San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. Afghan War veteran deported

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CHICAGO — An Army veteran from Chicago who served two tours in Afghanista­n and had been in the U.S. since age 8 has been deported to Mexico because of a 2008 drug-traffickin­g conviction.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials confirmed Monday that Miguel Perez Jr., 39, who had a green card, was deported Friday. The move came after he lost an appeal to remain in the U.S. and Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner refused to pardon him.

Perez was flown from Gary, Ind., to Brownsvill­e, Texas, where officers escorted him across the border and turned him over to Mexican authoritie­s, ICE officials said. He spoke to the Chicago Tribune in a Thursday evening call from a detention center, saying ,“I’m not leaving. They’re taking me.

“Not for 30 seconds was I illegal in this country,” he said. “I went to war for this country out of love for this country.”

Perez’s parents, Miguel Sr. and Esperanza Montes Perez, said in Spanish that they are heartbroke­n but will continue to fight for their son’s return.

“My son fought in a war (in) which he defended people who are now throwing him out like garbage,” Montes Perez said, according to the Tribune.

Perez handed a laptop case containing 4.4 pounds of cocaine to an undercover officer on Nov. 26, 2008, authoritie­s said. He pleaded guilty to the drug charge and ICE took him into custody after he served half of a 15-year prison sentence.

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., an Iraq War veteran who lost both legs in combat, has been one of Perez’s supporters. On Friday, she wrote a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen asking her to halt Perez’s deportatio­n.

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