The Star Malaysia

South Korean adoptee in US to be deported

Man’s plight mirrors that of 35,000 others without papers

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SALEM (OREGON): A South Korean man flown to the US 37 years ago and adopted by an American couple at age three has been ordered deported back to a country that is completely alien to him.

“It is heartbreak­ing news,” said Dae Joong (DJ) Yoon, executive director of the National Korean American Service & Education Consortium, who had been in contact with Adam Crapser.

Crapser remains confined in an immigratio­n detention centre in Tacoma, Washington, pending his deportatio­n.

Crapser waived an appeal during the hearing on Monday because he is desperate to get out of detention, his Seattle attorney, Lori Walls, said on Wednesday.

“I’m sure he doesn’t have any idea what he can do in Korea,” Yoon said in a phone interview from his group’s offices in Annandale, Virginia.

Crapser’s plight mirrors those of thousands of others. Yoon’s group says an estimated 35,000 intercount­ry adoptees lack US citizenshi­p. It is backing legislatio­n in Congress to address that.

Seven years after Crapser and his older sister were adopted, their parents abandoned them. The foster care system separated Crapser when he was 10 from his sister.

He was housed at several foster and group homes. When Crapser was 12, he moved in with Thomas and Dolly Crapser, their biological son, two other adoptees and several foster children.

There, he was physically abused, Crapser has said. In 1991, the couple was arrested on charges of physical child abuse, sexual abuse and rape. They denied the charges. Thomas Crapser’s sentence included 90 days in jail, and Dolly Crasper’s included three years of probation.

Adam Crapser got into trouble with the law after he broke into his parents’ home – it was, he said, to retrieve the Korean Bible and rubber shoes that came with him from the orphanage – and later it was for stealing cars and assaulting a roommate.

Federal immigratio­n officials say they became aware of Crapser after he applied for a green card. His criminal conviction­s made him deportable.

Becky Belcore, who was adopted at age one and brought to the United States from South Korea, said she was with Crapser in the courtroom, located inside the detention centre.

She said the facility seems worse than jail because visitors cannot touch or hug detainees and must talk to them on a telephone.

“He has been in detention for almost nine months,” Belcore said in a phone interview from her home in Chicago.

“He’s been separated from his children. It is really hard for him.” Walls said Crapser is married and has four children.

 ?? — AP ?? Happier times: Crapser (left) with daughters, Christal, one, Christina, five, and his wife, Anh Nguyen, in the family’s living room in Vancouver, Washington.
— AP Happier times: Crapser (left) with daughters, Christal, one, Christina, five, and his wife, Anh Nguyen, in the family’s living room in Vancouver, Washington.

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