logo
DHS said in 2016 it was not moving to deport a convicted Army vet. He's spent most of Trump's new term in ICE custody

DHS said in 2016 it was not moving to deport a convicted Army vet. He's spent most of Trump's new term in ICE custody

CNN03-04-2025

After his two deployments to Iraq and despite falling into legal trouble, Marlon Parris learned the US government was not pursuing deportation proceedings against him.
The letter had been a welcome assurance some six months before President Donald Trump's 2016 election that the Department of Homeland Security and its Immigration and Customs Enforcement bureau didn't intend to send the US Army veteran back to his native Trinidad and Tobago, even after he pleaded guilty and served prison time for felony conspiracy to distribute cocaine as part of a sophisticated, big-money cocaine ring.
Since Parris had come to the US as a child in 1997, he had been a lawful permanent resident. As a soldier, he sought full citizenship, a benefit military recruiters often tout to entice foreigners. But his deployments, his wife told CNN, prevented him from seeing the process through, another common obstacle noncitizen service members face.
During his years in the Army, Parris was among the first teams sent overseas in Operation Iraqi Freedom, then returned to Iraq two years later, according to his wife and military records. He earned awards, including a service medal for the global war on terrorism and one for good conduct.
Parris, who has suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, figured immigration officials' letter in 2016 – and his green card renewal the following year – meant he 'was given full clearance to basically live life as normal,' said his wife, Tanisha Hartwell-Parris, an American citizen.
But two days after Trump retook the White House this year on promises of tightening America's borders and expelling violent criminals, Parris found himself at a red light in his Arizona neighborhood, surrounded by unmarked SUVs.
It was the feds.
Parris, now 45, called his wife.
'ICE is about to detain me,' he told her, she recalled in February to CNN's Victor Blackwell.
Now, more than two months later, the couple is still waiting to understand why an agency that had explicitly stated it was not pursuing deportation proceedings against Parris still has him in custody and is trying to remove him from the country he served on the battlefield – a circumstance scores of veterans reportedly have faced in recent years.
The documents ICE has provided in support of Parris' deportation stem from the 2011 federal drug case, his wife told CNN: Parris was charged along with at least 13 others as part of a trafficking scheme that ferried cocaine cross-country on private jets and returned with huge sums of cash, court records show.
After he served his time in the case, Parris learned of DHS' and ICE's letter of no interest to the detention center holding him, saying the government was lifting his detainer and was not moving to deport him. 'After further review, DHS has determined that he/she is not amenable to deportation or exclusion proceedings,' the letter read.
Now, his wife told CNN, it seems Parris has been swept up in the new Republican administration's immigration crackdown, which also has targeted academics at elite universities, alleged gang members and ordinary parents of US citizens.
'We still don't know how he got caught up in this' after several years of thinking he was in the clear, Hartwell-Parris said. 'There's still nothing that they're presenting that would make sense.'
DHS did not respond to CNN's requests for comment about Parris' detainment. The department's ICE division told CNN in February it couldn't share information about the case, saying there was no signed privacy waiver on file.
'My goal is to arrest as many public safety and national security threats as possible and move on to the other priorities,' White House border czar Tom Homan said in January. 'We're prioritizing criminal aliens.'
But Parris and military veterans, Hartwell-Parris said, 'are not the people who you're hearing about on TV. These are not murderers and rapists, everything that's being said about immigrants.'
'It's no secret that veterans get in trouble with the law,' Navy veteran Alex Murillo, who also has faced deportation, told CNN. 'What the difference is with us is after we serve our time, after we pay our debt to society, then we get exiled. We never get to see our family again.'
Military service is one way immigrants can be naturalized under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Eligible service members can apply through the standard form, with some requirements waived, and many military installations offer a liaison to help with the process, according to US Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Applicants still need to meet requirements, such as having good moral character and being a lawful permanent resident at the time of their naturalization interview.
But there's a difference between being eligible for the benefit and actually receiving it, said Danitza James, who chairs a subcommittee on deported veterans for the League of United Latin American Citizens, the nation's oldest Hispanic civil rights group.
Military recruiters tell noncitizens they can apply for naturalization and get their citizenship by serving. But, James said, 'that is it.'
'There is nothing that is signed. It's not in our military orders; it's not in our contract. There is nothing abiding the military to deliver on that promise, and that's where the challenges begin,' she said.
James went through the process herself: She was 16 when she came to the United States from Mexico and, as a green card holder, did two combat tours in Iraq, she said. She tried to get her citizenship through her military service, but she kept missing immigration appointments and naturalization ceremonies because of redeployments.
'The mission always takes priority,' James said.
