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Whatever happen to that caravan, anyway?
#27
(11-08-2018, 06:54 PM)Mike M (the other one) Wrote: Ok,
First guy enters legally as a child, gets busted with Cocaine, sent back to home country, comes back illegally.  STOP

2nd one, family enters illegally.. Technically STOP (parents had time to become legal, but failed to do so).  Sons try to seek entry via asylum, miss court date  STOP That's a shame, but happens.

3rd one, here legally, but committed 2 crimes, to bad, had more than 5 years of good behavior to change status from Green Card holder to USC, never did.

Just cause you are here legally doesn't mean you can commit crime and not end up being deported. Fulfill the requirements to become a USC so that if you do commit a crime, you won't be deported.


None of your links were good, all had committed crimes, so of course they are going to be detained and possibly deported. That's how the system works.

When you sign that I-485 (Green Card application) it specifically says on Item Numbers 25-80 of a long list of illegal activities that saying yes to anyone of them can result in a deportation. And lying on this form, is a Federal offense, which will also result in a deportation.

The War camps were an outlier, that's not normally how it works. You should know better than to try to push it off as an example that happens all the time.

To be honest I simply glanced at the articles I didn't read them in detail. Thanks for doing so.

But as I said; none are relevant to what we are discussing and/or if Dill's comments made the assumption they were going to cross illegally.

But apparently I was wrong because......
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RE: Whatever happen to that caravan, anyway? - bfine32 - 11-08-2018, 07:01 PM

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