United States Supreme Court: Gonzales v. Williams
In 1905, after traveling through Europe where he purchased a collection of paintings, Degetau moved to Puerto Rico and established his residence in the town of
Aibonito where he managed a coffee plantation. In 1902, the
United States Treasury Department issued new immigration guidelines that changed the immigration status of all Puerto Ricans.
Isabel González, a young, but pregnant, single Puerto Rican woman was traveling aboard the S.S.
Philadelphia when the new immigration guidelines took effect and she was detained at
Ellis Island as an "alien" and "burden" to the state. She lost her appeals in the Board hearings and took her case to the
U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, on August 30 of that year, Federico Degetau, unaware of the Gonzalez situation, wrote to the U. S. Secretary of State in protest of the new rules subjecting Puerto Ricans to immigration laws. His protest was forwarded to the U.S. Treasury Department. Degetau then contacted Le Barbier and Parker, who informed him that they planned to appeal González's case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Once Isabel lost her administrative appeal, switching tactics and focusing instead on the "public charge" issue, she decided to argue that all Puerto Ricans were citizens of the United States and as such should not be detained, treated as aliens, or denied entry into the United States. On January 4, 1904, the Court determined that under the immigration laws González was not an alien, and therefore could not be denied entry into New York. The court, however, declined to declare that she was a U.S. citizen. The question of the citizenship status of the inhabitants of the new island territories remained confusing, ambiguous, and contested. Puerto Ricans, instead, came to be known as something in between: "noncitizen nationals." ==Literary work==