Texas Mom Daughter, A Texas lady and her long-missing girl arrived Saturday morning in Houston, finishing an eight-year cross-outskirt case that had erroneously sent another young lady to the U.S. without wanting to.
Houston occupant Dorotea Garcia and 13-year-old Alondra Diaz landed at Bush Intercontinental Airport on Saturday morning from Guadalajara, Mexico.
Diaz, a local conceived U.S. resident, was taken to Mexico in 2007 by her dad without her mom's assent and Diaz's whereabouts hadn't been known as of not long ago.
The case picked up consideration a month ago after a judge in Mexico incorrectly decided that 14-year-old Alondra Luna was the missing young lady and requested her swung over to Garcia. DNA testing indicated she wasn't Garcia's girl and she came back to her genuine crew.
Garcia and Diaz talked with correspondents outside of Garcia's rural Houston home on Saturday evening.
"I cherish her, and I am so upbeat having her here," Garcia said. At the point when requested that what it means have her little girl back, she answered, "No more dim days."
The carport entryway on the front of the house had been adorned with blow ups and signs that said in Spanish, "Welcome Alondra" and "We cherish you all that much, Alondra."
All through the news meeting, mother and girl embraced one another, and Garcia got to be passionate a few times.
At the point when gotten some information about returning home to the United States to live with her mom, Alondra said in Spanish, "I need to realize numerous things about the United States, about my crew."
Garcia said that she had been sitting tight during the current day for a long time.
"I can touch her now," she said in Spanish.
Houston occupant Dorotea Garcia and 13-year-old Alondra Diaz landed at Bush Intercontinental Airport on Saturday morning from Guadalajara, Mexico.
Diaz, a local conceived U.S. resident, was taken to Mexico in 2007 by her dad without her mom's assent and Diaz's whereabouts hadn't been known as of not long ago.
The case picked up consideration a month ago after a judge in Mexico incorrectly decided that 14-year-old Alondra Luna was the missing young lady and requested her swung over to Garcia. DNA testing indicated she wasn't Garcia's girl and she came back to her genuine crew.
Garcia and Diaz talked with correspondents outside of Garcia's rural Houston home on Saturday evening.
"I cherish her, and I am so upbeat having her here," Garcia said. At the point when requested that what it means have her little girl back, she answered, "No more dim days."
The carport entryway on the front of the house had been adorned with blow ups and signs that said in Spanish, "Welcome Alondra" and "We cherish you all that much, Alondra."
All through the news meeting, mother and girl embraced one another, and Garcia got to be passionate a few times.
At the point when gotten some information about returning home to the United States to live with her mom, Alondra said in Spanish, "I need to realize numerous things about the United States, about my crew."
Garcia said that she had been sitting tight during the current day for a long time.
"I can touch her now," she said in Spanish.
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