psychological harm if she were returned 
under Article 13 of the Hague Convention.  Answer [ECF No. 18] at 2.  In support of this 
defense, Mother claimed: “The city of Culiacan, Sinaloa has a high level of risk in 
organized  crime  and  the  great  psychological  damage  that  R.R.S.  can  suffer  when 

separated from the mother, [ ] R.R.S. is very well adapted in school, friends and activities 
[s]he does every day.”  
Id.
  Though Mother categorizes this as a single affirmative 
defense under “Art. 13(1)” of the Convention, Mother’s specific allegation that R.R.S. is 
“well adapted” in St. Paul is better understood to also raise the “well settled” defense 
under Article 12.                                                         

                              1                                         
   Article 13b says a court is not bound to return a child if “there is a grave risk that 
his or her return would expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise 
place the child in an intolerable situation.”  Mother must prove the defense by clear and 
convincing evidence.  
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(A).  Clear and convincing means “highly 
probable.”  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
 (citing Colorado v. New Mexico, 
467 U.S. 310, 316
 (1984)).  This standard requires “more than a preponderance of the evidence but less 
than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”  Olson v. Snap Prods., Inc., 
29 F. Supp. 2d 1027, 1036
 (D. Minn. 1998) (citation omitted).                                  
   “Whether the respondent has established ‘a grave risk of harm under the Hague 
Convention is a mixed question of law and fact.’”  Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
 (quoting 
Acosta v. Acosta, 
725 F.3d 868, 874
 (8th Cir. 2013)).  A court “must engage in ‘a fact-

intensive inquiry’ to determine whether the respondent has proved a grave risk of harm, 
which  requires  ‘careful  consideration  of  several  factors,  including  the  nature  and 
frequency of the abuse [and] the likelihood of its recurrence.’” 
Id.
 (quoting Simcox v. 
Simcox, 
511 F.3d 594, 608
 (6th Cir. 2007)).  Cases finding the grave risk exception has 
been met “often involve the use of physical force [against the child] that is repetitive or 

severe.”  Galaviz v. Reyes, 
95 F.4th 246
, 260 (5th Cir. 2024).  But external factors, such 
as war, famine, or disease, may constitute a grave risk as well.  Friedrich v. Friedrich, 
78 F.3d 1060, 1069
 (6th Cir. 1996).                                          
   Examples are instructive.  In Colon v. Mejia Montufar, 
470 F. Supp. 3d 1280
 (S.D. 
Fla. 2020), a federal district court in Florida applied the grave-risk defense in the context 

of gang activity in Guatemala.4  There, the child had been threatened on two separate 
occasions by members of the MS-13 gang.  Colon, 470 F. Supp. 3d at 1286.  Gang 
members tried to recruit the child and threatened to harm him if he did not join.  Id.  
“Further, they told him that if he told anyone, then they would kill him and his family.”  
Id.    After  the  child  had  been  removed  from  Guatemala  to  the  United  States,  gang 

members appeared at the child’s house in Guatemala looking for him.  Id. at 1287.  
                                                                        
4    Though the grave-risk defense was not established in Colon, the petition was 
denied, and the child was not ordered returned to Guatemala because evidence showed 
the child, then twelve years old, was mature enough to object to being returned.  Colon, 
470 F. Supp. 3d at 1295–98; Hague Convention, art. 13.                    
Ultimately, the child’s brother was forced to join the gang in the child’s place.  Id. at 
1287 & n.8.  The Colon court found the respondent (the child’s mother) had not carried 
her burden of establishing a grave risk of harm to the child.  The court focused on the 

heavy burden the respondent faced, noting: “‘Grave risk’ means something more than 
serious risk, but it does not have to be immediate.  The level of risk and danger required 
to trigger this exception has consistently been held to be very high.”  Id. at 1292 (citations 
omitted).    The  court  found  there  was  no  evidence  the  child’s  brother’s  MS-13 
involvement posed a grave risk to the child or created a “zone of danger” that might 