That's much like what happened to Parris, his wife said – and to others, like Murillo. When the jet mechanic was on active duty in Israel in the early 2000s, his father called from the United States to tell him he had a citizenship interview coming up, he said.
'Dad, I'm serving overseas,' Murillo recalled replying. 'I'm with my squadron. My command is going to take care of that.'
'Yeah, and they never did,' he told CNN. 'They never did.'
Murillo later went to prison on a nonviolent cannabis change, he said, and soon after he'd done his time, the Democratic Obama administration deported him in late 2011 to Mexico, where he hadn't been since he was a baby. He spoke no Spanish.
Scores of veterans have been held in ICE detention or faced deportation proceedings, a 2019 Government Accountability Office report found. But the exact number isn't clear, it said, and ICE itself fails to keep track. At least 239 deported US veterans live across 34 countries, according to the nonprofit National Immigration Forum, which also counts about 94,000 immigrant veterans who aren't naturalized.
And while ICE has special policies for handling veterans' cases – requiring extra layers of documentation and management approval – it doesn't consistently adhere to them, nor does it keep complete data on veterans who are in removal proceedings or deported, the report concluded.
ICE 'does not know exactly how many veterans have been placed in removal proceedings or removed, or if their cases have been handled according to ICE's policies,' the report stated.
The GAO also found some veterans were removed who may not have received the level of review and approval ICE's own policies deem appropriate.
DHS at the time said it concurred with the GAO's recommendations that it consistently implement its own policies and maintain data on veterans and would take action to address them, the GAO report states.
'The Department is pleased to note GAO's acknowledgement that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) recognizes noncitizen veterans warrant special consideration in the event that they become subject to immigration enforcement and removal from the United States,' the agency's response to the report reads. DHS 'and ICE are focused on smart and effective enforcement of US immigration laws.'
The agency did not respond to CNN for this story about whether it has addressed the report's recommendations.
For veterans who get deported, trying to return to the US often isn't the only challenge. Hector Barajas was honorably discharged in 2001 from the US Army but struggled to adjust to civilian life, he said, and soon pleaded guilty to illegally discharging a firearm and spent two years in prison.
He then was deported and lived the next 14 years in Mexico while working to secure US citizenship. For much of his time in Tijuana, Barajas also ran the Deported Veterans Support House, or 'The Bunker.' Barajas is the first known deported veteran to be naturalized as a US citizen, the American Civil Liberties Union has said.
But even after he was welcomed back to the United States in 2018, Barajas struggled to find housing. For a while, he slept in his car in a parking lot, he told CNN. He eventually found a job as a security guard, but his applications for rental housing still got denied because he had no credit history.
'For some of us, the nightmare really isn't over,' he said, 'but it's just nice to be home.'
Murillo, the Navy veteran, spent 11 years in Mexico after his deportation. Then in 2021, Democratic President Joe Biden signed an executive order establishing a program that identifies current and former military members and their relatives who were deported to ensure they receive service benefits.
Since then, a coalition of nonprofits, advocates and attorneys has used the program to bring back to the United States about 140 service members under humanitarian parole, a special immigration status.
Murillo was repatriated in April 2022.
But since Trump's second inauguration, the progress of some applications under Biden's executive order has slowed significantly, and approvals aren't happening as often, said James, who ended up becoming naturalized through marriage.
'The deportations haven't stopped, and there's still veterans being wrapped up in this,' Barajas added. 'Because of Trump's enforcement of immigration, they're really worried about what's going to happen with veterans.'
For Murillo, it was shocking and painful to hear Parris' story in the news. In recent weeks, he has gone to rallies in support of the detained Army veteran, met his wife and shared his own deportation experience with her as a means of support.
'The main thing that I want is for him to be back with his family,' Murillo said.
'So, we have to get him out. It's not right for him to be in there again. He already served his time.'
Twice a week, Hartwell-Parris wakes up at 4 a.m. and drives 80 minutes to the Florence Correctional Center, in Arizona, where her husband is still detained. That's as often as she can see him in person, and even then, they have to speak by phone and are separated by a thick pane of glass – no contact allowed.
'It's been hard, for sure, to have to even adjust to life without him here,' she said. 'But I just, I try to thank God for just the little time that I am able to see him those two times a week.'
Other families' detained loved ones have been sent from Florence to facilities in other states, Hartwell-Parris said.
'So, I'm just blessed that he's not one of them – yet,' she said.
Parris had been scheduled to have a hearing in his immigration case on March 24, but it was extended to April 25, his wife said. Until then, he will remain in detainment, his future in the United States uncertain.
CNN's Hyan de Freitas, Tonju Francois and Norma Galena contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hedge fund titan Ken Griffin rips White House over tax bill
Hedge fund titan Ken Griffin rips White House over tax bill

