Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. reverses course on status of deported DACA recipient

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO — The U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday reversed its position on the status of a man who has sued over his deportatio­n to Mexico, acknowledg­ing he was enrolled in a program to shield people who came to the country as young children.

Juan Manuel Montes, 23, was entitled to be in the United States until Jan. 25, 2018 under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, according to Homeland Security, which broke from its position a day earlier that his status expired in August 2015 and wasn’t renewed. But it said Montes acknowledg­ed under oath that he entered the country illegally on Feb. 19, forcing him to lose status because it was an admission that he left without required permission.

Montes’ attorneys say their client is believed to be the first known DACA recipient to be deported by President Donald Trump. They say he qualified in 2014 and renewed his status for two years in 2016.

A lawsuit seeking records about Montes’ deportatio­n was assigned to U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel in San Diego, who last month approved an agreement for Trump to pay $25 million to settle cases alleging that his now-defunct Trump University misled customers. Trump repeatedly criticized the Indiana-born judge during the presidenti­al campaign, insinuatin­g that his Mexican heritage exposed a bias.

The case may define Trump’s approach to DACA, which was introduced in 2012 by President Barack Obama. Trump has kept it in place and made sympatheti­c remarks about its beneficiar­ies, upsetting some immigratio­n hardliners.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Wednesday that he didn’t want to “rush to judgment” about Montes and referred questions to Homeland Security. He said the administra­tion’s enforcemen­t priorities are people who committed crimes in the United States and pose a threat.

“I would respectful­ly suggest that, in this case, the facts are not completely out, so I would rather not jump to conclusion­s about what happened,” he said.

U.S. Rep. Steve King, an Iowa Republican, applauded Montes’ removal in a tweet that linked to a story in USA Today, which first reported the case. Above a photo of a mug, he wrote, “First non-valedictor­ian DREAMer deported. Border Patrol, this one’s for you.”

Even after its latest statement, Homeland Security’s account sharply differed from what Montes’ attorneys say happened.

The attorneys said in a lawsuit filed Tuesday in the Southern District of California that their client left the country Feb. 17 only because he was stopped by a law enforcemen­t official and asked for identifica­tion while walking to a taxi stand in Calexico, about 120 miles east of San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States