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Thursday, February 4, 2021

US Veterans Deported to Mexico Fear Cartels

 Yaqui for Borderland Beat

Deported US Marine Corps veteran at the US-Mexico border during a July 4th gathering on the beach at Playas de Tijuana, July 4, 2017.

US veterans deported to Mexico want to be let  'back into their country' before cartels get to them:

For thousands of US veterans who have been deported to Mexico, the strain of being separated from their home is compounded by threats from criminal groups that seek them out for their military training.

Some of those veterans have renewed hope that there will be a chance to return, but for others who have already restarted their lives, that hope comes too late.

Ciudad Juarez, Mexico: Thousands of US veterans deported to Mexico, some of whom have been forcibly recruited by cartels, are asking the Biden administration to let them "back into their country."

The Deported Veterans Support House, writing "on behalf of thousands of US deported veterans," asked President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to stop deportations of US veterans and to welcome back those who are already on foreign soil.

"We believe that there is not a more perfect time in our nation's history to bring these heroes home. President Biden is a military father and knows what it is like to be separated from a loved one overseas," states the letter, which was obtained by Insider.

"In Mexico, drug cartels prey on this desperation, coercing former service members to join criminal operations for their combat skills," the letter says.

Hector Barajas, founder of the Deported Veterans Support House in Tijuana and a US Army veteran, expected the letter to encourage thousands of veterans currently stuck in foreign countries.

"This is the first time we write a letter to the President of the United States. I really hope they understand the problems and the risks we take by being deported to a place we don't really belong," said Barajas, who was granted US citizenship in 2018 after 14 years of waiting.

One of those risks is forcible recruitment by Mexican cartels.

"The recruiting by Mexican cartels is real. They are looking for professionals with training on the use of arms," Barajas said.

He believes his advocacy on behalf of deported veterans is the reason he has never been approached by cartels. But not everyone is that lucky.

"Mike," a deported US veteran, is currently facing more than 50 years in Mexican prison after being accused of several murders related to his work for a cartel.

"I was deported back in 2010 after serving the US Army and deploy[ing] two times. Since then I'm working with a criminal organization," said Mike, using a pseudonym to avoid retaliation.

Mike said he was recruited specifically to assassinate rival gangs and to train young sicarios as soon as he was deported to Ciudad Juarez, which borders El Paso, Texas.

"I was totally scared when I got deported. They reached out to me on the streets, and they knew I had a kid and threatened me with harming him if I didn't cooperate. So I started training them on how to shoot and clean guns," he told Insider.

Mike said he didn't know of any other US veterans working for the Juarez cartel, but Jose Camacho, a 65-year-old US Army veteran deported to Mexico, said many more like him and Mike are working with Mexican criminal groups.

"There are many more. I know of a few working for the same organization, but it wouldn't be news to find many, many more even working with other organizations throughout Mexico," he said.

                                       "Mexico Deported Veterans Memorial Day"

Veterans deported from the US at a tribute for fallen comrades on Memorial Day at the Deported Veterans Support House in Tijuana, May 27, 2019. 

Camacho was deported around the same time as Mike, after being arrested for drug trafficking in Texas. After that, he started collaborating with the Juarez cartel.

"They would pay me to teach members on how to use weapons and to teach them on ambush and tactics I learned in the Army," Camacho said. Camacho says he is no longer involved in any criminal activity.

The number of US veterans who have been deported, let alone those working for criminal organizations, is currently unknown, but deportations have been going on for some time.

"Through the Deported Veterans Support House I've helped around 400 people since 2003, but deportations for veterans started back in 1996," Barajas told Insider.

A 2017 report from the National Immigration Forum said about 40,000 immigrants serve in the US military and about 5,000 non-citizens enlist each year.

President Biden addressed the deportation of US veterans several times during his campaign 2019, Biden promised "to bring them back."

"That's why we're who we are, the country we are. We are a country of immigrants, and they serve, and they should be treated the same way," Biden said.

President Biden echoed that sentiment in an official campaign statement on veterans:

"Joe Biden will not target the men and women who served in uniform, or their families, for deportation. He will also direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to create a parole process for veterans deported by the Trump Administration, to reunite them with their families and military colleagues in the US."

