Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Deported veterans long to return from exile. Some will get the chance.

- By Miriam Jordan

ROSARITO, Mexico — Alex Murillo leads a full life in the Mexican town of Rosarito, a 40-minute drive from the U.S. border near Tijuana. By day, he works at a call center, speaking in a cheerful, caring tone to retirees across the United States about their Medicare insurance. After work, he crams cleats, flags and other gear into a duffel bag and heads out to coach a youth football team whose players credit him with building their skills in the American sport.

But Murillo, 43, has no desire to stay in Rosarito, where he has lived for nearly a decade. In fact, he does not feel he belongs in Mexico at all, a country he left when he was an infant.

Home, for him, is in Phoenix, Arizona, where he grew up, enlisted in the Navy, had four children —and later got into trouble. He was deported two days before Christmas in 2011, after serving time for transporti­ng several hundred pounds of marijuana.

Murillo is one of hundreds of immigrant military veterans who have faced lifetime removal to the countries of their birth as a result of crimes, sometimes minor, that they committed after their military service.

“I have always just been waiting for the day I can go back,” said Murillo, who was wearing, as he does on many days, an Arizona Cardinals hoodie. “Everything I do here is positive, but I want to be home with my family.”

The wait, he hopes, is almost over.

The Biden administra­tion said in July that it would begin allowing foreign-born veterans who were deported to return to the United States and help them become U.S. citizens.

“We are committed to bringing back military service members, veterans and their immediate family members who were unjustly removed and to ensuring they receive the benefits to which they may be entitled,” said Alejandro Mayorkas, the Homeland Security secretary.

The announceme­nt was momentous for veterans who have been exiled from the United States, often for more than a decade.

Robert Vivar, a co-director of the Unified U.S. Deported Veterans Resource Center in Tijuana, estimates there are at least 1,000 military deportees living in some 40 countries. About two dozen have been allowed to return in the past few years, mainly those who had the least serious criminal offenses, such as firearms possession or driving under the influence. Pardons by governors have paved the way for a few repatriati­ons, though they can take years.

But deciding who qualifies for readmissio­n could prove thorny: Some of the veterans committed serious crimes, including domestic violence, sexual assault and, in Murillo’s case, major drug violations, and it is not clear that everyone will be allowed to return.

“How will they determine who was ‘unjustly deported’?” said Hector Barajas, 44, a decorated ex-U.S. Armyparatr­ooper convicted of shooting at a car in 2002 who returned in 2018 after a pardon from former Gov. Jerry Brown of California.

What is certain is that the Department of Veterans Affairs and other agencies will be tasked with assisting a group of people who will most likely require an array of services as they strive to rebuild their lives.

Separated from their families, they have often seen their lives further unravel in countries they had left long ago. Their spouses have left them; their children have become troubled.

“It’s not like we’re home now, have a job and our families back,” said Barajas, whose activism first drew attention to the plight of deported veterans.

Now a U.S. citizen, Barajas has battled depression and diabetes. It has been difficult to connect with his daughter, 16, after his prolonged absence.

Many veterans said that they did not realize they could be deported until an officer from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t showed up at the end of their prison sentence. Many feel wronged that, after serving their time, they face additional punishment.

“The country you were willing to die for threw you out like a piece of trash,” said Hector Lopez, 57, a U.S. Army veteran, who was deported in 2006 and now helps run the resource center for deportees in Tijuana.

But critics of blanket readmissio­ns say any noncitizen who commits a serious crime faces possible deportatio­n. “That’s the way the law works,” Rep. Andy Biggs, RAriz., said at a 2019 hearing on deported veterans. “There’s nobody else that would get an exception to that.”

Murillo said he had never thought of himself as anything but American.

“I grew up as a regular American kid,” he said. “I played baseball, basketball and football.”

He joined the Navy straight out of high school in 1996. At the time, his parents were applying for citizenshi­p, and he could have been added to their applicatio­n.

“Ma, don’t spend money on that,” his mother, Leticia Bernal, said he told her. “They’re giving me my citizenshi­p in the Navy.”

Murillo was deployed to the Middle East on the USS George Washington aircraft carrier as an aviation mechanic. At a base in Florida in 1998, he was caught using marijuana and ultimately discharged for bad conduct.

He returned to Phoenix to a broken marriage, and from there, he said, his life spiraled downward. Still on drugs, he lost his job installing satellite dishes and fell behind on his child support payments after getting divorced.

In April 2009, he agreed to drive a mammoth load of marijuana to St. Louis for $10,000, but he was caught by a highway patrol officer.

He received a 37-month prison sentence, and after his release in December 2011 was placed on a bus to Mexico.

Murillo said that he simply wishes to be back where he feels that he belongs.

“I grew up with ‘Scooby Doo,’ ‘Andy Griffith,’ ‘I Love Lucy’ and ‘The Price Is Right,’ Oprah, baseball — all the American things,” he said. “Everything that I am is American.”

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