expose the child to harm.  Id. at 1293.  The court also found that, because over one year 
had passed since the child was threatened by gang members, there was no evidence gang 
members would continue to target the child.  Id. at 1294.  The court further noted a lack 
of evidence that any harm posed was specific to the child.  Id. (“Critically, there is no 
evidence that that the men sought to recruit [the child] for any reason other than the fact 

that gangs seek to recruit young males to join their gang.”).  The court found the threats 
were an “isolated event,” indicating “that the risk of harm is not likely to resurface.”  Id.  
In all, the court found it was not “highly probable” that the child would face a grave risk 
of harm if returned to Guatemala.                                         
   Similarly,  drug  cartel-related  violence  has  been  rejected  as  the  basis  for  a 

grave-risk defense in a federal court in Texas.  In Bernal v. Gonzalez, 
923 F. Supp. 2d 907
 (W.D. Tex. 2012), the respondent (the children’s father) argued there was a grave 
risk of harm if his children were returned to Sinaloa, Mexico, due to the “ongoing cartel 
violence.”  Bernal, 
923 F. Supp. 2d at 920
.  The court noted the “high threshold” for 
establishing the grave-risk defense and found it had not been met.  
Id. at 921
.  Though 
respondent testified about observing dead bodies in a river, and the children testified 
about being stopped by cartel members, witnessing “a tense situation in which an armed 

man pointed a gun directly at the driver of [a] vehicle,” and more, the court found that the 
respondent  did  not  establish  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  a  grave  risk  to  the 
children.  
Id.
                                                            
   Here, Mother points to the “high level of organized crime” as the basis for the 
defense.  Answer at 2.  In testimony, Mother asserted she “lost two brothers in a violent 

way,” but she did not provide details in her hearing testimony.  Tr. 112:4–13.  It is true 
that Mother was personally affected by violence in Sinaloa when she was threatened in 
connection with robberies of the service station where she worked.  Tr. 106:4–107:19.  
While working at the service station, Mother witnessed a murder in the parking lot.  
Tr. 116:18–24.  Mother testified that she suffered armed robberies “maybe once a week,” 

including when she was pregnant or when R.R.S. was at work with her.  Tr. 116:25–
117:4.  Mother asserted that in a “wave of violence in Culiacan” in March 2024, five 
families—including children—were kidnapped.  Tr. 98:19–99:2.  She stated that her own 
brother-in-law and nephew were kidnapped in 2019, despite being uninvolved in drug 
trafficking.  Tr. 99:5–10.  Father testified he believes R.R.S. will be safe in Culiacan.  

Tr. 74:21–75:19.                                                          
   Mother has not carried her burden with respect to the grave-risk defense.  The 
ongoing violence and threat of organized crime in Sinaloa is of course a serious concern.  
Regardless, the assertions do not establish a grave risk of harm to R.R.S. in the relevant 
sense.  It does not appear from the evidence presented that R.R.S. was ever threatened or 
harmed directly or specifically.  Tr. 123:16–22.  It has been about three years since 
Mother and R.R.S. lived in Sinaloa, and there is no indication any person or group would 

target them if they returned.  Moreover, “[t]he level of risk and danger required to trigger 
this exception has consistently been held to be very high.”  Colon, 470 F. Supp. 3d at 
1291; see also Bernal, 923 F.2d at 920.  The record evidence does not establish a high 
probability that R.R.S. faces serious physical or psychological risk if she is returned.  
Hague Convention, art. 13; Rodriguez, 
96 F.4th at 1083
.                   

