June 17, 2009 7:05 PM

Kids Sue Obama Over Parents' Deportations

(AP)  Ronald Soza celebrated his 10th birthday Wednesday with cake and a serenade by more than 100 other children and their parents.

His own family: absent. His mother was recently deported back to Nicaragua. His father rarely ventures out in public in fear of a similar fate. Now Soza and the other children — all U.S. citizens whose parents face deportation — are demanding a say in the immigration debate.

They are suing President Barack Obama, asking a court to halt the deportations of their parents until Congress overhauls U.S. immigration laws.

The children, who gathered Wednesday at the Miami nonprofit American Fraternity to draw attention to their cause, say their constitutional rights are being violated because they will likely have to leave the country if their parents are forced to go.

Some children said their families didn't have enough money to pay for school supplies because the breadwinning parent had been deported, and some are at risk of losing their homes. They also say they are suffering psychological and physical hardship.

"My grades went from A's to C's when my mom had to leave," said Ronald.

Nearby, 5-year-old Sara Bedoya Sanchez comforted her sister Salome, 3, who played with a paper sign pinned to her chest reading "Don't Leave me alone."

"I came today because I want to stay with my mommy here," said Sara, who was born in South Florida, but whose mother came from Medellin, Colombia, through Mexico, crossing the Rio Grande on foot nearly a decade ago.

Nora Sandigo, the head of the Fraternity, originally brought the case on behalf of the children against the Bush administration. She refiled it in January in Miami and a hearing is scheduled for August.

Sandigo said she is frustrated that the Obama administration hasn't done more to address immigration reform.

"Today these children's voices are not heard," Sandigo said as dozens of youngsters squirmed and twirled their flags on a rug before her, "but tomorrow these U.S. citizens will be voting."

Perhaps not literally, but many of the more than 100 children who gathered Wednesday are already in their teens and will be voting age by the next presidential election.

Also on Wednesday, religious leaders and supporters gathered in Washington for a prayer vigil in advance of Obama's proposed meeting on immigration next week with congressional leaders.

Sandigo says many of the children's parents came to the U.S. before 1996 immigration changes made it more difficult for them to become legal residents. When they came, they had a valid expectation that if they stayed out of trouble for seven years, they could eventually become legal residents, she has argued.

Immigration experts say the case has a tough road in the courts because Congress explicitly made the law retroactive.

And the plight of the children is not grounds for their parents to remain in the U.S., said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, which seeks to limit immigration.

"These are deportable aliens, and they get whatever due process Congress grants them and nothing more," Krikorian said.

"There are going to be times when you're going to want to make exceptions in certain cases, but today the law is so riddled with exceptions that now is not the time."

Sandigo has championed seemingly hopeless causes before. She brought a lawsuit in the early 1990s to help fellow Nicaraguans avoid being deported back to their war-ravaged country. The case prompted Congress to pass an amnesty law for many Central Americans.

The current lawsuit could also advance the cause of immigrants in the political arena, said immigration Scholar Louis DeSipio of the University of California, Irvine.

