Chicago Sun-Times

DREAMer is deported under Trump

23- year- old ejected from country had lived in the USA since he was 9 years old

- Alan Gomez and David Agren

Federal agents ignored President Trump’s pledge to protect from deportatio­n undocument­ed immigrants brought to the USA as children by sending a young man back to his native Mexico, the first such documented case, a USA TODAY examinatio­n of the new administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies shows.

After spending an evening with his girlfriend in Calexico, Calif., on Feb. 17, Juan Manuel Montes, 23, who has lived in the USA since age 9, grabbed a bite and was waiting for a ride when a U. S. Customs and Border Protection officer approached and started asking questions.

Montes was twice granted deportatio­n protection­s under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program ( DACA) created by President Obama and left intact by Trump.

Montes had left his wallet in a friend’s car, so he couldn’t produce his ID or proof of his DACA status and was told by agents he couldn’t retrieve them. Within three hours, he was back in Mexico, becoming the first undocument­ed immigrant with active DACA status deported by the Trump administra­tion’s stepped- up deportatio­n policy.

“Some people told me that they were going to deport me; others said nothing would happen,” Montes told USA TODAY in his aunt and uncle’s home in western Mexico. “I thought that if I keptmy nose clean, nothing would happen.” He asked that the exact location of their home be withheld.

Trump has followed through on his campaign pledge to crackdown on illegal immigratio­n by signing executive orders to step up enforcemen­t against the estimated 11 million undocument­ed immigrants living in the USA. The new policy calls for expanding the criteria for detaining and deporting someone and hiring thousands of new agents.

Trump declined to revoke the DACA protection­s Obama granted to more than 750,000 undocument­ed immigrants, repeatedly saying he had a soft spot for these young people who lead productive lives and have few, if any, ties to the countries of their birth.

“They shouldn’t be very worried,” he

told ABC News in January. “I do have a big heart.”

Even so, DACA enrollees are targeted by immigratio­n authoritie­s. At least 10 are in federal custody, according to United We Dream, an advocacy organizati­on made up of DACA enrollees and other young immigrants.

The group’s advocacy director, Greisa Martinez, who has DACA protection, said Montes’ case is proof that people such as herself are at risk despite what Trump said. “We’ve seen Trump and ( Department of Homeland Security Secretary) John Kelly say, ‘ The DACA program is alive and well.’ We’ve seen ( House Speaker) Paul Ryan look straight into the eyes of one of our members and say, ‘ You have nothing to worry about,’ ” she said. “And then this happens.” Customs and Border Protection said Tuesday it could not discuss Montes’ case citing privacy policies.

A group of attorneys filed a lawsuit in federal court Tuesday in California, requesting that a judge force Customs and Border Protection to release details of the encounter with Montes.

Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Law Center, part of Montes’ legal team, said it has requested informatio­n for months but has gotten no response. “How does an immigrant family today know that this is not going to happen to them?” Hincapié said.

The shy Montes was never a poster child for the DACA program. He wasn’t his high school’s valedictor­ian or a prominent advocate for fellow DREAMers.

He suffered a traumatic brain injury as a child that left him with learning disabiliti­es that meant a constant struggle to keep up in school and everyday conversati­ons, according to Hincapié. He made it through special education courses and graduated high school in 2013. He started taking welding classes at a Southern California community college and paid for it by picking crops in California and Arizona.

He lived with his mother and a younger brother, who was born in the USA and, thus, is a citizen. His mother did not want to be named or reveal her immigratio­n status.

Court records show he has four conviction­s: one for shopliftin­g in January 2016 and three for driving without a license, most recently three months ago. Those conviction­s are not serious enough to disqualify him from DACA protection­s, according to U. S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the federal agency that approves DACA applicatio­ns.

Montes received renewed DACA protection­s in January 2016, which keep him enrolled through 2018. That is why Montes was confused when he was approached by the federal officer in February.

“They detained me, they took me to a center, they asked me a lot of questions, and I signed a lot of papers,” he said.

Montes said he couldn’t understand anything he was signing and was not given any copies. Officers walked him to the U. S.- Mexican border and released him into Mexicali.

There, he found a friend who put him up for the night. He called another friend, who drove across the border to return his wallet and bring fresh clothes. Then things got worse.

Montes said he was jumped from behind, mugged and beaten. At that point, he decided he needed to get back home. He saw some people using a rope to climb over a section of the border wall and joined them. He was quickly captured by federal agents, questioned again and deported again.

Today, Montes has reconnecte­d with his estranged father and works in a gas station and a tortilla mill.

He counts the days until he can return to the USA and continue building his life.

“There I worked and studied at the same time. I only had six more months to finish ( my studies),” he said. “I liked it there more than here.”

 ?? DAVID AGREN FOR USA TODAY ?? Juan ManuelMont­es, 23, had been protected from deportatio­n twice under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program created by President Obama. He was deported toMexico on Feb. 17.
DAVID AGREN FOR USA TODAY Juan ManuelMont­es, 23, had been protected from deportatio­n twice under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program created by President Obama. He was deported toMexico on Feb. 17.

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