A Change of Guard

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Thursday, 4 October 2012

After run-in with law, Cambodian immigrant’s permanent residency is at risk [in America]

By Tara Bahrampour
The Washington Post
Back in 2000, Lundy Khoy (pictured) was just another young person who had made a stupid mistake. The George Mason University freshman, a green card holder, had a boyfriend who was dabbling in Ecstasy. He gave her some pills, and during a night of partying she was arrested and charged with possession with intent to distribute the drug. She pleaded guilty, served three months and was on probation for four years. End of story, for most people. But for Khoy, now 31, it was the beginning of a 12-year saga of incarcerations, deportation proceedings and the specter of being sent to live in a country she has never even visited
The difference between Khoy and others whose youthful indiscretions led to criminal charges is that she was not born in America. The consequences can be catastrophic.
“There is a misconception among some immigrants that once they have a green card they can no longer be deported, and that’s simply not true,” said Ben Winograd, staff attorney at the American Immigration Council, an immigrant advocacy organization in the District. “All it takes is one criminal conviction. Regardless of whether it results in jail time, it can be the basis for deportation.”
In 1996, Congress passed laws that limited judicial discretion for immigration judges and broadened the scope of what is considered an aggravated felony for the purposes of federal immigration law. The category includes a wide range of crimes, from murder to nonviolent offenses such as theft or fraud.
Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for stricter immigration controls, acknowledged that the law can unfairly target less serious offenders but added that it was necessary because otherwise the government would allow more serious criminals to evade deportation.
“The abuse of discretion makes it impossible to give the executive this kind of wiggle room, because they can’t be trusted,” he said.
Last year, the government deported nearly 400,000 people, the largest number ever. It’s unclear how many among that number had been green-card holders.
Unlike illegal immigrants, many of whom try to keep a low profile in order to evade detention, legal permanent residents who commit a crime are often cavalier, unaware that the stakes are starkly different for them than for their citizen peers.
This presumption that they cannot be deported appears to be especially true of young green-card holders such as Khoy, who grew up here.
Khoy’s story is not unusual in Southeast Asian communities. Her Cambodian mother gave birth to her in a Thai refu­gee camp a year before they moved here. She and her parents received green cards; her siblings, born after they arrived, are U.S. citizens.
Often, Southeast Asians who came in the 1970s and 1980s escaped war or genocide, and worked long hours in low-paying jobs.
“They are traumatized, shell-shocked, and can’t understand how to effectively raise adolescents in impoverished America,” said Jay Stansell, an assistant federal public defender in Seattle who has defended many Cambodians in this situation.
A spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said that 1,894 Cambodians are in deportation proceedings. Since Cambodia started accepting deportees in 2002, it has taken only about 500. More were deported last year than ever before: 97 compared with 55 in 2010 and 48 in 2009.
Often the deportation proceedings don’t begin until years after they immigrants have served sentences and cleaned up their lives, getting jobs and starting families.
“Years later . . . ICE would catch up with them and say, ‘Hey, you were supposed to have been deported years ago,’ and send them back to Cambodia, which many of these youngsters had never been to,” said Pang Houa Toy, deputy director of the D.C.-based Southeast Asia Resource Action Center.
Many don’t speak the language, and don’t have friends or relatives in their parents’ homeland. They also face discrimination. “They’re stigmatized,” Toy said.
Khoy says she was obedient and responsible while growing up as the eldest child of strict parents who forbade nighttime events during high school. By the time she started college, she was thirsting for more freedom and took up with a “bad crowd,” she said, adding that because she didn’t want her mother to think she was using drugs, she falsely told the arresting officer that she planned to sell the pills to her friends, a statement that resulted in a more serious charge.
Because her crime was an aggravated felony, she lost her green card and was put into deportation proceedings.
“I didn’t believe it,” said Khoy, a delicate-featured woman perched on her living room couch in the Southwest Washington townhouse she shares with three roommates. “I was like, ‘There’s no way that my country could just kick me out.’ ”
Her entire adult life has been colored by the arrest and its consequences. Men she dated were often scared off by her situation. She was arrested again in 2004, as her probation was ending, during a sweep targeting “removable aliens” on probation, according to ICE records. After several months in jail, her request for voluntary departure, asylum or withholding of removal was denied by a judge, who ordered her deported.
Cambodia accepts only a few requests for travel documents each year, however, so she was released from prison and put on an order of suspension, reporting regularly to the ICE office in Fairfax. She did so for the next eight years, while studying at Northern Virginia Community College, getting a job as an enrollment adviser at the University of Phoenix’s Northern Virginia campus and working toward her bachelor’s degree in communications and cultural diversity there. She moved to the District in December because it was easier there for someone in her situation to get a driver’s license.
From the outside, her life seemed normal. Few people knew about her situation — until April, when she went in for a routine visit to ICE. There, she said, she was told to re-apply immediately for a travel document from the Cambodian embassy.
She was also fitted with an electronic ankle monitor. She had to stay close to an electric outlet for hours at a time to keep it charged.
With the help of her sister, Linda, a U.S. citizen, Khoy has gotten more than 3,000 signatures on a petition to stop her deportation. She has letters of support from Rep. Frank R. Wolf (R-Va.) and from longtime friends. On Wednesday night, SEARAC hosted an event at Busboys and Poets to raise awareness about her case and played a nine-minute film about her situation.
On Sept. 21, her request for deferred action was denied. That day, the ankle monitor was removed because of the low likelihood that she would be deported in the future, according to ICE spokeswoman Gillian Christensen.
If eventually deported to Cambodia, Khoy said, “I wouldn’t know where to start.”
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Khmerization's Note: Read all the comments from readers of The Washington Post about the imminent deportation of Lundy Khoy here.

