U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) keeps making an inexcusable error: it has been deporting U.S. citizens by mistake.
immigrationimpact.com
www.aclu.org
In recent years, some U.S. citizens have claimed they were mistakenly identified as foreign nationals and detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs...
www.gao.gov
On average, a hundred and fifty Americans are mistakenly detained for deportation proceedings every year. What sort of legal protection do they have?
www.newyorker.com
Americans might be forgiven for overlooking immigration news of late.
lieu.house.gov
A new California bill would commemorate 'a dark part of our American history' known as the Mexican 'repatriation' of the 1930s.
www.kqed.org
You are a fukking gullible idiot if you think the government has always followed the "constitution" or the laws in general, especially when it comes to non white people. There will be a lot of "oopsies" if Trump and the Republicans can push the hardline immigration policies they want.
You are a moron if you think only non-whites get deported by accident
Yes it happens but it's unconstitutional and I guarantee you there's more to the story
Edit
"Salazar, born in Mexico, had been awaiting immigration hearings with her two older children. She married Arellano Jr. in 2019, and the couple has been raising their children in Houston. The twins, born in September, are U.S. citizens by birthright. Despite their status, the twins were deported along with their mother and siblings, prompting significant legal and emotional challenges for the family."
Sounds like the mother and 2 older children were illegal who missed a court hearing
Only the father and the newborns are US citizens
I doubt the newborns were deported but it makes more sense if the mother took them back to Mexico with her to care for them
Computers start putting if the headline reads "ICE deported newborns "
If they really did then pops can fly out to get them with ease
Janky journalism