Fear grips immigrants who fled here to escape genocide - 'They're going to try to deport me'
https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/matt-driscoll/article230266884.html
Thuoy Phok expected his meeting with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be brief so brief that he hadnt eaten breakfast. A plumber from Tacoma, Phok planned on returning to work later that day.
I thought maybe it was good news, Phok, 43, recalls of the Sept. 10, 2018, meeting in Tukwila, taking off his baseball cap and running a calloused hand over his balding head.
Phok, a Cambodian refugee whose family escaped genocide and arrived in the United States in 1980, had received a notice summoning him a few weeks earlier. He said the letter told him only that federal immigration officials who hed been checking in with regularly over the last 18 years wanted to see him.
The meeting, it soon became clear, would be a one-sided affair. For Phok, the results would be life-changing.
It was brief, lasting 10 to 15 minutes. When it was over, Phok said he was taken to a holding cell. Hed remain detained in various immigration facilities, he told The News Tribune, for the next three months.
Phok said he learned federal immigration officials wanted to deport him to Cambodia, a country hes never seen, because of a crime he committed more than two decades ago. The 1997 conviction resulted in an active immigration removal order against him.