Baljit Singh had crossed the border into Texas illegally 12 years ago. His attorney said being a Sikh, he had fled religious persecution in Punjab where he feared for his life.
Singh, who has no criminal history and is a father of two children who are US citizens, was required to go for periodic check-ins with immigration officials and during one such visit early this month, he was told he will be deported to India after 90 days, a report in the Los Angeles Times said.
"With this new administration, the rules have changed everybody goes," his wife, Kate Singh told The Times.
"It doesn't matter if you're a father and haven't done anything to break the law, or if you're a criminal.Everybody's going. It's just a huge cleanup," she said.
President Donald Trump came into office promising to expel the estimated 11 million people living in the US illegally, who he says steal American jobs and fuel crime.
Most are from Mexico, and many of them have been here for decades, raising families, owning homes and businesses.
The report quoted Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) spokeswoman Lori Haley as saying that Singh's immigration case has undergone "exhaustive review" over the last 11 years at multiple levels of the Department of Justice's immigration court system.
"The courts have consistently held that Singh does not have a legal basis to remain in the US," Haley said in the report.
Even though Singh has no criminal history, Haley said the head of the agency has made it clear that anyone in the country illegally "may be subject to arrest, detention and, if found removable by the immigration courts, as Singh was, removed from the United States."
"The human element has been stripped from the immigration service as it stands right now - there is no compassion," Shamieh said.
"It's a really destructive approach to the immigration laws."
Singh now must return to India before he can begin the paperwork to return legally, a process that could take anywhere from six months to two years. If the paperwork is denied, he would have to wait 10 years before he can return.
"I'm all for criminals, drug dealers and troublemakers to be sent back," Kate Singh wrote in a blog post.
"...They are scooping up the good with the bad in their nets just like the destruction that takes place with net fishing. The inedible fish and precious coral get swooped up with the wanted fish. Habitats are destroyed with these nets," she wrote.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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