logo
US soldier's son, born on Army base in Germany, is deported to Jamaica

US soldier's son, born on Army base in Germany, is deported to Jamaica

The Hilla day ago

(KTLA) — A man born to an active-duty member of the United States military on an Army base in Germany in 1986 before coming to the states as a child was deported last week to Jamaica, a country he's never been to, according to a report by The Austin Chronicle.
Jermaine Thomas, whose Jamaican-born dad became a U.S. citizen during his 18-year military career, spent much of his early life moving from base to base with his father and mother, the latter a citizen of Kenya at the time of his birth.
At 11 years old, after his parents' divorce and his mother's second marriage to another soldier, he went to live with his father, who had since retired, in Florida. Unfortunately, his father passed away in 2010 from kidney failure shortly after Thomas had arrived.
Much of his life after that, The Chronicle reported, was spent in Texas, homeless and in and out of jail.
It's unclear when exactly Thomas was first ordered to leave the country, but court records from 2015 show a case that went all the way to the Supreme Court, in which the U.S. Department of Justice argued that he was not a citizen simply because he was born on a U.S. Army base in Germany.
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the DOJ, upholding the U.S. Court of Appeals decision and denied Thomas' petition for a review of the deportation order, saying in part that 'his father did not meet the physical presence requirement of the statute in force at the time of Thomas's birth.'
The court also noted Thomas' prior criminal convictions, one for domestic violence and two 'crimes involving moral turpitude.'
Without U.S., German or Jamaican citizenship, Thomas was stateless, though he remained in the states, most recently living in Killeen, a city about an hour north of Austin.
He told The Chronicle that deportation to Jamaica started with an eviction from his apartment.
While moving his belongings out of the apartment, he was arrested by local police on suspicion of trespassing, a misdemeanor in Texas.
Told by a court-appointed lawyer that he'd likely stay in jail for the better part of a year while waiting for a trial, Thomas, who had lost his job while in lockup, signed a release agreement with certain conditions, but instead of being released from Bell County Jail, he was transferred to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention camp just north of Houston, where he was detained for two and a half months.
Now in Kingston, he told The Chronicle he's living in a hotel, though he's unsure who is paying for it, the U.S. or Jamaican government, and does not know how long he'll be able to stay there.
Unsure how to get a job or if he's even allowed, Thomas added that he's unsure if it's even legal for him to be in the country at all.
'If you're in the U.S. Army, and the Army deploys you somewhere, and you've got to have your child over there, and your child makes a mistake after you pass away, and you put your life on the line for this country, are you going to be okay with them just kicking your child out of the country?' Thomas said in a phone call with the outlet's reporter.
Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to The Chronicle's request for comment.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chief Justice John Roberts warns anti-judge rhetoric can lead to violence
Chief Justice John Roberts warns anti-judge rhetoric can lead to violence

