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Deported from America

Stephen Davis

Published 22 November 2004

Under US laws passed in the mid-1990s and now being strictly enforced, minor and long-forgotten offences can lead to jail and eventual exile, reports Stephen Davis

James (not his real name) is a businessman. He is 62 and he now lives in the English Home Counties. But he ought to be living in America, with his wife, children and grandchildren. For 15 years, he ran a company in the US. He met and married an American woman, and lived in Virginia. The couple have eight children, two of them adopted from Vietnam. They also cared for two grandchildren when their daughter suffered depression.

Now James is an exile, unable to see his family. He is a victim of a US law introduced on a wave of anti-immigrant feeling eight years ago and now ruthlessly enforced in post-9/11 America. This law makes no distinction between a youthful misdemeanour and murder, between white-collar fraud and terrorism. It can have you expelled from the US as a "criminal alien" for a minor offence committed two or three decades ago; it converts a conviction for petty theft, minor assault or shoplifting into a much more serious charge of aggravated felony requiring deportation.

James is one of at least 1,000 British citizens caught in this way in the past year. And, at any one time, there are 22,000 people locked up by US immigration, mostly in local county jails, where they can wait for up to two years to get a hearing. James's wife, a patriotic American who has the Stars and Stripes flying from her porch, has a phrase for what this law and her government has done to them. "It has been the death of a family."

The story goes back to 1994. California's Republican governor, Pete Wilson, running for re-election, trailed badly in the polls. He and his advisers, detecting a wave of anti-immigrant feeling in the Golden State, decided on a new strategy. Wilson began to urge a "get tough" policy on illegal immigrants and on those non-US citizens in California who got into trouble with the law. He won the election. And as Charles Kuck of the American Immigration Lawyers Association puts it, politicians, having seen that attacking immigrants worked, said "let's take it nationwide".

The result was what everyone now calls "Ira-Ira", the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, passed by a Republican Congress and signed into law without a word of protest by the newly re-elected Bill Clinton. In the past, immediate deportation was triggered only for offences that could lead to five years or more in jail. Now shoplifting, which would normally lead to a year on probation, is enough to get you deported. And, crucially, the law was made retroactive, with no time limit. Minor offences committed 20 or 30 years ago are now grounds for deportation.

So never mind those famous words about "give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free". The new legislation said something quite different. "It said if you break our laws, you have worn out your welcome," says Kuck. "Don't ever mess up in America, even accidentally, even if you are a permanent resident, even if you have a wife, a family, a business and a home here. If you have ever had a conviction, you are out." "Ira-Ira" applies even to those who have married American citizens and who have American-born children.

People are picked up for old crimes and taken to detention centres, even when they have already served their punishment; indeed, many will never have been in prison for the original offence. The numbers detained have grown so much that the three designated immigration detention centres in the US cannot cope, and most detainees end up sharing cells with hardened criminals in county, city and state jails.

You can appeal to an immigration court. But you have to pay for your own lawyer, so many poor people simply go without representation. Moreover, says Kuck, you go before "Department of Justice employees wearing robes". They are, he says, "hearing officers" rather than "real" judges. In rare cases, a final appeal is allowed to go to a board of immigration appeals. But, again, the case will be heard by government appointees from the Department of Justice. In effect, those who are charged with enforcing the law are also sitting in judgment.

Since 9/11, the law has been enforced more rigorously and those caught are more likely to be kept in jail. New computerised databases compiled by the Department of Homeland Security are supposed to stop more people like the 9/11 hijackers getting into the country undetected. But they pick out many people who are neither terrorists nor serious criminals. "I have had clients picked up for minor offences committed 25 years ago, when they had been coming and going in and out of the US for years without any trouble," says Kuck. "Whether you have a shoplifting charge or got caught on a $10,000 tax fraud, you are gone, you are history. Just wave goodbye."

As Laurie Kozuba, the founder of Citizens & Immigrants for Equal Justice, a campaigning organisation against "Ira-Ira", has put it: "The Statue of Liberty, once our symbol of welcome, hope, freedom and justice, is now a bouncer."

Twenty years ago, a young Briton living in the US was put on probation because he got involved in a fight. (Like other deportees in this story, he does not want his name used.) Thirteen years ago, he moved back to the UK.

For years afterwards, he travelled freely back and forth to the US to visit his family. But when he arrived in Florida with his sister after 9/11, his name was "flagged" on the computer. He was promptly arrested and taken into custody, while his sister was put on the next flight home, not knowing where her brother was being taken and unsure why he had been arrested.

