The article has been automatically translated into English by Google Translate from Russian and has not been edited.

A woman from Michigan was deported to Albania, not allowing to say goodbye to her family

'21.05.2018'

Source: USA Today

The illegal immigrant Sile Presetay, who had no criminal record, was deported from Michigan to Albania, and the immigration authorities did not allow her to say goodbye to her three children and her husband.

Photo: depositphotos

While the representative of the US Immigration and Customs Service (ICE) stated that the agency had notified family members of the impending deportation to Force Presetai and asked them to pack her things 10 days before the woman was expelled from the country, her husband said he did not know about the deportation 4’s wife’s 17 o'clock in the morning of May when she called him from Germany, informing her that she was on her way to Albania with two ICE agents, writes USA Today.

“My children are devastated. They can't stop crying. My children are traumatized, ”said the husband of the immigrant, Pete Goikay.

“They boarded the school bus in tears,” he said, adding that he sent them to school to distract them from their mother's thoughts and keep them as normal as possible.

“They told me:“ This is not the government that we are told about at school, ”added Goikai.

ICE spokesman Hallid Walls stated that the family was notified of the deportation “a few days before the woman’s upcoming departure,” and that they brought Presetay’s luggage and personal belongings to the department.

At the same time, the family claims that they have never been told the date of deportation or any final information about when a woman can be deported, and whether she will be deported at all. According to an immigrant husband, 10 called him from ICE a few days ago, packed his wife's things and delivered them to ICE headquarters in Detroit, he was not told about any deportation.

Pete Goykay and the children packed a suitcase and handed it to the office, but, according to him, they had no idea why it was needed. His wife periodically called him from Calhoun County, where she was in prison, but did not give him any new information. Therefore, they and the children waited for the outcome of the struggle and prayed.

But on May 17 they found out that their moms and wives are no longer in the US.

From his wife Goykay found out that five ICE agents came to her in the Calhoun district 16 prison in May, were handcuffed and taken to Detroit to prepare her for removal from the United States. Two ICE agents went with her to Albania.

46-year-old Sile Presetay, an immigrant from Albania, was one of more than ten mothers trapped in a prison in Calhoun County awaiting deportation. They all have children born in America.

Preseta filed for asylum in the US in 2000, the woman has no criminal record. She was released from deportation in 2014, having been required to report regularly to ICE, and as a result of 26 on April 2018, she was arrested during her monthly visit to the ICE office in Detroit.

Her three children aged 8, 10 and 16 are living with their father Pete, a Yugoslav immigrant who lived in the US for 30 for years and owns a restaurant.

Meanwhile, ICE has long stated that they have legal grounds for the deportation of Presetai, and that she was allowed to remain in the country for so long just because they wanted to give the opportunity to try all the possibilities of legalization available to her.

“In June 2005, Ms. Presetai, an Albanian citizen illegally staying in the United States, was ordered to be deported from the United States by a federal immigration judge,” ICE said.

“For more than ten years, from 2007 to 2018, ICE allowed Ms. Presetay to remain at large, giving her the opportunity to use the legal routes available to her in order to stay in the United States,” the department said.

After her arrest, she filed an appeal to the court, and remained in custody until his decision. But after the court confirmed the decision of the first instance immigration court, the woman was deported.

In a preseta asylum application, she claimed that she feared for her life in Albania, and that her family was constantly threatened by criminal gangs who tried to kidnap her and force her into prostitution. She also expressed concerns about the aggressive fiancé whom she had left in Albania.

Follow success stories, tips, and more by subscribing to Woman.ForumDaily on Facebook, and don't miss the main thing in our mailing list

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By: XYZScripts.com