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    When Americans Get Deported Illegally

    UCSB Professor Publishes Research on Illegal Deportation and Detention of Americans


    Wednesday, July 23, 2008
    By Adrian Castañeda
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    “We often think that citizenship is a real cut-and-dried determination,” said UCSB law and society professor Jacqueline Stevens in a recent interview on KCLU’s Crosstalk, “but there are a lot of areas where the question is a little bit more gray.”

    According to Stevens, who published a study in the June 23 issue of The Nation, immigration laws are often so convoluted that U.S. citizens and legal residents are being deported to Mexico and other countries on a regular basis. Stevens has studied a large number of cases filed against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) by the ACLU and other civil rights groups on behalf of legal residents and citizens who were wrongfully detained or deported. “Detaining and deporting U.S. citizens amounts to false imprisonment, which is a felony,” said Stevens.

    A man named Robert, who has an Hispanic last name, served nearly two years in prison, was deported, got caught re-entering, was sentenced to three years in prison, served more time, and then was finally sent to an immigration judge. He was later informed that he had been a citizen since 1983.

    As a result of these numerous lawsuits, ICE has cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees and damages paid to claimants. Steven’s article quotes Kara Hartzler, an attorney at the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project (FIRRP), as saying, “The deportation of U.S. citizens is not happening monthly, or weekly, but every day.”

    Stevens attributes this phenomenon to the confusing nature of immigration laws but also to racial profiling. According to her findings, “The profiling of Mexican-Americans is based largely on last name and not appearance.” Among several cases, she cites the example of Robert, a U.S. citizen who served an 18-month sentence in jail before being transferred to an ICE detention center for over a year and eventually being deported. Stevens says Robert is “phenotypically ‘white’” but his Hispanic surname caused immigration officials to doubt his citizenship and deport him. After returning to the U.S. and being deported a second time, Robert was caught trying to enter the country illegally. He was convicted of impersonating a U.S. citizen and sentenced to three years in prison, which he served until an immigration judge allowed him to present his case to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. There, he was informed that he had been a citizen since 1983.

    In addition to the strain on tax dollars and ICE resources, these mistaken deportations cause huge problems for those unfortunate citizens who are detained. “These people have lives and families and jobs, and close attachments to where they live, that they’re missing out on while they’re being held in detention,” said Stevens.

    ICE has no jurisdiction over U.S. citizens and claims that instances of citizens being deported are rare. But in reality, countered Stevens, “ICE detains thousands of people who were born in the United States and puts the burden of proving citizenship on them. Often they are people who have limited communications skills and even more limited knowledge about their rights.”

    Citizenship can often be difficult to prove or establish, especially in the case of foreign-born citizens as different laws apply to different birth years. Stevens explained, “In some cases, immigration judges simply ignore the law and ignore court precedent,” issuing determinations of deportation to individuals who qualify as citizens but do not appear to be without investigation.

    “The number of people held in detention centers around the country,” Stevens reported in her radio interview, “are between twenty-two and thirty thousand.” With nationwide raids on factories and homes, it can only mean more mistaken deportations and detentions, not only for laborers but also for citizens from all walks of life.

    Recent memory will attest to the 2007 incident involving a predawn raid on an apartment in Isla Vista in which a UCSB student of Korean descent was arrested while ICE agents were actually looking question her roommate, an Iranian graduate student, about her legal status. Stevens commented on the incident by saying, “The aggressive and unlawful tactics of ICE are inevitably going to lead to the harassment and false imprisonment of residents and U.S. citizens who are lawfully in this country.”

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    What a shame!

    Why are we wasting so much money deporting our own citizens? And not just once, but deporting them over and over again and then paying thousands of more dollars to find out if they are really citizens!

    This is what we get for being so pro-racial profiling!

    What a shame!

    Ted1333 (anonymous profile)
    July 23, 2008 at 1:26 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Yes, "When Americans get deported illegally" .. what a shame. I don't see any numbers associated with this phony research. How many? Let's see, there's Robert, that's one.
    What about when Mexicans come into the country illegally? So 20,000,000 law breakers coming in illegally, one or two going out illegally? Yes I imagine mistakes do happen with those odds. The obvious conclusion we are to arrive at by this agenda driven "research" is that we must stop deporting illegals so this doesn't happen, don't you know.
    This isn't research, it's typical American Criminal Liberties Union politics as usual. How much was the prof paid by the ACLU I wonder?

    RForsyth (anonymous profile)
    July 23, 2008 at 4:47 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    It's a shame you dont know what you are talking about. I am currently going through the detention and deportation of some one i love very much He has been in the country LEGALLY since he was 4 years old. He is a citizen of the US by deriviated citizenship of a naturalized parent. He was NOT born in any country south of the border. So this is not just a mexican thing. All American need to be concerned with the over zealous actions that the ICE agent use in doing there job. Their actions are equal to Bubba justice. They have made it a practice to violate the constitution. I have personally have spoken to ICE agents. I had an ICE agent tell me my husband might be a US citizen 3 months ago. And yet he has been ordered deported. Before you speak of the ACLU paying professors consider that people who are going through this dont want to bring attention to them selves. We dont want to be a number. We only want our loved ones back and to resume the life that was interupted. Tell me why Michael Chertoff repeatedly has gone in front of the supreme court asking that charges be dropped againt ICE Before you spout off about something you know NOTHING about do your research. If you are getting your information from the media representatives of ICE then you only know what they tell you and that does not equal the truth. Believe me I know.

    stopbeingignorant (anonymous profile)
    July 24, 2008 at 9:30 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    By the way ACLU stand for American CIVIL Liberties Union. NOT CRIMINAL.

    stopbeingignorant (anonymous profile)
    July 24, 2008 at 9:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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