Federal immigration authorities took Jilmar Ramos-Gomez, a U.S.-born citizen and veteran, into custody for possible deportation. Image courtesy: ACLU of Michigan.
DETROIT (AP) - A Marine veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder was held for three days for possible deportation before federal authorities learned that he was a U.S. citizen born in Michigan, lawyers said Wednesday.
Jilmar Ramos-Gomez, 27, lives in the Grand Rapids area. He was released on Dec. 17 from a detention center in Calhoun County after personal records were provided to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan.
"Why did they think he was a noncitizen? Did they get him confused with someone else? Who knows," ACLU attorney Miriam Aukerman said. "This is an individual who's incredibly vulnerable with a mental illness."
ICE released a statement Wednesday evening saying Ramos-Gomez told its officers he was "a foreign national illegally present in the U.S," and the agency took him into custody on Dec. 14. ICE said it released him three days later after receiving documentation suggesting he was a U.S. citizen.
Ramos-Gomez was in the Kent County jail after being accused of trespassing and damaging a fire alarm at a Grand Rapids hospital on Nov. 21. The ACLU said he pleaded guilty and was supposed to be released on Dec. 14 while awaiting a sentence.
But ICE contacted the jail and requested that Ramos-Gomez be held for pickup. Kent County Undersheriff Chuck DeWitt said ICE, like other law enforcement agencies, has access to fingerprint records.
"Once he was released from our custody, he was under the domain of ICE. Where they take him is their process," DeWitt said. "Our procedures were followed."
DeWitt said he didn't know whether Ramos-Gomez protested when immigration officers picked him up.
Ramos-Gomez was driven 70 miles to a detention center in Battle Creek. He was released after three days, after lawyer Richard Kessler contacted ICE on behalf of the man's family.
Aukerman said Ramos-Gomez' treatment was "appalling."
Ramos-Gomez is receiving mental-health care and wasn't available for an interview Wednesday. He was a lance corporal in the Marines and received awards for service in Afghanistan. The ACLU said his PTSD had a role in the disturbance at the hospital.
According to the ACLU, Ramos-Gomez was born in Grand Rapids in 1991 an served in the Marines from 2011-2014. He was decorated with several awards including a national defense service medal, a global war on terrorism service medal, an Afghanistan campaign medal, and a combat action ribbon.
When he came home, the ACLU says he was 'a shell of his former self' and suffered from PTSD because of what he encountered. His family says he has episodes where he disappears and, once found, has no clue about where he has been.
The November incident was one of those situations and it led to him being held for possible deportation - despite holding his U.S. passport when he was detained.
Sheriff Michelle LaJoye-Young defended her department, saying officers don't have authority to verify why ICE wants to detain someone. Nonetheless, she called it a "very unfortunate situation" for Ramos-Gomez.
"We believe this case underscores the need for immigration policy reform," the sheriff said.