Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Deportation in Store for Missing Soldier's Wife?

Unfathomably, CBS News is reporting that the wife of kidnapped US soldier, Army Spec. Alex Jiminez, faces deportation, even as the search for her missing husband continues:

While the U.S. military searches for a soldier missing in Iraq, kidnapped by insurgents possibly allied with al Qaeda, his wife back home in Massachusetts may be deported by the U.S. government.

Army Spec. Alex Jimenez, who has been missing since his unit was attacked by insurgents in Iraq on May 12, had petitioned for a green card for his wife, Yaderlin Hiraldo, whom he married in 2004.

Their attorney, Matthew Kolken, said 23-year-old Hiraldo illegally entered the United States in 2001 to reunite with her husband, whom she had met in her native Dominican Republic and later married at his New York State Army base in 2004.

Her husband's request for a green card and legal residence status for his wife alerted authorities to her status, Kolken said.

She now faces deportation, reports CBS station WBZ correspondent Beth Germano, and would be barred from applying for a green card for 10 years.

It is hard to imagine a more colossal, bureaucratic bungling than this.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Website: http://www.wiselaw.net/

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