For this undocumented activist, returning to Mexico was liberation
On an overcast morning in September, Hector Alessandro Negrete left his beloved Los Angeles β the city he was brought to at 3 months old β and headed down Interstate 5 to Mexico, the only country where he held a passport.
It was a place that, to him, had βalways felt like both a wound and a possibility.β
Negrete, 43, sat in the passenger seat as a friend steered the car south and two more friends in another car followed. He had condensed his life to three full suitcases and his dachshund mix, Lorca.
They pulled over at the beach in San Clemente. Angel Martinez, his soon-to-be former roommate, is deeply spiritual, and his favorite prayer spot is the ocean, so he prayed that Negrete would be blessed and protected β and Lorca too β as they began a new stage in their lives.
On the near-empty beach, the friends embraced and wiped away tears. Martinez handed Negrete a small watermelon.
As instructed, Negrete walked to the edge of the water, said his own prayer and, as a gift of thanks to the cosmos, plopped it into a crashing wave.
Negrete, holding a drink, embraces his friend Angel Martinez as they visit a drag club in Tijuana after leaving Los Angeles a day earlier.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Negrete doesnβt call it self-deportation.
βSelf-repatriation,β he said. βI refuse to use this administrationβs language.β
President Trump had been in office just over a month when Negrete decided he would return to Mexico. Methodical by nature, he approached the decision like any other β by researching, organizing and planning.
Negrete secured three forms of Mexican identification: his voter credential, a renewed passport and a card akin to a Social Security ID.
He registered Lorca as an emotional support animal, paid for a vaccine card and a certificate of good health, and crate-trained her in a TSA-approved carrier.
He announced his decision to leave in June on his Substack newsletter: βIf youβre thinking, βAlessandroβs giving up,β look deeper. I am choosing freedom. For the first time, I feel unshackled from the expectations of waiting.β
Negrete walks the streets of Boyle Heights while shopping for moving supplies after deciding he would leave the U.S. on his own terms.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Negrete had grown tired of wishing for immigration reform. He had built his career advocating for immigrants such as himself, including stints as statewide coordinator for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, or MALDEF, and as executive director for the California Immigrant Youth Justice Alliance.
He said his work had helped legalize street vending in Los Angeles and he assisted the office of then-California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris in securing the release of a young woman from immigration detention. He was the first openly undocumented and LGBTQ+ person on the Boyle Heights Neighborhood Council.
Under previous administrations, Negreteβs political work had felt like a shield against deportation. Even during Trumpβs first term, Negrete had marched at rallies denouncing his immigration policies.
But that was before the new Immigration and Customs Enforcement patrols that tore into Southern California during Trumpβs second term. On June 6, as anti-ICE protesters took to the streets, Negrete rushed to downtown Los Angeles when fellow activists told him street medics were needed.
βOne of my homies said, βHey fool, what are you doing here?ββ he recalled. Seeing Los Angeles police officers advancing on the crowd, he realized that no amount of public support could protect him.
He fled. βThank God I left.β
Negrete, in red, with his friends and colleagues at a farewell party and yard sale in August.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
In mid-August, Negrete hosted a yard sale and going away party. The flier was tongue-in-cheek: βEverything must go! Including me!β
His red T-shirt stated plainly, βI AM UNDOCUMENTED,β and his aviator sunglasses hid the occasional tears. Tattoos dotted his extremities, including an anchor on his right leg with the words βI refuse to sink.β
βI think it hit me when I started packing my stuff today,β he told a former colleague, Shruti Garg, who had arrived early.
βBut the way youβve invited everyone to join you is so beautiful,β she replied.
One table held American pop-culture knickknacks β sippy cups with Ghostface from the movie βScream,β collectible Mickey Mouse ears, a Detective Batman purse shaped like a comic book, another purse shaped like the locker from the β90s cartoon βDaria.β
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Negrete said the items reminded him of his youth and represented the gothic, quirky aspects of his personality.
βI was born in Mexico, but I donβt know Mexico,β he said. βSo Iβm leaving the American parts of me that are no longer going to serve me.β
The back yard slowly filled with loved ones from Negreteβs various social circles. There was his mostly queer softball team β the Peacocks β his running group, his chosen family and his blood family.
Negreteβs close friend Joel Menjivar looked solemn.
βIβm scared itβs going to start a movement,β he said. βUndocumented or DACA friends who are talented and integral to the fabric of L.A. might get ideas to leave.β
Another friend, Mario Mariscal, said he took Negreteβs decision the hardest, though at first he didnβt believe Negrete was serious. More than once he asked, βYou really want to give up everything youβve built here for a new start in Mexico?β
Eventually, Negrete had to tell Mariscal that his questions werenβt helpful. During a deeper conversation about his decision, Negrete shared that he was tired of living with the constant fear of getting picked up, herded into an unmarked van and taken away.