 

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well, what can I say? You're not special than anyone,you should know if you break the law you'll pay the consequence,you commit crime you do the time.You're at least still have parents got to have picture taken living luxuries haft of your life abroad,me? Pol pot killed my families lived as an orphanage, don't even know who was my father/mother,what did he look like? Don't even know where they kill him at and why? Not just me,perhaps millions of khmers were like me.Don't cry you're going to be alright in Srok Khmer,your families abroad will support you,me! Maybe next life,this life is over....I don't commit any crime but I received the consequence for the rest of my life,because of Khmer rouge regime.

Yobal khmer.

Anonymous said...

Even though I detest Khmer-american deportees as scum, but she is an expection, at least she is heading towards a degree or a certificate.

word of advice to deportee that i detest. please re-learn our culture and history, reeducate yourself in our language you will need it. act accordingly and with consideration. at the end of the day your still khmer.

DCPP GUY

Anonymous said...

khmer peoples respect american verdict,to deportation

in return, USA should be respecting khmer's verdict as well.

Anonymous said...

Do you understand what's called justice? Or injustice? Can you separate the two's? What's your injustice? According to you? imprisonment an innocent man like Sir Mam Sonondo is justice according to you? What's crime did he commited? Where,when,how? ANSWER me,will you little gook offering?

Anonymous said...

I do not believe she deserved to be deported. After all, it is a minor crime. She is not a repeated offender. I think American policy on deportation is racist. The Cambodian government should cancel the deportation agreement with the U.S govt.

Anonymous said...

She won't serve any one if she is to be deported. CPP dogs from Long Beach should all be in the deportation list for helping Hun Sen kill Khmer.

Anonymous said...

Don't ever mess with Uncle Sam. He is all about generosity and opportunities and all, but if you mess up just one time, you are a goner. Uncle Sam says, welcome to the good ol' USA. Here is some money to help you get started. Getting an education is your right. Go and be the very best that you are destined to be. Now come out and participate in the community and pay taxes and buy houses and create a family of your own. However beware, should you decide to be f*cked up, then there is no mercy on you. I even saw White Americans trying to get passports to visit other countries but were denied because they were classified as "criminals".

Anonymous said...

I don't feel pitty for her. She has had ample opprotunity to become a nauturalized US citizen, but she DID'T.

Shame on her for hanging around and having boyfriend who is a drug dealer.

I hope her deportation will serve as warning to all Khmers who are living in America to wake up and try whatever legal means they can to become a naturualized US Citizen. Once you are a citizen will be Extremely to revoke your citizenship. You are entitled to appeal to the US Supreme Court.

VOTE IN ALL ELECTIONS.

Only the President and US Senate can change the treaty (deportation) with Cambodia. Forget about the Cambodian gov't as they are incompetent. Write to your US Senators (2 from each state) ask them to review the deportation treaty with Cambodia. Ask them to make the US/Cabmodian treaty similiar to the deportation treaty between Vietnam and US.

ONLY DEPORT THOSE CONVICTS/CRIMINALS FROM VIETNAM WHO CAME TO THE US AFTER 2002 OR 1992 (Whenever US and Vietnam normalized diplomatic relations).

Philip said...

unfortunately for the guy above me. she commited the crime when she was 19 she got out of prison after serving her time. afterward ins detained her and stripped her of her papers and eligibilty to become a citizen. so before you go and say she had ample time to apply she did not. lundy khoy is a close and dear friend of mine. you are an example of what is wrong with khmers today; judgement before facts. khmers do not care to help one another which is why we are the laughing stock in asia and in america.

Philip said...

how does one have ample time to apply to become a citizen when that right waa taken away from you at 20? let me guess when you were 18 you ran out the door immediatly and ran to the naturalization office and screamed i want to be a citizen!

Anonymous said...

I want to heell that my Khmer peoples after year 1975 to year 1979 during Khmer Rough / Pol Pot regime under a cruel Yuonese / Vietnamese hidden faces behind the killing fields are so cruel, I hope the American Government and Australian Government & France Government stop take my Khmer to live at those Countries, from Khmer Australia