"It's a very conscious decision of the immigrant advocates to focus on this issue," he added, "to disabuse Americans of the images we have of men in their twenties and thirties running across the border, showing instead that it's a family affair."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 40 Comments
by KerlyCassandra November 13, 2009 11:16 AM EST
YOUR A CRUEL PERSON JUST WAIT US HISPANIC WELL BE STAYING IN THE U.S 4 EVER AND WE DO GOT THE RIGHT TO SUE
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by KerlyCassandra November 13, 2009 11:14 AM EST
Are You kidding me your an illigal here to because native american where the first ones here and plus just because your ancestors where here after doesnt mean nothing why would you want illigal immigrants to go back if all they come for is for a better life and to actually work and not be lazy they actually do somethin for the U.S and another thing there are some white peoples (AMERICANS) That are really lazy and dont even work when there from here now thats sad. my parents use to be illigal now there residents soon to be citizins and let me tell you we have a really good life here and im from here so i cant get deported but hopefully the laws well change and let them stay people like you are the ones that dont care about anybody but your self I HOPE U DO GET A SLAP IN YOUR FACE FOR EVEN SAYING ANYTHING
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by KerlyCassandra November 13, 2009 11:12 AM EST
wow your really messed up im 15 and hispanic hopefully we do win beacause we deserve to be here where not lazy like some white people we actually do somethim 4 the U.S Im from california so they cant do nothing to me but im guessing your one of them racist peoples my parents use to be illigals and thank god they didnt ever get deported there residents now soon to be citizins what im trying to say put your self in that situation and you leaving the country wit your kids staying in a another coutry do you only think of your self??
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by Justiceboy15 August 2, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
Hey everybody who is against illegals. Why do you hate them so much? Aren't we all imigrants too? Our ancestors have travled here long ago. Why do you hate them. Listen, we take jobs right? But do you think that an American citzen will work in the most extreme places for 12 hours without break, in fear of getting deported and getting paid almost nothing? Think about it. Do we really need "papers" to live on this planet? If you believe that other countries are rich, you are wrong. People leave countries in order to have a better life. I know a friend that came from Peru. His family lived under the worst condtions ever. His father day and night worked. Still, the family barely lived. Here, they are happy. All the imigrants want is to have a good life and be successful, like everybody else. Do we really need laws to pick where people live? So, people, let's stop being ignorant and welcome these people. Here's a tip, if illegals aren't allowed here, we do we give them PIN numbers to pay taxes? Huh? Thank you and God bless America. P.S. im only a 14 year old boy
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by no_illegals August 2, 2009 12:07 PM EDT
Illegals take many risks when they sneak into this country, or overstay their visas. One of those risks is deportation. If they acquire mortgages, or spawn, or entangle their lives with nationalized or legal citizens in the process...does that mean they deserve a reprieve from that risk? Many have had a nice long ride on the financial coattails of this society. All rides eventually come to an end and so should this one.

As an aside: Have you ever observed how some Illegals seem to have miraculously advanced financially from nothing in a very short time? You can thank our loophole-ridden system. Another commentor mentioned EITC above. Check out these links!
http://www.thesocialcontract.com./docs/tsc_earned_income_tax_credit_2009apr09.pdf

Report Says IRS Let Foreigners Take Improper Tax Credits
http://www.alipac.us/ftopict-153337-irs.html

Some IAs paying taxes; claim dependents in Mexico???
http://www.alipac.us/ftopict-153384-irs.html

Immigration Tax-Credit Scandal
http://www.alipac.us/ftopict-153210-eitc.html

Millions of Tax Returns Will be Filed Fraudulently
http://www.alipac.us/ftopict-153095-eitc.html

Another commentor mentioned the propspect of US Citizens suing Obama. I think that is a VERY excellent idea and if amnesty is passed in ANY way, shape, or form, I hope Tom Fitton of Judiciary Watch will get that rolling!

People, GET INVOLVED!!! Send faxes, letters, emails DAILY! Scream, shout, rage, rant, do whatever it takes for us to be heard and considered in OUR future. So far, our lawmakers seem much more concerned about protecting the illegal population than protecting citizens and legal residents. Just wait 'til Sotomayor gets busy. She is really going to work against us. We created a lifestyle in this country that has been eroded by the overwhelming numbers of Illegals arriving here. They are not assimilating to us, we are having to assimilate to them (whichever culture has invaded your area). I, for one, am fed up as the struggle of surviving and getting ahead becomes harder every day.
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by NYCEsqView June 20, 2009 11:39 AM EDT
Correction, should read: To the extent there are in fact "voices" that are not "being heard," they are [not] the "kids" who by-definition lack standing to invoke the laws of our Country . . .