βI just kept telling him, βThatβs not going to happen to you,ββ Mariscal said. βBut the more this administration keeps doing it, the more itβs in our face, the more weβre seeing every horror story about that, it became clear that, you know what, you do have a point. You do have to do whatβs right for you.β
Negrete continues packing for his move to Mexico as roommate Martinez works at their Boyle Heights home.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Negrete is cognizant of the privilege that makes his departure different from that of many other immigrants. He is white-passing, fluent in Spanish and English, and moved with $10,000 in savings.
In June, he was hired as executive director of a U.S.-based nonprofit, Old School Hub, that works to combat ageism around the world. The role allowed him to live wherever he wanted.
He decided to settle in Guadalajara, a growing technology hub, with historic buildings featuring Gothic architecture that he found beautiful. It also helped that Guadalajara has one of the countryβs most vibrant LGBTQ+ scenes and is a four-hour drive from Puerto Vallarta, a renowned queer resort destination.
As Negrete began his new job while still in L.A., he picked a moving date β Sept. 4 β and booked a two-week Airbnb near the baseball stadium.
That Guadalajaraβs team, the Charros de Jalisco, wore Dodger blue felt like a good omen.
On the day he left the United States, Negrete and Martinez hold a prayer at the beach in San Clemente in which Negrete offers thanks to the universe with an offering of a watermelon.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
On the drive toward the border, messages poured into Negreteβs phone.
βIβm sending you all my love Alessandro,β one read. βCuΓdate. [Take care.] Know that even though youβre far away from home, you carry us with you.β
βTodo te va a salir bien,β read another. Everything will go well for you, it said. βSpread your wings and flyyyyy.β
Afraid of being stopped and detained at the airport, as has happened to other immigrants attempting to leave the country, Negrete preferred to drive to Tijuana and then fly to Guadalajara.
Negreteβs driver, his friend Jorge Leonardo, turned into a parking lot at the sign reading βLAST USA EXIT.β
Negrete put on his black felt tejana hat and called Iris Rodriguez, who was in the companion car. He asked her to cross on foot with him.
Negrete walks his last few steps on American soil as he enters Mexico en route to Guadalajara, his new home.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
βI donβt want to go alone,β he said.
βWeβre still on American soil,β Leonardo said. βYou can still change your mind.β
Negrete ignored him.
βSee yβall on the other side,β he said as he hopped out of the car.
He and Rodriguez stopped for photos in front of a sign with an arrow pointing βTo Mexico.β Around a corner, the border came into full view β a metal turnstile with layers of concertina wire above it.
The line for Mexicanos was unceremoniously quick. The immigration agent barely glanced at Negreteβs passport before waving him through.
On the other side, a busker sang βPiano Manβ by Billy Joel in perfect English.
βWelcome to the motherland,β Rodriguez told him. Negrete let out a deep breath.
Negrete tours downtown Guadalajara, where he now lives.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Negreteβs immediate family members, and almost all of his extended family, live in the U.S.
He was born in Manzanillo, Colima, in 1982. Three months later, the family relocated to Los Angeles, where his parents had two more children.
At 17, Negrete was one of two students in his graduating class at Roosevelt High School to get into UC Berkeley. Thatβs when he found out he didnβt have papers.
His parents had divorced and his father married a U.S. citizen, obtaining a green card when Negrete was at Roosevelt. They began the legalization process for Negrete in 1999, he said, but two years later he came out to his family as gay.
His father was unsupportive and refused to continue seeking to adjust his immigration status. By the time they mended their relationship, it was too late. Negrete had aged out of the pathway at 21.
In 2008, Negrete said, he was arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol. Four years later, President Obama established the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program to protect immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children. Negrete failed to qualify because of the DUI.
He said he got his record expunged in 2016, but β again β it was too late.
The following year, Trump began unwinding DACA, shutting out new generations of recipients, including Negrete.
Negrete waited until his last night in the U.S. to tell his mother, who now lives in Colorado, that he was leaving. He had grown tired of friends and other family members begging him to change his mind.
He had partially hinged his decision on the fact that his mom was in remission from her third bout with cancer and had just obtained legal residency. With life more stable for her, he could finally seek stability for himself.
βYou taught me to dream,β Negrete recalled telling her. βThis is me dreaming. I want to see the world.β
She cried and scolded him, promising to visit and repeating what she had said when he came out to her all those years before: βI wish you told me sooner.β
At a hotel in Tijuana, Negreteβs emotions finally caught up with him.