Politico

time3 hours ago

  • Politico

Chief Justice John Roberts warns anti-judge rhetoric can lead to violence

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina — Chief Justice John Roberts issued another warning Saturday that heated political rhetoric aimed at judges can spur physical threats and violence. 'If you have somebody who's expressing a high degree of hostility to the court, on whatever basis … the danger, of course, is somebody might pick up on that. And we have had, of course, serious threats of violence and murder of judges just simply for doing their work,' Roberts said during an appearance at a judicial conference. He spoke the day after the Supreme Court issued its final opinions of the term, but he did not discuss any of the court's rulings. Since President Donald Trump returned to office in January, he has mounted withering attacks on federal judges who have blocked his executive orders and other policies on mass deportation, government funding cuts and ending diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. He has blasted some judges as Communists and even called for their impeachment. However, speaking to an audience of judges and attorneys, Roberts did not mention Trump by name. And while the chief justice said he's been prompted to issue public statements against such verbal attacks, he emphasized that he has done so in response to comments from both Republican and Democratic officials. 'I've been compelled for the past few years to make statements about people on the one side of the aisle, their views on judges, and on the other side. It's not politically associated in any way with one side or the other,' the chief justice said, apparently referring to two instances where he inveighed against Trump's comments and one where he criticized remarks by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. Schumer apologized for his comments. Trump has not and even doubled down. Threats and violence against judges have increased in recent years. In 2020, an assailant targeting U.S. District Judge Esther Salas of New Jersey killed her 20-year-old son and injured her husband. In 2022, a man attempted to assassinate Justice Brett Kavanaugh. A state judge in Maryland was murdered in his driveway in 2023, and a state judge in Kentucky was killed at his courthouse in 2024. 'I think the political people on both sides of the aisle need to keep that in mind,' Roberts said about the possible progression toward violence. 'If you think the law is being not followed, you can address that legislatively. But threatening the judges for doing their job is totally unacceptable.' Roberts spoke about 24 hours after the high court released its final decisions in cases argued this term, handing wins to the Trump administration on nationwide injunctions, to states seeking to mandate age-verification for porn websites and to religious parents who want to pull their kids out of public school classes that use books with LGBTQ+ themes. The chief justice sounded relieved to be through the frenzied stretch of work the court typically completes by late June every year. He acknowledged that the harsh language the justices sometimes exchange in the most contentious cases leads to perceptions of a bitterly divided court. 'Particularly at the end of the term, we are offering opinions — decisions — where there is a lot of sharp division and some sharp adjectives employed,' Roberts said. Despite the sometimes rancorous words used, he insisted that the justices 'to a person [are] working hard to understand' their colleagues' thinking on the cases and whether there's an opportunity to achieve consensus. Roberts did say the pile-up of cases can be difficult to manage, and he suggested this year was worse than some others. He didn't say why, but the court heard the nationwide injunctions dispute on an emergency basis at the request of the Trump administration and held arguments May 15, about two weeks after arguments typically conclude for the term. 'We're all lawyers, and like lawyers you put things off 'til the last minute,' the chief justice said. 'There's nine of us. … People have their own idea of the schedule. It's part of my responsibility to make sure we're on the same page to the extent we can, so we don't have all 70 cases decided on the last day. And that's not easy.' 'Things were a little crunched towards the end this year. We'll try to space it out a little better next year,' Roberts added. Roberts described his job primarily as managing people and added the typical chief justices' lament that the position actually has little explicit power over the court's eight other members. He waffled a bit, however, on whether his colleagues uniformly defer to him on management issues. 'You can't fire people. You can't cut their pay,' Roberts observed. 'My colleagues have uniformly been gracious, I would say, over the last 20 years, in giving me the benefit of the doubt and understanding, 'Well, that might not be what I would do, but somebody's got to decide that for all of us. And you know, he's doing the best he can.' … I am very grateful for the fact that my colleagues generally recognize that, sort of, somebody has to do it.' Roberts spent about 45 minutes taking questions from Chief Judge Albert Diaz Jr. of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. It's one of three federal appeals courts Roberts has special responsibility for, with all emergency Supreme Court appeals from those circuits routed to him. During the exchange with Roberts, there was a brief mention of the importance of judicial independence, but no explicit discussion of claims that the Trump administration has defied some court rulings it disagreed with. The administration has denied defying those orders, even as it mounted withering attacks on the judges who issued them. As the discussion concluded, Diaz remarked: 'It's obviously a very challenging time for us as Americans.' He did not elaborate.

