Past as Prologue - Expect More US Citizens Deported
and more cover-ups
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From CBP File on U.S. Citizen Miguel Silvestre, 2004 |
Superbowl Sunday, January 31, 1999. Miguel Silvestre, 20, was in the drunk tank at the San Joaquin County Jail. Three men in green uniforms entered Miguel's cell and asked some questions. The conversation began in Spanish but quickly turned to English, Miguel's best language. “I told them, ‘I’m from Stockton, California. I was born at the Dameron Hospital,’” eight miles up the road. The men also asked about his brothers. Miguel let the guards know that they, too, were born in Stockton, where his father worked as a foreman for a nearby construction company.
“We’ll come back,” one said.
A half hour later they returned. “Grab your property. You’re coming with us.” The guards escorted him to a dull green and grey bus. Miguel, on parole, figured he and the four others in the jail were on their way to prison.
About 20 minutes later Miguel made out that they were entering the Port of Stockton, a gritty 6.5 square mile hub for container ships, rail transport, and long-haul trucks and storage for the goods and fuel in transit. The group entered a building. One side had two cells, the other some guys at their desks in civilian cloths. One approached, a White man with grey hair. “Where’s Miguel?” he asked.
“I'm right here," Miguel said.
“Oh, so you’re the troublemaker,” the man said. Miguel figured he'd heard about the fight with another inmate when he was being booked at the jail.
“Give me your belt,” the man in civilian clothes ordered.
“I can’t. My pants will fall down.”
The official punched Miguel in the stomach. Miguel handed over his belt.
In the holding cell someone tried giving Miguel a Bible. Miguel asked why. The Good Samaritan replied, “We’re leaving. We’re being transferred. Aren’t you scared?” Shackled, his stomach aching from the hit and nausea from the hangover, Miguel demurred. No reason to be more scared of “somewhere else,” even prison, than a holding cell in the Port of Stockton with some old guy who punches you.
Six days after he and his friends watched the Broncos beat the Falcons and his mom called 911 to report her son's alcohol and meth-fueled demands to borrow her car, Miguel, in a tan prison outfit, stripped of his drivers license and social security card, heard guards shouting to his group that had just disembarked a bus, "Keep walking!" A few minutes later he had reached his final destination: Nogales, Mexico.
Route from Eloy Detention Center, AZ to Nogales, MX
"If you ask questions they ignore you or tell you to shut up," he said, explaining to me his confusion about the odyssey that took him to several jails, a military base with soldiers using gun scopes to scan the sky with red beams, his first plane flight ever, and being chemically sprayed in Eloy, AZ. "Everything they did, they did at night,” he said.
After arriving in Nogales it took Miguel a day to figure out he had been deported and two more days before a church worker told him the U.S. government could not do that to a U.S. citizen. When Miguel tried to return, U.S. border patrol threw him back into Mexico, so he called his dad.
"Are you lying to me?" his father asked. "They can't do that to a U.S. citizen," he added, underscoring his reluctance to abandon his construction work crew based on nonsense from his addict son. Finally convinced, his father grabbed Miguel's birth certificate with the imprint from Miguel's newborn feet and drove his red GMC pickup down to Mexico. "He seen me and started crying," Miguel said, describing how his father reacted on encountering his son, 5' tall, filthy and wearing a woman's shirt he'd grabbed from the church donation pile.
***
The account above is from episodic interviews with Miguel over the last three years. It tracks precisely the paperwork I finally obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests and litigation, though some records remains withheld in a dispute before a federal district court in Northern Illinois.
The protocols ICE and its predecessor INS followed are identical to those in place today, and resemble dozens of other cases I've reviewed. The details highlighted here reveal the inner workings of the deportation machine. Specific records are reviewed so media and policymakers can see how the U.S. government illegally deports U.S. citizens. Of note is that this is not a "mix-up" but a deliberate effort to deport someone the sheriffs and INS had clear evidence of U.S. citizenship at birth. Prior personal contact and details in Miguel's criminal records, in addition to Miguel's own statements, left no doubt of his U.S. citizenship. ICE's mid-February announcement of efforts to coordinate with sheriffs indicates we can expect more unlawful deportations, of U.S. citizens and noncitizens.
1) 11 a.m., Feb. 1. An INS officer types up the I-213 that invented Miguel's fake bio. Miguel is brought from jail to CBP building in Port of Stockton.
From Miguel's I-213, 1999
Pretty much everything here is fiction, including that Miguel was arrested for a DUI. (The criminal arrest record INS attached makes no mention of any DUI arrest at any time. Miguel may have been a menace to his family, but he was not driving when the county sheriff took him into custody.)
If anyone were to spend a few minutes looking at this record, the fraudulent paperwork used to kidnap Miguel would be obvious: the biographical information on his recent criminal arrests in May, 1998, November 1998, and January 16, 1999 for possession of drugs and carrying a firearm, made it obvious that Miguel was quite familiar to the local sheriffs, who were knowledgeable of his U.S. citizenship as well, a fact that appears on their prior records on him.
If Miguel really were from Mexico, then why was he on probation and not deported after his gun and meth possession prison time in 1998? And why didn't CBP note the records showed he was born and raised in San Joaquin County?
Miguel might have been the world's worst son, but he was quite obviously the Stockton-born-and-bred child of the Modesto-resident mother who had called 911, not some Mexican guy from Guerrero who happened to share his same name, birth date, and parents but had first shown up in the United States just two weeks earlier for agricultural work.
