Waiting at the hotel
Aguilar said he was in a similar predicament.
His family had timed out of the center Sept. 11 after three nights and were waiting on a family member to send them money to get to Washington state, where they heard from an immigration official that there was a shelter for migrants.
Around 3 p.m. that day, Aguilar said Perla arrived outside the San Antonio center with another woman and a male Venezuelan migrant, whose name Aguilar said he didn’t know.
Some of the migrants voluntarily began to share with the women where they were headed, he said, but explained that they were stuck because they didn’t have money. Aguilar said the women began to offer to take migrants to either Washington state, Oregon or other states. Aguilar said he didn’t hear the term “sanctuary states” as part of that conversation.
“We were desperate because it was already night and we were on the streets,” Aguilar said. When they asked when they would get to wherever they were going, they were told any day between Monday and Wednesday.
According to migrants, Perla said she was taking them to a “residence,” which they understood would be her home. They instead were taken to a hotel.
On Sept. 8, Villazana said his family members were taken to a La Quinta hotel near Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland with 12 other migrants. The next day, Villazana and others were also taken to the same hotel. Aguilar said he arrived Sunday with his cousins.
Rita Orpeza, a maintenance employee at the La Quinta hotel, told the San Antonio Report she first heard of the migrants staying there from coworkers.
“They didn’t make a peep when they stayed here … pretty much just stayed in their rooms,” Orpeza said.
Villazana said he spent four nights and five days at the La Quinta.
Filling the flights
The migrants did not know exactly where they were going after the hotel, they were only told about the things they were promised when they arrived at their eventual destination.
“On Tuesday, the woman arrived [at the hotel] and asked us to sign a paper because the flight was leaving tomorrow,” Aguilar said. “We were feeling doubtful because we know that when you’re boarding a flight, they have to hand you a ticket.”
Aguilar said that the paper the migrants signed was permission to board the plane.
On Wednesday afternoon, Villazana and Aguilar said the group departed the hotel in buses and were taken to two private planes by Perla, two women and two men.
Aguilar said he heard one of the men from Perla’s group say they had the goal of flying out 60 migrants from Kelly Field, but didn’t meet their goal.
“They didn’t want to depart until they met their goal,” Aguilar said.
Villazana and Aguilar said 42 migrants and five children boarded the two planes and were finally told they were going to Massachusetts when they boarded, and were again reminded they would have jobs. Aguilar said Perla did not get on the plane.
“The whole time, the movements were secretive,” Villazana said. “Everything, they did it in their own way.”
About 10 minutes before they landed, Aguilar said a woman handed them a pamphlet with three blue dots on the island, showing them where they could find the migrant refugios.
Aguilar said the woman told the migrants, “at whichever of those three refugios, you can go and they’ll help you, give you jobs. We already contacted them and they’re going to receive you.”
Arrival in Martha’s Vineyard
The migrants waited for buses to arrive in Martha’s Vineyard, and about 15 people boarded each bus.
“We saw a [news] camera, and when we saw it, we knew something strange was going on,” Aguilar said. “When the bus driver took us to a certain address, he pointed to where we needed to walk.”
Groups of migrants began to arrive at the address and began asking for directions on the street. The people on the street were confused, the migrants said, as they began to realize more and more groups of people were walking up behind the first group.
“We were desperate. We didn’t know what to do,” Aguilar said. “Do we walk to the left? To the right?”
Aguilar said migrants realized they had been lied to and described a feeling of embarrassment at being met by seemingly wealthy people. The locals’ kindness made them feel better, he said, but the migrants still kept apologizing for showing up.
So far, the migrants swept up in the stunt have been working with attorneys who are getting their testimony on what happened, and helping them update immigration documents.
They’re just as hopeful for the future as they were when they arrived in San Antonio.
“Maybe God wanted it this way,” Aguilar said.
Photojournalist Nick Wagner and Reporter Lindsey Carnett contributed to this story.
Raquel Torres is the San Antonio Report's breaking news reporter. She previously worked at the Tyler Morning Telegraph and is a 2020 graduate of Stephen F. Austin State University. More by Raquel Torres
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