As to the matter of this specious misuse of "kids" to enforce the purported "rights" that their parents fail to have in the first instance, it is a tactic that no more lends validity to any such lawsuit than it serves to retroactively legitimize their parents' illicit entry into this Country. It is axiomatic that the laws of our Country are addressed to not reward the individuals who violate them but, rather, protect the interests of our civilized society against the deleterious effects of those who break the law. That the individuals whose very presence in our Country is itself defined by their knowing violation of our law should now endeavor to extort the benefits of our law is a concept not only straining of all bounds of self-entitled audacity, and itself anomalistic, but also exemplifying of all the other reasons to enforce what our laws are in fact designed to protect: The right of our citizens not to find their health, safety and economic interests subverted to the benefit of these who spurn them.
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by NYCEsqView June 19, 2009 9:50 AM EDT
Deplorable, and altogether deportable. Taking this inane "legal theory" to its logical (and uninterrupted) end, the government would also be subject to suit by "kids" of individuals incarcerated for white collar crime, murder, arson, rape, and the like, for the deprivation of their purported "due process right" to school supplies and homes, (not to mention free health care, consumer credit accounts, tax-payer financed living expenses, and other fruits of their parents ill-gotten gains). Moreover, this "constitutional" argument necessarily presumes that they are not the existence of our laws but, rather, the very violation of the law that should somehow give rise to all these "constitutionally-derived entitlements.? To the extent there are in fact "voices" that are not "being heard," they are the ?kids? who by-definition lack standing to invoke the laws of our Country but, rather, ever-mounting voices of the millions-upon-millions of LEGAL, tax-paying Americans who are utterly fed up by the fact they are compelled to find their tax-dollars squandered, transportation systems overly-burdened, utilities systems compromised, hospitals closing, health and safety compromised, and quality of life eroded - - daily - - by the unforgivable flood of illegal aliens permitted to enter and illicitly remain in this Country.
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by robnot54 June 19, 2009 8:55 AM EDT
So, according to this silliness, as a U.S. citizen I can sue my governor or the President because one of my parents has, oh...let's say been found guilty of forgery and theft and has been sentenced to a few years in prison. All Right!!....lawyers, here I come! ..........Anyone can sue for anything, but taking this suit seriously (on the side of these "jackpot" babies), ranks down there with the lowest bottom-feeders.
As U.S. citizens, these children can go back to their homeland with their parents, and then petition the U.S. government to have them brought to the U.S. - parents and children under 21 take precedence when it comes to family immigration, probably take 2-4 years.
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by panola60 June 19, 2009 7:23 AM EDT
Every illegal alien working in these service industries or construction, manufacturing, etc. is using a fraudulent SSN and filed a fraudulent I-9, W-4, etc. In other words 7-8 million illegal aliens are committing ID fraud.

They may be using your SSN or your child's SSN. So what harm does that do??? The IRS will come looking for you asking why you are filing two tax returns or they will want to know why you didn't report all the income you made. Don't forget that your income will now include the illegal aliens earnings, so you will be responsible for paying any taxes he owes. Many illegals file tax returns for the sole purpose of claiming Earned Income Credit (EIC), so you can expect the IRS to question that as well. And don't forget to check your credit report to see how much other damage they've done to you there.

Those who come here illegally, steal our IDs and ignore our laws have already demonstrated they lack the honesty and decency to ever become American citizens.
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by chuckdeported June 18, 2009 11:27 PM EDT
My parents came here as permenant residents,but while my mother was waiting to enter USA, l was born in Canada, l came legaly to USA as infant as a legal permenant resident, got married to USA born wife,been married 30 years,have 3 adult kids,4 grandkids,some with disibilites that l support,my parents are now citizens,l have been in usa for 52 years always worked, payed taxes,and just retired after 33 years of service due to i am being deported,10 years ago l committed a crime,l grew a pot plant, got busted, paid fines did probation of 3 years to state of michigan, 3 years ago l went to Cancun and when l entered USA the federal goverment began deportation presidings on me, just recieved a denied appell to my deportation, because my family concers do not warrent your ability to not be deported. l have no other crimes in 43 years leading up to my drug crime,and l took testing to enter army, at advice of army recurter l did not enter army,always wished l did. l know no other country,never felt like anything other than part of USA, want to stay here where l belong,l always supported nation thru my legal job with the use of my own name, not faked name, so l made a mistake with drug use, grew up smoking pot,now im a undiserable allien,yet l supported my family, like the rest of the hard working USA nation. Wrote President Bush and President Obama but l will soon be gone. If the protesting kids get there wishes for there parents to stay when they where not here legaly in the first place,then l hope somebody puts me in the front of the line to stay.l think l earned a little mercy.
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