The day after Negrete and his three friends left L.A., three more friends surprised him by arriving in Tijuana for a final Friday night out together. One of them presented a gift he had put together with help from Negreteβs entire social circle β a video with loved ones sharing messages of encouragement.
In Negreteβs hotel room, as he and his friends watched, the mood grew sentimental.
βYouβre basically the one that formed the family friend tree,β one friend said in her clip. βFriendships do not die out in distance.β
Negrete sobbed. βYes! Friendships donβt have borders,β he said.
βEvery single one of you has said this hasnβt hit yβall, like itβs a mini vacation,β he said. βI want to think of it as an extended vacation.β
βThis isnβt goodbye, this is weβll see each other soon,β he continued.
Off his soapbox, Negrete then chided his friends for making him cry before heading to a drag show.
Negrete had a habit of leaving social gatherings abruptly. His friends joked that they would refer to him as βcatch me on the 101β because every time he disappeared during a night out, they would open Appleβs Find My app and see him on the freeway heading home.
βWeβre not gonna catch him on the 101 no more,β Martinez said.
The last few flights of stairs lead Iris Rodriguez and Negrete to his Airbnb apartment in Guadalajara.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
On the flight to Guadalajara, Negreteβs heart raced and he began to hyperventilate. The anxiety attack caught him off guard.
Negrete had worked hard to show his friends and family that he was happy, because he didnβt want them to think he had doubts β and he had none. But he began to worry about the unknown and to mourn his former dreams of gaining legal status and running for public office.
βIt hit me all at once,β he recounted. βI am three hours away from a whole new life that I donβt know. I left everything and I donβt know whatβs next.β
Many deep breaths by Negrete later, the plane descended through the clouds, revealing vibrant green fields and a cantaloupe-hued sunset.
Negrete tests the bed at his temporary home in Guadalajara.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Inside the Airbnb, he was surprised to find a clothesline instead of a dryer. Noticing the blue 5-gallon jug of water in the kitchen, he remarked that he would have to remember tap water wasnβt safe to cook with. But alongside the new was something familiar: The view from his 11–story apartment showed off a sprawling metropolis dotted with trees, some of them palms.
The next day started off like any Sunday, with a trip to Walmart and drag brunch.
Negrete marveled at the cost of a large carton of egg whites ($1) and was shocked to see eggs stored at room temperature, liquid laundry detergent in bags and only single-ply toilet paper. He treated himself to a Darth Vader coffee mug and a teapot featuring characters from βThe Nightmare Before Christmas.β
After brunch, it was time to play tourist. Negrete was accompanied by Rodriguez, who stayed with him for the first two weeks, and a new friend, Alejandro Preciado, whom he had met at Coachella in April and happened to be a Guadajalara local.
Negrete tours downtown Guadalajara. He was drawn to the city, in part, by its Gothic architecture.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Their first stop was the cityβs Spanish Renaissance cathedral, where Negrete said a quick prayer to the Virgin Mary at his motherβs request. Negrete treated his friends to an electric carriage ride around the historic buildings, where he excitedly pointed out the Gothic architecture, then they bought aguas frescas and walked through an open-air market, chatting in an English-heavy Spanglish.
βIβm trying to look at how people dress,β Negrete said, suddenly self-conscious about his short shorts. βIβm pretty sure I stand out.β
After dinner, Negrete was booking an Uber back to his Airbnb when a message popped up: βWeβve detected unusual activity.β
The app didnβt know he had moved.
Before he arrived in Guadalajara, Negrete had already joined an intramural baseball team and a running club. Practices began days after his arrival.
Negrete enjoys a view of the sprawling hills of Guadalajara.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Within a month, he moved into an apartment, visited Mexico City and reconnected with aunts in Mexico City and Guadalajara he hadnβt seen in decades.
He reflected on the small joys of greeting neighborhood seΓ±oras on morning dog walks, discovering the depths of Mexican cuisine and the peace of mind that came with no longer feeling like a target β though heβll still freeze at the sight of police lights.
Still, Negrete remained glued to U.S. politics. In late September, the federal government detailed plans to begin processing initial DACA applications for the first time in four years. Had Negrete stayed in the U.S., he would have finally qualified for a reprieve.
He isnβt regretful.
Lorca greets Negrete as he arrives home after touring Guadalajara.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
His new dreams are wide-ranging. He wants to buy a house in Rosarito, where friends and family from L.A. could visit him. He wants to travel the world, starting with a trip to Spain. And he wants to help U.S. organizations build resources for other immigrants who are considering repatriating.
The goal isnβt to encourage people to leave, he said, but to show them they have agency.
βI actually did it,β he said. βI did it, and Iβm OK.β
Now, he said, Mexico feels like an estranged relative that heβs getting to know again.