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  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Deportees use "revolving door" to return to U.S

    Deportees use "revolving door" to return to U.S.
    Thu Aug 30, 2007 7:12 AM EDT

    http://ca.today.reuters.com/news/newsAr ... RN-COL.XML
    By Tim Gaynor

    PHOENIX (Reuters) - When a heavy knock came on the door of her Phoenix home, Mari knew that the immigration police had finally caught up with her. Arrested and held for a month in a U.S. jail, she was sent back to Guatemala on a prison flight.

    But four weeks later, after raising a $5,000 smuggling fee, she was back with her family in Arizona.

    As U.S. authorities step up deportations of illegal immigrants, a growing number of them, like Mari, are simply turning round and heading back stateside to rejoin families and resume their lives.

    "Guatemala is no longer my home. All my roots are here in the country I have lived in since I was 15 years old ... I felt I had no option but to try to come back," said Mari, which is not her real name.

    The little reported phenomenon of the repeat lawbreakers was highlighted by the high-profile case of Elvira Arellano, the Mexican illegal immigrant deported earlier this month for slipping back into the United States despite a previous removal in 1997.

    "I know a lot of people in the same position as Elvira ... their whole life is here," said Mari's husband, Samuel, who is also an undocumented immigrant.

    "If they throw them out of the country, sooner or later they will be back."

    REVOLVING DOOR

    Some 12 million illegal immigrants live in the shadows in the United States. Last year, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents deported 183,431 people amid stepped up raids in workplaces and homes nationwide.

    ICE said removing Arellano -- who sought sanctuary in a Chicago church and became a cause celebre for pro-immigration activists -- was necessary to enforce U.S. immigration laws, and ensure that they were applied fairly.

    "Miss Arellano willfully violated those laws and must face the consequences of her illegal actions," Jim Hayes, ICE director in Los Angeles, told a news conference.

    Although no records are kept of the numbers of deported immigrants sneaking back in to the country -- as Arellano did to join her 8-year-old U.S.-born son Saul -- anecdotal evidence suggests that it is widespread.

    "Deportation is a revolving door," said Elias Bermudez, the founder of Immigrants Without Borders, an advocacy group which works with thousands of illegal immigrants in the border state of Arizona.

    "People are picked up at their homes and deported, and some of them are back in three or four days, so it is not an effective policy," he added.

    Among those who have made the trip back is Demetrio, a Mexican waiter arrested and removed from Los Angeles in 2006, leaving behind a Guatemalan wife and two young children. He declined to give his last name.

    Just seven weeks after being deported he slipped back into California through the gritty border city of Tijuana, using border crossing documents widely available on the black market.

    "My children were crying, my wife's heart was broken. What could I do in Mexico without my family?" he said of his decision to break the law and return to Los Angeles, where he owns a house.

    RESUMING THEIR LIVES

    Earlier this year the U.S. Congress rejected comprehensive immigration reform allowing many illegal immigrants a path out of the shadows.

    The government has since ramped up workplace enforcement, netting more than 160 workers in a raid on a poultry plant in Ohio in August.

    Once back in the United States, previously deported immigrants often resume their lives. Demetrio waits tables in the same Los Angeles restaurant he previously worked, while Mari is back in her family's home in Phoenix.

    Reunited with their spouses and children, many of whom were born in the United States and know no other home, the repeated law breakers weigh their diminishing options in the wake of Arellano's deportation, and as a crackdown announced by the U.S. the Department of Homeland Security gathers pace.

    "I am waiting for the chance to one day become legal, but from what I can see there is little hope, and I can see all the doors closing," said Demetrio, adding that he is thinking of returning to Mexico if he sees no future in the United States.

    Others like Mari and Samuel, trapped between the Central American nation they were born and the United States where they raised three children, remain fearful but still defiant.

    "Every car that pulls up outside the house makes me nervous," said Mari, sitting behind drawn curtains in the home where she was arrested by ICE agents three years ago.

    "But instead of crushing us, it is only making us more determined to stay."

    (additional reporting by Adriana Garcia in Washington)
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Nicole's Avatar
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    For people who claim that they are poor and have to come here to feed themsleves and their families, they never have a porblem coming up with $$ for smuggler's fees. $5,000? She "raised" that much $$ in four weeks?

  3. #3
    Hapexamendios's Avatar
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    prostitution maybe? Or family chipping in. Only way I could see how she could of raised 5,000 in 4 weeks.
    "When the Government Fears the People, there is Liberty. When the People Fear the Government, there is Tyranny."

    Thomas Jefferson

  4. #4
    Senior Member avenger's Avatar
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    It's interesting that she has been in the US since she was 15 but she apparently knew how to work the system in her homeland for getting into the US. Apparently she is not unfamiliar with Guatemala!
    Never give up! Never surrender! Never compromise your values!*
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  5. #5
    Senior Member Ex_OC's Avatar
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    So, in essence, we are just giving these revolving-door deportees a FREE VACATION RIDE HOME. Sheesh, can't believe I am paying for their free vacations when I can't afford to go on one myself. I think I am going to become an illegal alien just for this benefit alone. Sheesh......
    PRESS 1 FOR ENGLISH. PRESS 2 FOR DEPORTATION.

  6. #6
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    The laws need to be harsher so they won't return after being deported! Also, where there is one illegal, there is probably more. So go after the whole family and deport whoever is not legal. If they don't want to be seperated, they have a choice, and that is to leave.
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  7. #7
    Senior Member Populist's Avatar
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    Anytime you see the cliche "living in the shadows," you know there is a major SOB STORY on the way.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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