He was held for four months in a local jail before being deported. He was strip-searched at the airport, handcuffed and put in chains while being transported. He was strip-searched again on the way out and given a US marshals' escort all the way back to the UK.

The law makes no concessions to age or circumstances. Last month an 83-year-old Frenchman - guilty of a long-forgotten minor offence - was put on a plane back to Paris after living in the US for 52 years. He had been held for seven months and was deported even though he had nowhere in France to go. As a result of the deportation, he lost all his US social security benefits.

In Georgia, Mary Anne Gehris, a mother of two children, one of them suffering from cerebral palsy, faced deportation to Germany. She did not even speak the language. She had been adopted in Germany when she was two weeks old and taken to the US by her American parents. Her "crime" was a conviction for misdemeanour battery - punished with a one-year suspended sentence and 60 hours of community service - after a hair-pulling scuffle with a boyfriend.

It was only when she applied for US citizenship (her parents, though themselves US citizens, had never got round to taking it out for her) that the offence came to the attention of the Immigration and Naturalisation Service (INS). On the form, she gave an honest answer to a question about previous convictions.

Gehris was lucky: after a public outcry, the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles pardoned her for the original offence and thus halted deportation. Robert, another victim, was also fortunate; his case was taken up by Citizens & Immigrants for Equal Justice. A serving member of the US air force, he faced deportation because he had a 15-year-old conviction for a drug possession for which he had served probation. He, too, had admitted to his "crime" when he applied for citizenship.

Many others are not so fortunate. James, the 62-year-old businessman now in exile, is one of them. His offence followed a complex and bitter dispute with his two brothers over a US company they had at one time jointly owned. The company ran into difficulties and James took a 50 per cent pay cut. With eight children and two grandchildren to look after, he began using company funds to pay his bills. He later said he planned to repay the money when a pension matured. But he was caught and fired and the police were called in.

He was ordered to pay retribution and sentenced to 90 days in prison. But the court had never seen him as a risk and he had been allowed to travel freely in the US and abroad during the 18 months of legal wrangles that preceded his conviction. Though he had to sleep in the jail at night, he was to be allowed to drive himself to work every day. When his wife dropped him off at the jail on 13 February 2004, neither had any reason to think that they would not soon resume a normal life.

But he never went home again. He was served with a notice of deportation proceedings and the daytime release to allow him to continue working was cancelled. His family got an immigration attorney in Washington, appealed to a friendly congressman for help and visited the British embassy. But in May, James was handed over to US immigration agents. He was allowed one quick call to his wife before he left the country.

"I sat in the front porch for hours," his wife recalls, "on the slightest chance that they would drive him past the house as they left, for one last glimpse of his home. I had our American flag flying from our porch as always, but I wanted to take it down, stick it in the closet. But then I realised that the flag didn't represent the INS, it didn't represent this insane administration, but it represented my family, the original colonists . . . and my father, who was a member of the Big Red One in the Second World War, awarded the Silver Star, the Bronze Star, two Purple Hearts and eight presidential citations. It represented our children, American children who were losing their papa. I finally went inside, and turned out all the lights and grieved as if my husband had died."

Stephen Davis is a writer and television producer currently working on his first book. He can be contacted at theeditor@xtra.co.nz

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11 comments from readers

fitz
21 May 2007 at 17:14

live and work in the for 28yrs ,married to U.S citizen and have 4 children, ages,now 3,12,13,&18.was paying child support. to two child outside married.accepted a plead bargin in 1985.for drug.serve 30 months. only arrest. was pick up in 2004. and at time when i check out cost for an attorney, i say it better my children get the money .after spoken to attorney and he told me my chances. my children came and visit me they were crying i was crying .did'nt want them seeing me lock. up.i allow them to depported me.its sucks, many families suffer after 9/11 .and many pay twice for an offense

jrgroeneweg
03 September 2007 at 18:07

What a ridiculous country the USA have become. I traveled there many times on vacation, last in 2005. But I think I will never, ever return there.

Steve-o
22 January 2008 at 23:07

The U.S.under George W. Bush has become an international disgrace. How can we, as citizens of this nation, allow such things to occur?This is only one of hundreds of horrific consequences produced by Bush and the GOP. History will surely judge him to be THE worst President ever. The only good to come from this is that the Republican party will be the minority party for many years to come.

hetchjay
23 January 2008 at 21:29

I'm not a fan of George Bush, Steve-o, but this law was signed into law in 1996 by Bill Clinton, not George Bush sometime recently.