                              2                                         
   Mother’s  assertion  that  “R.R.S.  is  very  well  adapted  in  school,  friends  and 
activities [s]he does every day [in Minnesota],” Answer at 2, will be construed to advance 
the “well settled” defense under Article 12 of the Hague Convention.  See also Tr. 14:16–
18.  Under Article 12, when more than a year has elapsed between the child’s removal 
and the petitioner’s commencement of return proceedings,5 a court must return a child 

“unless it is demonstrated that the child is now settled in its new environment.”  Hague 
Convention,  art.  12.    That  demonstration  must  be  made  by  a  preponderance  of  the 
evidence, 
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(e)(2)(B), meaning “the greater weight of evidence.  It is the 
evidence which, when weighed with that opposed to it, has more convincing force and is 

                                                                        
5    “[T]he  term  ‘commencement  of  proceedings’,  as  used  in  article  12  of  the 
Convention, means, with respect to the return of a child located in the United States, the 
filing  of  a  petition  in  accordance  with  subsection  (b)  of  this  section.”    
22 U.S.C. § 9003
(f)(3) (emphasis added).  Subsection (b), in turn, discusses filing a petition as 
commencing  a  civil  action  in  a  court  with  jurisdiction.    Father  filed  the  Petition  in 
December 2023, more than two years after R.R.S.’s removal in May 2021.    
more probably true and accurate.”  Smith v. United States, 
726 F.2d 428, 430
 (8th Cir. 
1984) (recounting the district court’s definition and finding no error).   
   In determining whether a child is well-settled in her new environment, courts 

consider the totality of the circumstances.  da Silva v. de Aredes, 
953 F.3d 67, 75
 (1st Cir. 
2020); see also Neng Nhia Yi Ly v. Heu, 
294 F. Supp. 2d 1062, 1066
 (D. Minn. 2003) 
(“[T]he  court  is  permitted  to  consider  any  relevant  factor,  including  the  particular 
circumstances surrounding the child’s living environment.”).  The Hague Convention is 
silent  regarding  what  factors  should  be  considered  when  analyzing  the  well-settled 

defense.  Courts have nonetheless identified various factors, including:  
        (1)  the  age  of  the  child;  (2)  the  stability  of  the  child’s 
        residence  in  the  new  environment;  (3)  whether  the  child 
        attends school or day care consistently; (4) whether the child  
        attends  church  [or  participates  in  other  community  or    
        extracurricular  school  activities]  regularly;  (5)  the      
        respondent’s employment and financial stability; (6) whether    
        the child has friends and relatives in the new area; and (7) the 
        immigration status of the child and the respondent.             
Lozano  v.  Alvarez,  
697 F.3d 41, 57
  (2d  Cir.  2012)  (alteration  in  original)  (citation 
omitted); see also de Jesus Joya Rubio v. Alvarez, 
526 F. Supp. 3d 1186
, 1202–03 (S.D. 
Fla. 2021) (articulating similar factors).  “The United States Department of State has 
declared that ‘nothing less than substantial evidence of the child’s significant connections 
to the new country is intended to suffice to meet the respondent’s burden of proof’ under 
the well-settled defense.”  Luis Alfonso V.H. v. Banessa Cristina A.Z., 
512 F. Supp. 3d 633
, 645 (W.D. Va. 2021) (quoting Hague Int’l Child Abduction Convention; Text and 
Legal Analysis, 
51 Fed. Reg. 10,494
, 10,509 (March 26, 1986)).  On this evidentiary 
record, the better answer is that R.R.S. is not “well settled” in St. Paul.   
   It  is  true  that  one  consideration  favors  finding  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  in 

St. Paul: R.R.S. has attended school and daycare consistently in St. Paul since arriving 
here in mid-2022.  She is close to completing two grade levels—pre-kindergarten and 
kindergarten—in the St. Paul public school system.  Tr. 123:3–12.  R.R.S. has received 
therapy for her disabilities from her school.  Tr. 121:2–19.  Mother testified that R.R.S. 
receives this care for roughly thirty minutes of every school day.  
Id.
  And R.R.S. has 

attended the same daycare facility since November 2022.  Tr. 124:11–17.   
   Other considerations cut in the opposite direction or are neutral:   
   (a) It is difficult to understand how R.R.S.’s age should affect the analysis.  R.R.S. 
     is six years old and has been in the United States for nearly three years, enough 
     time for the well-settled defense to be considered, and enough time to become 

