Bangkok Post

FRENCH TEENAGER WHO ACCIDENTAL­LY CROSSED US BORDER HELD FOR 2 WEEKS

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>> OTTAWA: A young French woman who was visiting her mother in western Canada spent two weeks in a US detention centre after inadverten­tly crossing the border while jogging along the beach, a report said on Friday.

Cedella Roman, 19, ran across the border just south of the town of White Rock in Canada’s British Columbia, into the US state of Washington on the evening of May 21, she said in a interview.

She headed back when the tide began to come in, going up toward a dirt path before stopping to take a photo of the scenery, then turned around to retrace her steps.

It was then that she was apprehende­d by two US Border Patrol officers who told her she had crossed illegally and had been caught on camera.

“I told him I had not done it on purpose, and that I didn’t understand what was happening,” she said.

Ms Roman protested that she hadn’t seen any warning signs, and didn’t initially anticipate how serious the matter would become.

“I said to myself, well I may have crossed the border — but they’ll probably only give me a fine or they’ll tell me to go back to Canada or they’ll give me a warning.”

Complicati­ng matters, Ms Roman, who had come to Canada to visit her mother and work on her English, wasn’t carrying any government-issued ID on her at the time.

She was transferre­d by the officers to the Tacoma Northwest Detention Centre, run by the Department of Homeland Security, 200 kilometres to the south.

“They put me in the caged vehicles and brought me into their facility,” she said. “They asked me to remove all my personal belongings with my jewellery, they searched me everywhere.

“Then I understood it was getting very serious, and I started to cry a bit.”

When she reached the centre, she contacted her mother, Christiane Ferne, who quickly reached the centre with her passport and study permits — but the workers at the site said the documents would have to be verified by Canadian authoritie­s.

She was held at the centre for two weeks before the matter was resolved and she was allowed to return to Canada.

Ms Ferne said the lack of clear signs had led to her daughter’s predicamen­t. “It’s like a trap … anybody can be caught at the border like this,” she said.

US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t confirmed to CBC that Ms Roman was discharged on June 6. But neither the ICE nor Immigratio­n Canada would comment further on the case, citing privacy concerns.

A spokespers­on for the US Customs and Border Protection told CBC that anyone who enters the US outside an official port of entry and without inspection has crossed the border illegally and will be detained.

“This applies regardless of whether or not the individual claims to have inadverten­tly crossed the border,” the department said.

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