Local Inmates React to ICE Deportation Program
Carolyn Carver
November 22, 2008 - 6:23PM

A government program sends foreign nationals who commit crimes back to their home countries.

More than 10,000 criminal illegal immigrants have been deported this year from the Pacific Northwest, according to officials.

That's up 33 percent compared to last year.

Officials say nationally more than 345,000 criminal illegal immigrant have been deported in fiscal year 2008. They say the national numbers are also showing big increases.

Officials say the Criminal Alien Program, or CAP, is one of the main reasons for the jump in deportations.

But for a lot of Jackson County immigrants they've lived here most of their lives and now say they will have little if anything when they get back to their home countries.

Jose Villa lives in Southern Oregon, and has most of his life.

"My parents brought me here when I was 7 or 8," he says. "I've been living here ever since."

Rafel Avina says he's just here because we wants to stay close to his five kids.

"That's why I stay here," he says. "If i was like anybody else, I could run and be free, but I got kids."

But now Villa and Avina are leaving the Jackson County Jail with federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents because of the Criminal Alien Program.

Officials say the program helps send illegal immigrants who have committed crimes back to their home countries by bridging the gap between local, state and federal agencies.

But for some, those countries may not feel much like home.

"I've been living here my whole life," Villa say. "I don't have anything to go back to Mexico to."

He says he was born in Mexico but since then his whole family has moved to Medford.

He says if he gets deported, he'll have nothing in Mexico.

But Sheriff Mike Winters says this program is a good thing for Jackson County.

"We work very closely with ICE because our intent is to not allow criminal illegal aliens out on the streets that can commit crimes against legal citizens in the United States of America, " Winters say.

Neil Clark works for ICE. He's in charge of removal and deportations in the Pacific Northwest.

He says both Villa and Avina have been arrested and convicted for meth related charges. So, he says, they should be taken off American streets.

"We're not looking for them at their homes," Clark says. "These are people who have come through the criminal justice system through a county or state and they committed crimes."

But both Mexican nationals say they just want one more chance.

"I know im not perfect guy," Villa says. "I've done a lot of bad stuff but I do regret it."

Neil says, "Congress is putting a lot of money, funding and staffing to this issue to make sure Americans and people living here legally are safe."

So it's a chance Villa and Avina aren't likely to get.

Now it's up to an immigration judge to decide.

Both of these two immigrants, Villa and Avina, have earned legal status in America either through family or marriage, but because of the severity of their crimes, now both men have lost their citizenship.

Sheriff Mike Winters says the program has been in Jackson Country for about three years, and he says illegal immigration should remain one of the countries top priorities.

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