     well settled.  Hague Convention, art. 12; see de Jesus, 526 F. Supp. 3d, 1202–
     04 (finding a child who lived in the United States less than two years to be well 
     settled); see also Neng Nhia Yi Ly v. Heu, 
294 F. Supp. 2d 1062, 1066
 (D. 
     Minn. 2003) (finding that a seven-year-old child removed from France was 
     well-settled in St. Paul and noting the child “ha[d] spent more than half her 

     young life in Saint Paul,” and “has only vague memories of France”).  At the 
     same time, R.R.S. spent half her life in Culiacan and one year in Texas. 
   (b) It is easy to say that R.R.S. has not experienced meaningful stability in her 
     young life.  It is difficult to tell whether R.R.S.’s St. Paul residence is stable.  
R.R.S. was not brought directly to St. Paul from Culiacan.  She was brought 
first to Texas in May 2021, Tr. 12:15–17, meaning she has spent roughly two-
thirds of her time in the United States in Minnesota, Tr. 64:17–19, 112:22–23, 

124:11–17.    No  record  evidence  shows  whether  Mother  and  R.R.S.  have 
moved within St. Paul, how long they have resided at their current apartment, 
or how long they intend to remain there.  Apart from Mother’s desire for 
R.R.S.  to  continue  receiving  services  through  the  St.  Paul  public  schools, 
Mother has not identified a specific tie or connection to St. Paul or Minnesota 

that would give her a strong incentive to continue residing here with R.R.S., as 
opposed to another city or location in the United States.          
(c) R.R.S.  has  no  church,  extracurricular,  or  other  organization-grounded 
connections in St. Paul.                                           
(d) Clearly, Mother is hard-working and committed to providing for R.R.S., but 

the nature of her employment is ordinarily understood to be impermanent and 
not enduring.                                                      
(e) Though R.R.S. has formed friendships at school, the record lacks information 
regarding the number or qualities of those relationships.  Apart from Mother 
and her half-brother, R.R.S. has no relatives in Minnesota.        

(f) Mother  and  R.R.S.  do  not  have  legal  status  in  the  United  States,  and  no 
evidence suggests that either of them might seek—or be positioned to seek—
legal status in the foreseeable future.  Tr. 8:21–22, 14:19–17:14.  There is no 
reason to think that Mother or R.R.S. faces a near-term risk of removal or 
     deportation.    Regardless,  it  would  be  a  mistake  to  think  that  Mother  and 
     R.R.S.’s lack of legal status favors finding that the well-settled defense applies 
     here.  It cuts the other direction.6                               

   To  summarize,  I  find  that  Mother  has  not  shown  by  a  preponderance  of  the 
evidence that R.R.S. is well-settled in St. Paul.  Though evidence of R.R.S.’s school and 
daycare  attendance  favors  finding  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  here,  this  evidence  is 
outweighed by the absence of other community connections, the absence of any family in 
the community, R.R.S.’s (and Mother’s) lack of lawful immigration status.  Evidence 

relevant  to  the  stability  of  R.R.S.’s  St.  Paul  residence,  Mother’s  employment  and 
financial stability, and R.R.S.’s age does not support a conclusion one way or the other as 
to the well-settled defense’s applicability.                              
                                                                        