                                    Mexico's  deported  US Veterans get a little Consolation

US Reps. Michelle Lujan Grisham, Joaquin Castro, Nanette Diaz Barragn, Juan Vargas, and Raul Grijalva visit the Deported Veterans Support House in Tijuana, June 3 2017. 

But those promises don't give much hope to veterans stuck south of the border.

Michael Evans, a 32-year-old US veteran deported in 2009, said he has put down roots in Mexico and even if there is an opportunity to return to the US, he is not sure he will take it.

"I just submitted papers to become a US citizen and see what happens. I want to be a US citizen and to have that option, but honestly, I'm not sure if I want to start a new life over again," Evans told Insider.

"I've heard President Biden saying he will fight for deported veterans, and I hope he will, but I'm skeptical because of the system overall," he said.

Evans, currently living in Ciudad Juarez, said he has never been approached by criminal organizations but is aware of how they operate in Mexico.

"I don't think they will get to you if you are not close to them. You have to be around them to receive an offer or a threat," Evans said.

Evans might get a second chance to become a US citizen and return to the country he served. But for others, the hope of getting home comes too late.

"I don't even think about it. This is the life I'm living today. If some of them , the deported veterans, are getting back to the "mainland", well, good for them, but as for me, it's too late now," Mike said.

Source: Business Insider

21 comments:

  1. Drug trafficking (hard narcotics) should be consider treason. You are killing Americans by your actions. Most veterans get deported after a conviction. If you want to help a veteran there are enough living on the streets. Finish with that list first....

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    Replies
    1. ^ agreed. And "no longer participating in criminal activity"...hmmm.

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    2. I’m afraid the belief that drug users are “victims” of people who sell drugs has weakened society and caused people to believe that they are not responsible for their own actions.

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    3. "Treason"? You would lock up the See Eye AAY?

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    4. @12:15 of course when it's convenient the narcotic consumer will use the addiction excuse.

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    5. Americans are killing themselves by *choosing* to ABUSE drugs.

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    6. Loving that comment 12:15 mad props vato/ma’am. 💯

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  2. Someone who served our country and never got into trouble and came here before he was an adult with his family should be allowed to stay.

    ReplyDelete
  3. How can the US Airforce/Army/Navy permit 5,000 non-citizens to enlist?

    Canadian girl💋


    ReplyDelete
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    1. This girl is ALWAYS on some DUMB sh!t..
      They enlist IF they have GREEN cards

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    2. Yeah, lots of unanswered questions here.

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    3. I was in the service with a guy who somehow joined from germany- they paid to move his whole family to the us also- he ended up stealing a gov credit card and blowing 90k$ over a week or 2 on whatever he wanted and lots of crack- he ended up in the brig for years

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    4. @10:10pm kiss my lily white *ss ...and thanks for the answer.

      Canadian girl💋

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  4. Sorry for being OT but Martin Marin ex gob from Puebla got arrested due to Lydia Cacho. Maybe we see some justice.

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  5. The cynic in me says the cartels would not mind it one bit if these lieutenants returned "home" to do their bidding abroad.

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  6. As a former British army soldier this is a disgrace if they served with the us army ... SMH! off topic but zero zero zero has just been released in the uk what a good series only 3 episodes in I’m guessing the main guy in Mexico is lazca when he deserted the army? There will never be anyone like the original zetas again LEGENDS

    ATTE SCOTTISH ZETA

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mexico ain't the land of Sicario where one single individual highly trained is capable of taking down an entire cartel or it's boss.
      That is just movies.
      You are nowhere near these people shoes to know what if anything makes them join the cartels.
      It's not the free world in a third world country.
      Sometimes it's either you belong or you get eliminated including your family.

      Delete
  7. Lmfao as a veteran I have no sympathy for these guys. They all fucked up and got convictions at some point in their life. People don’t just get randomly deported. We are better off without these shitbags

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    Replies
    1. As a veteran and MEXICAN at that, I think differently..
      Your NOT mexican so YOU don't care
      I don't BELIEVE in deporting Veterans, especially if honorably discharged..
      A lot of this guys suffer from PTSD..

      Delete
  8. This is F*CKED Up
    They serve in the armed forces and still get deported how r*tarded is the US government

    ReplyDelete
  9. Been happening for a long time, Mexican cartels have been enslaving US military personnel to work for them on both sides.

    ReplyDelete

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