Anyone else facing the possibility of being deported??

Joined
Dec 24, 2015
Messages
825
Reputation
251
Daps
1,633
So I'm a naturalized citizen of the United States since the 90's. But due to my ex (bum bytch) burning up my naturalization papers and my passport expired im walking around dirty.
My family has been stressing me about getting these freedom papers so I recently put in a request to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services for a duplicate copy of my freedom papers :comeon:. $505 to get the shyt.
Getting deported back to the "land of wood and water" 🇯🇲 won't be a bad thing if ICE pick me up on some bogus charge. I never wanted to come to the US and it would be great not dealing with white/ Latinos folks and their racism...Chinese I can deal with.
 

skeetsinternal

I never see my nut
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
33,574
Reputation
9,141
Daps
90,783
Reppin
Cervixes
Still don't have my freedom papers as of this date. The immigration services website still has my application as pending.
On a serious note my fam in Jamaica has discussed setting me up to live there in case I do get deported. We got land in St Elizabeth, uncles and cousins and my grandmother. Besides family and friends I don't think it's anything else I would miss about the US....maybe Amazon prime delivery
 

Kasgoinjail

AKA RehReh 😇
Supporter
Joined
Mar 10, 2017
Messages
16,225
Reputation
10,062
Daps
55,591
Reppin
UK
Still don't have my freedom papers as of this date. The immigration services website still has my application as pending.
On a serious note my fam in Jamaica has discussed setting me up to live there in case I do get deported. We got land in St Elizabeth, uncles and cousins and my grandmother. Besides family and friends I don't think it's anything else I would miss about the US....maybe Amazon prime delivery
Sainty is beautiful 😍
 

Strapped

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
48,449
Reputation
4,974
Daps
60,956
Reppin
404
Still don't have my freedom papers as of this date. The immigration services website still has my application as pending.
On a serious note my fam in Jamaica has discussed setting me up to live there in case I do get deported. We got land in St Elizabeth, uncles and cousins and my grandmother. Besides family and friends I don't think it's anything else I would miss about the US....maybe Amazon prime delivery
Please do not meet with any 3 letter agency, you'll lose your freedom & might end up in South America or Africa
 

The BasedFather

Task Force
Joined
Feb 12, 2013
Messages
17,413
Reputation
10,076
Daps
106,691
Reppin
Bltch Mob
Still don't have my freedom papers as of this date. The immigration services website still has my application as pending.
On a serious note my fam in Jamaica has discussed setting me up to live there in case I do get deported. We got land in St Elizabeth, uncles and cousins and my grandmother. Besides family and friends I don't think it's anything else I would miss about the US....maybe Amazon prime delivery

Damn breh, hope you get everything sorted out soon.

Are you familiar with Jamaica like that? Comfortable there?
 

skeetsinternal

I never see my nut
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
33,574
Reputation
9,141
Daps
90,783
Reppin
Cervixes
Damn breh, hope you get everything sorted out soon.

Are you familiar with Jamaica like that? Comfortable there?
It's getting real ...fr fr because my application has been pending for months and I feel like I'm riding dirty out in these ICE streets. Papi done for snatch for having more than what I got to prove I am legal.
I'm somewhat familiar with certain parts like Kingston (Kingston 10 to be exact) and Clarendon. As for comfortable yes, I still talk patois and can adapt to any situation
 

Strapped

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
48,449
Reputation
4,974
Daps
60,956
Reppin
404

Migrant Insider

Migrant Insider




Read in the Substack app
Open app

ICE Has Deported at Least 70 U.S. Citizens​

GAO confirms ICE deported U.S. citizens due to systemic failures — and the agency still doesn’t know how many more it’s wrongly targeting​

Jun 23, 2025
335
165

WASHINGTON — A recent report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) confirms what immigrant advocates have long warned: ICE has deported American citizens.
Between 2015 and 2020, ICE deported at least 70 people who were U.S. citizens, according to the GAO. That’s not just a bureaucratic mistake — it’s a constitutional violation.
U.S. citizens cannot be deported under civil immigration law. Yet GAO found that ICE and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) lack the records to even know how many people they may have deported in error.
In total, the watchdog found that ICE arrested 674 potential U.S. citizens, detained 121, and deported 70 — all of whom may have been legally untouchable by immigration enforcement.
And the actual number could be much higher.
“ICE does not know the extent to which its officers are taking enforcement actions against individuals who could be U.S. citizens,” the GAO concluded.

Training Gaps, Broken Databases, and Zero Accountability

According to the report, ICE’s own systems — both human and digital — are fundamentally flawed.
First, ICE’s internal training is a mess. Officers are technically required to consult with supervisors before questioning someone who claims to be a citizen. But ICE’s training materials contradict that rule, telling officers they can act alone — a gap that leaves life-altering decisions in the hands of under-trained agents.
Second, ICE’s data infrastructure makes misidentification permanent. Officers are supposed to document citizenship investigations, but they aren’t required to update a person’s status in ICE databases, even after confirming U.S. citizenship.
The result: people who are U.S. citizens can stay marked as “removable” in ICE’s system indefinitely.