New York Post

time24 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Hedge fund titan Ken Griffin rips White House over tax bill

Hedge fund titan Ken Griffin ramped up his war of words with the Trump White House on Wednesday, blasting the president's so-called 'Big, Beautiful' tax bill for adding to Uncle Sam's eye-popping $36 trillion debt pile. The 56-year-old CEO of Citadel, who is worth $42 billion according to Forbes, told the business magazine's annual Iconoclast summit in New York City that if the bill passed, the country would 'unquestionably add several trillion dollars' to the US debt. 'There are a lot of question marks as to why we are continuing to restart tax cuts when we have a fiscal deficit that is this big,' Griffin said at the business magazine's annual Iconoclast summit in lower Manhattan Advertisement 4 Griffin warned that the Trump tax bill will only add to America's debt pile. REUTERS 'The United States' fiscal house is not in order,' Griffin added. 'You cannot run deficits of 6 or 7% at full employment after years of growth. That is just fiscally irresponsible.' Analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office forecasts that there is a $2.4 trillion black hole in the president's flagship tax bill. Griffin, who moved his firm from Chicago to Miami in 2022, likewise warned that the administration should rein in spending and that investors are already worried about America's finances — posing major risks in the bond markets. Advertisement 'US default prices are probably the same as Italy or Greece,' he said, referring to the so-called credit default swap markets where investors can bet on whether someone will fail to pay their bills. The GOP megadonor also took aim at Trump for criticizing Walmart CEO Doug McMillon after he warned of needing to raise prices in response to higher import costs. 'We should not criticize CEOs for being honest, right? And that's all the CEO of Walmart was doing,' he told the audience in lower Manhattan. 'Shame on the administration.' Advertisement The Post has approached the White House for comment. 4 Elon Musk, who has only recently left the Trump administration, has been repeatedly griping about the bill on his social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. REUTERS More broadly, Griffin lamented the 'uncertainty' that now clouds investment decisions in the US as a result of policies that have 'called into question American exceptionalism.' 'The administration's attempts to use tariffs come at a dear price for the US economy and come at a dear price for the US consumers, who will undoubtedly pay higher prices,' Griffin told the audience at the upmarket Cipriani ballroom on Broadway in lower Manhattan. Advertisement 'Why do we aspire to bring back to the United States jobs that are actually moving out of China into lower-cost jurisdictions? Why are we aspiring to be the nation of the lowest cost and the lowest-paid workforce in the world? That makes no sense to me.' 4 The tariff tiff blew up at the Beverly Hills Hilton where Trump's allies organized a rival VIP welcome party to go up against Griffin's traditional Milken opener. Bloomberg via Getty Images Griffin, who voted for Trump in November's presidential election, has been a staunch critic of his administration's tariff and trade policies since the real estate mogul's second inauguration earlier this year. The row between the two men spilled over at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills last month, where allies of President Trump organized a rival VIP welcome bash to go up against the Citadel supremo's traditional opening reception. Trump unveiled his tariff plans on April 2, which he dubbed Liberation Day, as he sought to renegotiate new trade deals with countries he believed were treating the United States unfairly. 4 Griffin used a Forbes summit to launch a string of broadsides at the Trump administration over its trade and tariff policies. AP The move has since faced a string of legal challenges, with negotiations failing to bear any fruit until now, apart from an agreement with post-Brexit Britain that was announced on May 8. But discussions with the European Union, one of America's largest trading partners, have faltered, as The Post exclusively reported on May 7.