Government wants to execute Teresa Youngblut after Vermont shooting that killed border agent, her lawyer says
Government wants to execute Teresa Youngblut after Vermont shooting that killed border agent, her lawyer says

Boston Globe

time4 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Government wants to execute Teresa Youngblut after Vermont shooting that killed border agent, her lawyer says

The government holds Youngblut responsible in the death of a US border agent and for that, her lawyer disclosed on Tuesday, the government wants to execute her. At 21, Youngblut is the youngest and probably most unlikely known member of what appears to be Advertisement The members are called Zizians, after its purported leader, Steven Barth, Youngblut's public defender, said in US District Court in Burlington that federal death penalty charges will be lodged against his client in what he called 'short order.' He declined to elaborate when surrounded by reporters after Tuesday's routine hearing, a position of 'no comment' he has maintained since Youngblut first appeared in court in January, days after her companion, Felix Bauckholt, and Border Patrol agent David 'Chris' Maland died in a hail of gunfire that the government says began when Youngblut drew a gun after a traffic stop and started firing. Advertisement The apparent decision by federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty against Youngblut isn't a surprise. In a February memo announcing the moratorium against seeking federal death penalty charges under the Biden administration was over, Attorney General Youngblut was wounded in the gunfire, which began after Border Patrol agents pulled over the car she was driving on Interstate 91 in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, about 10 miles south of the Canadian border. The government says Bauckholt, a German national who identified as female and went by the name of Ophelia, began drawing a weapon but was shot dead by an agent before she could fire. So far, Youngblut has been charged with using a firearm while 'assaulting, resisting and opposing, impeding, intimidating, and interfering with a US Border Patrol agent while he was engaged in official duties.' The government's charging document also charges that Youngblut 'carried, brandished and discharged a firearm.' But, to date, prosecutors have not explicitly said Youngblut fired the shot that killed Maland. Last month, officials from US Customs and Border Protection released a The summary said the lone agent who returned fire discharged 'approximately eight rounds.' So far, the government has remained tight-lipped about whether Youngblut shot Maland. Advertisement But that distinction won't make a difference if the government moves to seek the death penalty, according to David P. Hoose, a Massachusetts attorney who has worked on 17 death penalty cases, 15 of them federal and most of them in New England. Hoose, a partner at Strehorn, Ryan & Hoose in Northampton, said that in If, for argument's sake, prosecutors can't definitively assert that Youngblut fired the fatal shot, Hoose said, 'it creates additional hurdles for prosecutors and maybe some qualms in a juror looking for a reason not to give the death penalty.' As for finding jurors in mostly liberal Vermont willing to sentence someone to death, that's another potential hurdle for prosecutors, Hoose said. Vermont last executed someone in 1954, and the state outlawed capital punishment in 1972. Polls show most Vermonters oppose capital punishment. The US attorney's office in Vermont, which is prosecuting Youngblut, has said it was Youngblut's parents have attended their daughter's hearings, but have declined to speak to reporters. Last year, they Advertisement They seemed to be onto something. Records show Youngblut and Maximilian Snyder, who Like other members of the Zizian cult, Youngblut and Snyder, 22, who attended the University of Oxford, were good students with bright futures that were extinguished shortly after they got involved in the cult. Now they both face the prospect of landing on death row. Prosecutors in California are It seems the road from the comforts of affluence and privilege and one of the best high schools in the country to death row is not as long as one might think. Squeaky Fromme, who tried to kill a president, was released from prison after 34 years. Teresa Youngblut faces bleaker prospects. Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at

Persian Jews find refuge in ‘Tehrangeles'
Persian Jews find refuge in ‘Tehrangeles'

CNN

time4 hours ago

  • CNN

Persian Jews find refuge in ‘Tehrangeles'