Thousands Wrongly Targeted, Some Detained for Years

A separate analysis by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse found that between 2002 and 2017, ICE wrongly flagged at least 2,840 U.S. citizens as potentially deportable. At least 214 of those Americans were taken into ICE custody.
In the most harrowing case, Davino Watson, a New York-born citizen, was detained for three years in an Alabama immigration jail. He had no lawyer and was forced to prove his citizenship status to the government alone. When he finally got out, an appeals court ruled he wasn’t owed a dime — the statute of limitations had expired.

A Pattern of Profiling

Underlying these errors is a deeper problem: racial profiling.
Both ICE and CBP have long been documented engaging in discriminatory enforcement practices, disproportionately targeting people of color. As a result, Black and brown U.S. citizens are more likely to be stopped, arrested, or even deported — despite having every legal right to remain.
Without access to free legal counsel — a protection immigrants are not guaranteed — many citizens caught up in the system are left defenseless.

Mistakes ICE Refuses to Fix

What’s perhaps most disturbing is the lack of systemic response. ICE has not implemented a reliable system to track and correct its mistakes. Officers continue to make arrests based on outdated records. Supervisors are often left out of citizenship investigations. And there are no effective safeguards to stop this from happening again.
The result? A system that treats constitutional rights as optional — and a deportation machine that can’t (or won’t) tell the difference between an immigrant and an American.
 

Belize King

I got concepts of a plan.
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
5,163
Reputation
3,921
Daps
18,440

Migrant Insider

Migrant Insider




Read in the Substack app
Open app

ICE Has Deported at Least 70 U.S. Citizens​

GAO confirms ICE deported U.S. citizens due to systemic failures — and the agency still doesn’t know how many more it’s wrongly targeting​

Jun 23, 2025
335
165

WASHINGTON — A recent report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) confirms what immigrant advocates have long warned: ICE has deported American citizens.
Between 2015 and 2020, ICE deported at least 70 people who were U.S. citizens, according to the GAO. That’s not just a bureaucratic mistake — it’s a constitutional violation.
U.S. citizens cannot be deported under civil immigration law. Yet GAO found that ICE and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) lack the records to even know how many people they may have deported in error.
In total, the watchdog found that ICE arrested 674 potential U.S. citizens, detained 121, and deported 70 — all of whom may have been legally untouchable by immigration enforcement.
And the actual number could be much higher.
“ICE does not know the extent to which its officers are taking enforcement actions against individuals who could be U.S. citizens,” the GAO concluded.

Training Gaps, Broken Databases, and Zero Accountability

According to the report, ICE’s own systems — both human and digital — are fundamentally flawed.
First, ICE’s internal training is a mess. Officers are technically required to consult with supervisors before questioning someone who claims to be a citizen. But ICE’s training materials contradict that rule, telling officers they can act alone — a gap that leaves life-altering decisions in the hands of under-trained agents.
Second, ICE’s data infrastructure makes misidentification permanent. Officers are supposed to document citizenship investigations, but they aren’t required to update a person’s status in ICE databases, even after confirming U.S. citizenship.
The result: people who are U.S. citizens can stay marked as “removable” in ICE’s system indefinitely.

Thousands Wrongly Targeted, Some Detained for Years

A separate analysis by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse found that between 2002 and 2017, ICE wrongly flagged at least 2,840 U.S. citizens as potentially deportable. At least 214 of those Americans were taken into ICE custody.
In the most harrowing case, Davino Watson, a New York-born citizen, was detained for three years in an Alabama immigration jail. He had no lawyer and was forced to prove his citizenship status to the government alone. When he finally got out, an appeals court ruled he wasn’t owed a dime — the statute of limitations had expired.

A Pattern of Profiling

Underlying these errors is a deeper problem: racial profiling.
Both ICE and CBP have long been documented engaging in discriminatory enforcement practices, disproportionately targeting people of color. As a result, Black and brown U.S. citizens are more likely to be stopped, arrested, or even deported — despite having every legal right to remain.
Without access to free legal counsel — a protection immigrants are not guaranteed — many citizens caught up in the system are left defenseless.

Mistakes ICE Refuses to Fix

What’s perhaps most disturbing is the lack of systemic response. ICE has not implemented a reliable system to track and correct its mistakes. Officers continue to make arrests based on outdated records. Supervisors are often left out of citizenship investigations. And there are no effective safeguards to stop this from happening again.
The result? A system that treats constitutional rights as optional — and a deportation machine that can’t (or won’t) tell the difference between an immigrant and an American.
I’m traveling with passports and birth papers when I get back to the States.
:rudy:
 

Strapped

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
48,449
Reputation
4,974
Daps
60,956
Reppin
404


She's discussing DOJ going after naturalized citizens who have eye are ese issues
 

Turtle

Chupa me
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
2,116
Reputation
420
Daps
4,483
:mjlol:


You like chinese dikk in your mouth because it’s smaller right?

BACK TO MEXICO PAPI!
 
Top