Anissa
06 February 2008 at 23:59

I was adopted and deported have 14yr old us citizen that has no rights because she can't live in the country way to go usa. Where any of the 911 terorist parents to us citizens, has us jobs, adopted, this is madness my parents are besides themselves can't afford lawyers didn't finalize adoption so I pay for that too thank you

JB
07 February 2008 at 05:35

This entire article is rediculous. Illegal immigrants are people who ignored our sovereign right to regulate the flow of people who enter and leave our country. So, you propose that we don't deport illegal aliens that commit crimes? Do you think such a soft approach would deter or encourage illegal immigration?

Aww, I am so sad that people have the audacity to disreguard our right to enforce our laws are being sent back to their home countries. How about this: wait on line like everyone else! Or Fitz, maybe if you shouldn't go to someone else's country and traffic drugs!

ND
02 April 2008 at 13:10

Im against JB. I was deported from the USA and I stay away from my family but before I came to USA I never had a criminal record and I was young when I got to the States, my point is that is the people in usa about 90% been in jail and its a common thing in the US, doing and trafficing drugs and other serious crimes, I suggest that US citizen need to be paying hard punishments like life in jail for trafficing. We all are people we have a heart, family and children that we care about why should we be sperated from them?????

jppizzagirl2002
23 May 2008 at 04:15

I to have just been deported back to the u.k. i have been living in the u.s for 36 years. i have 4 american children and 1 amaerican grandson. i have been fighting this since 2003. i had a drug conviction got probation and have not been in trouble again. yes i made a mistake but the consquence far out wiegh the crime. americans need to see whats going on. we are not terrist. can't one mistake be forgiven ? well i'm off to england God bless every one i leave behind

sullivae
05 July 2008 at 13:39

This is not happening to illegal aliens. (for JB) This is happening to people with perfect immigration status who have already paid for their crimes, long ago. This is happening to a young man, who has lived in this country since he was 2 years old, whose mother never got her act together to get his citizenship papers. He is now in a jail cell 23 hours a day for a drug conviction five years ago, for which he has already served time (on the weekends, so he could stay in school) and completed community service. Because of this law, he is now facing deportation to a country where he knows no one and doesn't speak the language. This is like being convicted twice with the second punishment far out-weighing the first. It's madness.

This man has lived here his entire life, made one mistake, which he has already paid for and is now going to have his entire life destroyed. I'm ashamed of our country.

Dini
15 July 2008 at 11:24

Shame on u US. Don't forget-you state 'In God We Trust" God sees the tears of little children who cry for their parent(s). The sadnes that you impose on children, wifes and husbands of individuals you deport to satisfy your INS's hunger for power and to justify some laws are unacceptabe. Doesn'g God in His word state that what God has put together let no man saparate??? America, open your eyes! You have allowed your self to reach above Almighty. Your children are crying as I'm writing this note, they are crying for their Father, for their Mother,,,for the love that no one in this World can give them but their parent(s). When your laws impose such things to your US Citizens-stop, think and ask yourself -What have I become??? You deported me after I've lived in US for 31 yrs. legaly as a permanent resident. I have a wife and two kids (ages 7 & 8). My crime was 25 yrs. old. I am now aware that two minor US Citizens and wife are crying ceaslesly for their Father/husband and for his love. Can anyone tell me if there is anything that can fill this void in these two US Born Citizen childrens lives? Answer me America....or have you become so cold that you have begun abusing your own people just so a few of you can fill your bellies with your wifes and kids while others are left parent-less, without love, crying and even hungry. Bravo, you have achieved your goal. Yet, you preach to the rest of the World how you protect human rights, how just you are, how you protect children etc. etc.

divanmq
22 July 2008 at 06:29

Well said Dini.

My father was recently deported and he left behind a wife and three children under 18 yrs all US Citizens. He is an older man who lived in this country for nearly 30 years. He has no one in Mexico and now he is trying to find a way to work to provide for his children. He did have a very minor crime that I would like to hire an attorney...but I need to know there is hope for him. I am his older daugher who is a US Citizen and I am trying my best to help financially and with my time, but it is a lot that has fallen on my shoulders. I can only pray that God will do justice. This unfair treatment is affecting US CITIZEN families. Alos, While I was at the border I saw deportees who begged to wipe my car clean for any spare change. They were so thankful for what I gave them. THings are real sad. I do not think AMerica truly knows what they are doing to these people.

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