Persian Jews find refuge in 'Tehrangeles' CNN's Nick Watt reports from Westwood Boulevard in Los Angeles, situated in a neighborhood known as "Tehrangeles" for its population of Iranians and Persian Jews. 01:06 - Source: CNN Vertical Top News 16 videos Persian Jews find refuge in 'Tehrangeles' CNN's Nick Watt reports from Westwood Boulevard in Los Angeles, situated in a neighborhood known as "Tehrangeles" for its population of Iranians and Persian Jews. 01:06 - Source: CNN Trump reacts to win at the Supreme Court President Trump thanked conservative Supreme Court justices and explained what he plans to do next after the Court backed his effort to curtail lower court orders that have hampered his agenda for months. 00:46 - Source: CNN Supreme Court backs parents who want to opt out of LGBTQ+ curriculum The Supreme Court on Friday backed a group of religious parents who want to opt their elementary school children out of engaging with LGBTQ books in the classroom, another major legal win for religious interests at the conservative high court. 00:52 - Source: CNN Supreme Court limits ability of judges to stop Trump The Supreme Court backed President Donald Trump's effort to curtail lower court orders that have hampered his agenda for months. However, it signaled that the president's controversial plan to effectively end birthright citizenship may never be enforced. 01:32 - Source: CNN What we know ahead of the Bezos-Sanchez wedding After a stormy evening in Venice, CNN's Melissa Bell explains why details remain closely guarded ahead of the Bezos-Sanchez wedding. 01:25 - Source: CNN See moment suspect lights fire on Seoul subway CCTV footage released by the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors' Office captures the moment a man lit a fire on a busy subway in the South Korean capital last month. The footage, from May 31, shows passengers running away after the suspect doused the floor of the train carriage with flammable liquid before setting it alight. Reuters reports that according to the prosecutors' office, six people were injured. The prosecutor's office says it charged the 67-year-old man with attempted murder and arson. 00:48 - Source: CNN Hear Zohran Mamdani's response to concerns by the wealthy over his tax plan CNN's Erin Burnett speaks with New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani about concerns over taxing the city's wealthy to fund his proposed initiatives, and whether it will cause them to leave the city. 02:27 - Source: CNN Details emerge of secret diplomatic efforts to restart Iran talks CNN's Kylie Atwood reports on The Trump administration discussing possibly helping Iran access as much as $30 billion to build a civilian-energy-producing nuclear program, easing sanctions, and freeing up billions of dollars in restricted Iranian funds. 01:11 - Source: CNN How Diddy's body language was 'different' in court today CNN's Elizabeth Wagmeister reports on Sean "Diddy" Combs' family in court for closing arguments in his criminal trial and a notable difference in Combs' body language. 01:18 - Source: CNN Anna Wintour steps down as Vogue editor-in-chief Editor-in-chief of Vogue, Anna Wintour, is stepping down and seeking a replacement, the magazine's publisher Condé Nast confirmed to CNN. She will shift to a role of global chief content officer, where she will oversee every brand's global operations. 00:34 - Source: CNN Fireball spotted across the sky A 'daytime fireball' was caught on video in the sky over South Carolina – causing a sonic boom, according to the American Meteor Society. CNN has reached out to emergency management officials in North Carolina and Tennessee, as well as NASA for comment. 00:36 - Source: CNN Gen. Caine shares video of 'bunker buster' bomb test At a press conference about the US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, shared video of 'bunker buster' bomb test and shared information about what they know about the strike. 01:05 - Source: CNN Gen. Caine says moment after strikes gave him chills At a press conference about the US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, discusses the pilots who carried out the strikes and the reactions from their families after they returned home. 01:09 - Source: CNN 'Daddy's home:' Trump leans into NATO chief comment NATO Chief Mark Rutte got the world's attention after referring to President Trump as "daddy" after he used the analogy of two children fighting to describe the conflict between Iran and Israel. In a press conference, Rutte, explained his reason for using the term "daddy." Trump spoke about the moment at a press conference, and the White House leaned into the term in a social media post. 00:50 - Source: CNN Trump's team credits him with creating a decades-old phrase White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt falsely claimed that President Trump came up with the phrase "peace through strength." CNN's Abby Phillip reports on how the phrase has been used for decades. 01:22 - Source: CNN Cuomo called Mamdani after conceding NYC mayoral primary New York state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani was on the brink of a stunning Democratic primary win Tuesday for New York City mayor, with his top challenger, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, conceding the race. 00:38 - Source: CNN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store