2) 4:18 p.m. CBP, Port of Stockton, Arrest Warrant
click to enlarge
In the afternoon of February 1, 1999, Port Agent in Charge Dale Johnson had created an arrest record, Exhibit 1 for Miguel's sham administrative hearing inside the Eloy, Arizona detention facility run by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the predecessor to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Johnson's report stated Miguel had first entered the U.S. two weeks earlier and was agricultural labor. In the space for "Currently Residing" Johnson wrote, "FAILED TO PROVIDE."
All of this was sheer fiction, written about a guy in a nearby holding cell who was entirely clueless as to the fact that Johnson was effecting Miguel's kidnapping.
3) Feb. 1, 1999, Port of Stockton, Notice to Appear, created by Dale Johnson
Created by CBP Officer Dale Johnson, Feb. 1, 1999 (click to enlarge)
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Notes of John Zastrow, IJ who deported other US citizens, including Johann Francis |
Zastrow memorializes Miguel's claim to U.S. citizenship and then indicates Miguel said he was born in Mexico. While in some cases, U.S. citizens may have acquired fake birth certificates in Mexico for purposes of attending public schools, this was never the case for Miguel. Copious documentation proves Miguel was born and raised in California.
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Executive Office of Immigration: Oops! No Audio for Either Hearing (click to enlarge) |
If records the government is obligated to retain are damaged, the agency is required to submit a report on this to the National Archives and Records Administration. No such report exists.
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INS Response to Complaint - click to enlarge |
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Database Search 2-21-2002 Shows Miguel born in California, US Citizen |
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INS Receives Confirmation Miguel a U.S. Citizen, 2002, click to enlarge |
In 2004, Miguel was living in Arizona and accompanied a friend to Mexico for the weekend. When he tried to return, CBP saw the prior deportation and arrested him, disregarding the findings from 2002 to drop the detainer hold.
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San Luis, POE, photo from Yuma Sun New |
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CBP notes Miguel's Birth Certificate and Calif. DL, Proof that BC is Miguel's, Makes Error on Date of Entry, click to enlarge |
The guard said, "I can't let you go into US. You've got to go back into Mexico. You need someone to send documentation. I need birth certificate." I called my mother. She decided to come down to Arizona, to San Luis. Me, her, and my friend's mom wanted to take me somewhere to apply for a passport. But I was feeling sick. They left and I stayed in San Luis, Mexico. "When you feel better, you go back into Yuma and fix things there," they told me.
A day or two I felt better. Mom called me. "You're going to walk through there. Your uncle will be right behind you." I went through. I started walking. As I came, they asked me a question. "Where were you born?"
"Stockton, California." I gave him that right away. He arrested me. I'm looking at my uncle. "Aren't you going to do something?"
He took me into the holding cell. They took all my information. I gave them all my documents. "You're committing fraud," they said, "You're trying to represent somebody that aint you." They held me 6-8 hours.
CBP has an interview template.
Q. Why did you leave your homeland or country of residence?" A. "Because they said I had to fix my deportation in Arizona."
Q. Do you have any fear or concern about being returned to your home country or being removed from the United States? A. I would just be pissed off being returned to a country where I wasn't born.
Q. Would you be harmed if you returned to your home country or country of last residence. A. No, but I have no reason [sic] over there.
Q. Do you have any question or is there anything else you would like to add? A. Why does the paper work I see around me say I am a Mexican citizen?
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Interview in Bizarroland, March 8, 2004, click to enlarge |
The Alien Who is a Citizen
Miguel's records are of a piece with a pattern: a deported U.S. citizen who produces records documenting U.S. citizenship elicits accusations of false personation of a U.S. citizen, as the San Luis, AZ charged Miguel in March, 2004.
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I-860 Form |
You are ineligible for admission to the United States ... You are an alien who, at the time of your application for admission at the San Luis, Arizona Port of Entry on March 7, 2004, ... falsely represented yourself to be a United States citizen ... [But] you are an alien who, by fraud or willfully misrepresenting a material fact, seeks to procure (or sought to procure of has procured) a visa, other documentation, or admission into the United States or other benefit provided under the Act, to wit: You presented a California birth certificate in the name of Miguel Silvestre, born in Stockton, California on [PII] 1978 and attempted to assume that person's identity in order to be admitted to the United States.
The disposition on the report on March 8, said "expedited removal." Typically that means immediate deportation, perhaps directly or perhaps through the detained immigration court docket. Instead, CBP sent Miguel to the Yuma County Jail, to face criminal charges
10) Yuma, AZ Federal Court
Then they sent me to Yuma, Arizona, to the county jail. I was there a day or two. Then they took me to the immigration court. They took me there with my mother. The judge said, "What's your name?" Then it was over. "That's it?"
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March 9, 2004 Indictment, 8 USC 1326, 8 USC 1325, click to enlarge |
I said, "What's going on?" No one said anything. They took me out and sent me back to the county jail. "What just happened?" I asked. The guards said, "You've been to Tijuana lately." I told them, "I've never stepped foot in Tijuana."
They kept me there three days. Then they picked me up again and took me to Florence [Arizona].
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March 10, 2004, Charges Dismissed, click to enlarge |
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Mom Swears Miguel Born in the Stockton, California, click to enlarge |
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ICE Moves to Terminate Without Prejudice |