… well, maybe you are a criminal.
“I felt like a criminal,” Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos told Mexican reporters…
Ms. Garcia de Rayos, you may recall, was recently deported on a final deportation order dating back to 2013. In fact, she is a criminal and also a convicted felon: she violated our nations sovereignty by ignoring our immigration laws and process, and worked illegally under false identity – taking a job that would have gone to a U.S. citizen or legal immigrant.
Note that her attorney piped in with:
“Getting back to the U.S., legally, there’s really no route for her. There’s no avenue for her. There’s no application she can submit. There’s no waiver she can submit,” Maldonado said. “I mean, this is a prime example of our failed immigration system.”
I would argue that this is an example of a functioning immigration system. You illegally enter our country, falsify documentation, are caught and convicted of a felony, then deported and not allowed back. Sounds likes it’s working just fine to me. And it’s how it works in many other countries, too.
Carlos Garcia, director of immigration rights group Puente Arizona, had this to say about Garcia de Rayos’ predicament:
“ICE had done what President Trump wanted — which is deport and separate our families.”
No, Carlos – you cannot blame President Trump for this action; Ms. Garcia de Rayos alone is at fault. She violated the laws of the U.S. (more than once, I might add) knowing that if caught her family could be separated (Her children are U.S. born and therefore citizens). Blaming the U.S. for breaking up her family is like blaming the police for breaking up the families of the suspects they arrest and prosecute. It is the criminal’s activities that result in the breakup, which would not be possible otherwise; the police are not to blame.
I have no sympathy for Ms. Garcia de Rayos. Just because the long arm of the law took a significant amount of time to catch up with her does not mean that she should be allowed a “pass” on her conviction or deportation order.