6    Courts have considered how much weight to give a child’s lack of legal status in 
the  well-settled-defense  analysis.    While  “no  court  has  held  it  to  be  singularly 
dispositive,” courts “have consistently found immigration status to be a factor when 
deciding whether a child is settled.”  Lozano v. Alvarez, 
697 F.3d 41, 57
 (2d Cir. 2012), 
aff’d sub nom. Lozano v. Montoya Alvarez, 
572 U.S. 1
 (2014); see also da Silva, 933 F.3d 
at 75–76.  In da Silva v. de Aredes, 
953 F.3d 67
 (1st Cir. 2020), for example, the First 
Circuit affirmed a district court’s determination that a removed child was not well-settled 
in  the  United  States.    Though  the  district  court  found  the  child  had  “developed 
meaningful relationships and lasting emotional bonds with a community in East Boston,” 
it also determined that the child’s “unsettled” immigration status in the United States, her 
mother’s  difficulty  in  finding  stable  employment,  the  child’s  constant  tardiness  and 
absence from school, and her adjustment disorder due to a lack of family, weighed in 
favor of finding the child not settled.  da Silva, 953 F.3d at 75–76.  In Lozano, the Second 
Circuit affirmed a district court’s determination that a removed child was well-settled in 
New York though the child lacked legal status in the United States.  697 F.3d at 56–58.  
Important to the court’s affirmance, there was no evidence showing that the mother or 
child faced a threat of deportation, and evidence showed the mother was exploring how 
to gain legal status.  See 
id.
 at 46–48, 58.  These cases teach that a child’s immigration 
status  is  not  dispositive,  but  rather  one  factor  to  be  considered  alongside  others  to 
determine whether a child is well-settled in her new environment.         
                              D                                         
   If  the  conclusion  that  Mother  failed  to  prove  the  well-settled  defense  was 
incorrect, I would still order R.R.S. returned to Culiacan notwithstanding the well-settled 

defense’s applicability.7  Recall that a court retains discretion to order a removed child’s 
return even if the well-settled affirmative defense applies.  Hague Convention, art. 18; 
Tsai-Yi Yang, 
499 F.3d at 271
.  I would reach this decision for essentially two reasons.   
   (1)  Mother’s  ability  to  credibly  argue  that  R.R.S.  is  well-settled  in  St.  Paul 
depends on the time it has taken Father to pursue R.R.S.’s return, but that delay is not 

Father’s fault.  Father testified credibly that he has been working to secure R.R.S.’s return 
since she was removed.  See supra at 4.  Bureaucratic delays, the COVID-19 pandemic, 
and Mother’s efforts to conceal R.R.S.’s location all delayed Father from filing this case.  
These delays, in turn, gave Mother and R.R.S. time to settle in St. Paul.  In this situation, 
rigid  application  of  the  well-settled  defense  would  be  inappropriate.    See  Antunez-

Fernandes v. Connors-Fernandes, 
259 F. Supp. 2d 800, 815
 (N.D. Iowa 2003) (finding a 
removing parent should not benefit from the barriers another parent faced in bringing the 
petition).                                                                
   (2) The record shows beyond question that R.R.S.’s reception in Culiacan will be 
stable, highly supportive, and family centered.  The record shows that Father (along with 
Mother) is capable of caring for R.R.S.  Father has stable employment, owns a home, and 

is surrounded by extended family who also are available and able to care for R.R.S., 
                                                                        
7    I cannot say the same with respect to the grave-risk defense under Article 13.  Had 
Mother proven that defense, I would have denied Father’s petition.        
Tr. 72:4–74:1, and who are “awaiting her return,” Tr. 75:20–76:5.  It is undisputed that 
R.R.S. has an extended family network in Culiacan that she lacks in St. Paul.   

ORDER

   Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
ORDERED THAT:                                                             
   1.   Petitioner Jesus Rafael Roman Rodriguez’s Verified Petition for Return of 
Child to Petitioner Under the Hague Convention [ECF No. 1] is GRANTED.    
   2.   R.R.S. shall be removed to Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico not later than June 7, 

2024.  Unless the parties agree otherwise, removal shall be at Mother’s expense.8   
          LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                          


Dated:  May 6, 2024                s/ Eric C. Tostrud                     
                                 Eric C. Tostrud                        
                                 United States District Court           







                                                                        
8    Father testified that he requires one month’s notice to arrange travel to Minnesota 
to accompany R.R.S. on her return to Mexico.  Tr. 24:17–20.               

Reference

Status
Unknown