Albuquerque, NM – Complaint: US Agents Looting Immigrants Before Deportations

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    FILE - In this Jan. 4, 2016 file photo, a U.S. Border Patrol agent drives near the U.S.-Mexico border fence in Santa Teresa, N.M. A new complaint says U.S. Border Patrol agents are looting immigrants of possessions before deporting them to Mexico without their IDs or money. The ACLU of New Mexico and a coalition of advocacy groups filed the administrative complaint with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday, April 6, 2016, and say the seizures are endangering migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. (AP Photo/Russell Contreras, File)Albuquerque, NM – A complaint filed by advocacy groups alleges that U.S. Border Patrol agents are looting immigrants of possessions before deporting them to Mexico without their IDs or money.

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    The ACLU of New Mexico and a coalition of organizations filed the administrative complaint with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday and say the seizures are putting migrants at the US-Mexico border in harm’s way.

    The complaint said immigrants suspected of being in the country illegally were deported without their belongings in 26 separate cases. Advocates say immigrants were deported to cities in Mexico where they have no acquaintances.

    DHS spokeswoman Gillian Christensen said in a statement that the department has a policy of safeguarding detainees’ property.

    “DHS will review the complaint once we receive it. DHS has strict standards in place to ensure that detainees’ personal property — including funds, baggage and other effects — is safeguarded and controlled while they are in detention and returned to them when they are released from CBP/ICE custody or removed from the United States. Any allegation of missing property will be thoroughly investigated,” Christensen said.

    In one case, U.S. Border Patrol agents detained a 23-year-old man from Chihuahua, Mexico, on a road near Antelope Wells, New Mexico, in February 2015, and forced him to sign a form abandoning his rights to his belongings, the complaint said.

    The man did not understand the contents of the form, and the agents never advised him of his right to reclaim his belongings, according to the complaint. He was later sent to Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, without his belongings, documents claimed.

    The complaint also said border patrol agents seized nearly $400 from a 23-year-old woman from Guerrero after she was detained near an international bridge in El Paso, Texas. Advocates said the money, which was part of the woman’s life savings, was never returned.

    “They are really eroding the rule of law at the border,” ACLU of New Mexico attorney Kristin Greer Love said. “They are putting people at great vulnerability. Some are fleeing dangerous situations and are seeking asylum in the U.S.”

    Advocacy groups in Mexico complain that the seizures have been occurring along the border for years, Love said.

    Documents also said Border Patrol agents often destroy belongings, including legal and identity documents.


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    4 Comments
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    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    8 years ago

    It seems we have our own crooks on this side of the border!!

    gezinterheit
    gezinterheit
    8 years ago

    So let them come to the USA like all law abiding citizens from all over the world.
    With proper visas and then do the proper procedure for staying here.

    davidlangner
    davidlangner
    8 years ago

    The Nazis looted the Jews too. I guess the Americans are learning from them.