Tesla Tumbles After Musk Escalates Attacks on Trump Tax Bill
Tesla Tumbles After Musk Escalates Attacks on Trump Tax Bill

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tesla Tumbles After Musk Escalates Attacks on Trump Tax Bill

(Bloomberg) -- Tesla Inc.'s shares sank as Elon Musk and President Donald Trump's simmering feud devolved into a public war of words between two of the world's most powerful people. ICE Moves to DNA-Test Families Targeted for Deportation with New Contract Next Stop: Rancho Cucamonga! US Housing Agency Vulnerable to Fraud After DOGE Cuts, Documents Warn The Global Struggle to Build Safer Cars Where Public Transit Systems Are Bouncing Back Around the World Trump on Thursday said he was 'very disappointed' by the Tesla chief executive officer's criticism of the president's signature tax policy bill. Musk fired back on social media, saying it was 'false' that the Tesla CEO knew the plan would unwind EV tax credits that benefit Tesla's business. Musk followed up with several more sharply worded posts, including saying Trump showed 'such ingratitude' for the help the billionaire entrepreneur has provided to Trump's administration. Tesla's shares fell as much 9.2% to an intraday low as the two traded barbs. The spat highlights how policies advanced by Trump and Republican lawmakers put billions of dollars at risk for Tesla. Trump's massive tax bill would largely eliminate a credit worth as much as $7,500 for buyers of some Tesla models and other electric vehicles by the end of this year, seven years ahead of schedule. That would translate to a roughly $1.2 billion hit to Tesla's full-year profit, according to JPMorgan analysts. After leaving his formal advisory role in the White House last week, Musk has been on a mission to block the president's signature tax bill that he described as a 'disgusting abomination.' The world's richest person has been lobbying Republican lawmakers — including making a direct appeal to House Speaker Mike Johnson — to preserve the valuable EV tax credits in the legislation. Separate legislation passed by the Senate attacking California's EV sales mandates poses another $2 billion headwind for Tesla's sales of regulatory credits, according to JPMorgan. Taken together, those measures threaten roughly half of the more than $6 billion in earnings before interest and taxes that Wall Street expects Tesla to post this year, analysts led by Ryan Brinkman said in a May 30 report. Tesla didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The House-passed tax bill would aggressively phase-out tax credits for the production of clean electricity, and other sources years earlier than scheduled. It also includes stringent restrictions on the use of Chinese components and materials that analysts said would render the credits useless and limits the ability of company's to sell the tax credits to third parties. Tesla's division focused on solar systems and batteries separately criticized the Republican bill for gutting clean energy tax credits, saying that 'abruptly ending' the incentives would threaten US energy independence and the reliability of the power grid. The clean energy and EV policies under threat were largely enacted as part of former President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act. The law was designed to encourage companies to build a domestic supply chain for clean energy and electric vehicles, giving companies more money if they produce more batteries and EVs in the US. Tesla has a broad domestic footprint, including car factories in Texas and California, a lithium refinery and battery plants. With those Biden-era policies in place, US EV sales rose 7.3% to a record 1.3 million vehicles last year, according to Cox Automotive data. --With assistance from Kara Carlson, Keith Laing, Josh Wingrove and Kate Sullivan. (Updates shares, adds Trump, Musk comments starting in the fourth paragraph.) Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It's Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Is Elon Musk's Political Capital Spent? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Canadian drug trafficker on "Most Wanted List" sentenced in Detroit federal court
Canadian drug trafficker on "Most Wanted List" sentenced in Detroit federal court

CBS News

time25 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Canadian drug trafficker on "Most Wanted List" sentenced in Detroit federal court

A Canadian man who led an eight-year drug trafficking conspiracy in the United States was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison, according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Michigan. Khaophone Sychantha, 43, was convicted of one count of conspiring to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine, ecstasy, and BZP, one count of possession of methamphetamine, ecstasy, and BZP with intent to distribute, and one count of possession of ecstasy and BZP with intent to distribute. At one point, the press release said, Sychantha was listed on the Homeland Security Investigations' Ten Most Wanted List. Because Sychantha is not a United States citizen, he will be deported back to Canada after serving his sentence. Gorgon was supported in the announcement by Jared Murphey, acting Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations, Detroit field office. The Homeland Security Investigations team led the case. "This sentencing brings Sychantha's cross border criminal enterprise to a fitting end," Murphy said. "The collective effort by the case agents, the prosecutors and our international partners is astounding, and I commend them all for a job well done." Evidence at trial showed that Sychantha led an organization for about eight years that directed several couriers to transport hundreds of thousands of pills and tens of thousands of dollars in drug proceeds across the United States-Canada border. His couriers — many of whom were caught and convicted themselves — traveled within multiple states. The sentence was issued by Chief United States Judge Sean F. Cox.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store