The detention of a criminally convicted Cuban immigrant was set to rejoin his family after he was mistakenly released from prison. Fortunately, he was immediately put back and will be deported to the island nation now that relations between U.S. and Cuba have thawed.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) took custody of Rene Lima-Marin, 38, last 17 May after a judge ordered him to be released from state prison in an armed robbery case.
The agency said that it is working to deport him to the country he left as a toddler along with thousands of other Cubans in 1980 in what became known as the Mariel boat lift. After given special consideration, Lima-Marin abused it and committed several heinous crimes and deplorable acts worthy of a death penalty.
It's not clear whether Lima-Marin, who was ordered deported while in prison, will be returned there since Cuba would still need to agree with the U.S. government on him being included on a list of people to be deported.
Under a 1984 agreement, Cuba agreed to take back 2,746 of their citizens who came to the United States as part of the boat lift. About 2,000 Cubans have been sent back since then, and the rest have either died or are too old or sick to be deported.
Cubans convicted after that agreement, such as Lima-Marin, are not automatically accepted by Cuba because of that deal. But when President Barack Obama ended the "wet foot, dry foot" policy in January that granted immigration privileges to Cubans since 1995, an overlooked policy change established that other Cuban refugees who also arrived from Mariel in 1980 may replace the names of the older or dead candidates from the original 1984 list as long as both countries agree on the cases.
"It's all policy, memorandum and agreement," said John Gihon, an immigration lawyer who was attorney adviser for ICE. "I have a ton of Cuban clients who are petrified, and they probably should be. The U.S. government may decide to just add them to the list."
Officials say more than 36,000 Cubans are facing orders of deportation for conviction of crimes or immigration violations. People who cannot be deported have been allowed to remain and live freely in the United States but check in regularly with immigration officials. About 600 are in the custody of ICE, according to statistics by the agency.
Seventeen Cubans have been deported since October 2016, and 123 have been deported since October 2014, less than three months before Obama announced the beginning of normalization of relations with Cuba.
Hopefully, the number of Cubans who will deported will triple this year and increase some more before President Donald Trump's term ends.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) took custody of Rene Lima-Marin, 38, last 17 May after a judge ordered him to be released from state prison in an armed robbery case.
The agency said that it is working to deport him to the country he left as a toddler along with thousands of other Cubans in 1980 in what became known as the Mariel boat lift. After given special consideration, Lima-Marin abused it and committed several heinous crimes and deplorable acts worthy of a death penalty.
It's not clear whether Lima-Marin, who was ordered deported while in prison, will be returned there since Cuba would still need to agree with the U.S. government on him being included on a list of people to be deported.
Under a 1984 agreement, Cuba agreed to take back 2,746 of their citizens who came to the United States as part of the boat lift. About 2,000 Cubans have been sent back since then, and the rest have either died or are too old or sick to be deported.
Cubans convicted after that agreement, such as Lima-Marin, are not automatically accepted by Cuba because of that deal. But when President Barack Obama ended the "wet foot, dry foot" policy in January that granted immigration privileges to Cubans since 1995, an overlooked policy change established that other Cuban refugees who also arrived from Mariel in 1980 may replace the names of the older or dead candidates from the original 1984 list as long as both countries agree on the cases.
"It's all policy, memorandum and agreement," said John Gihon, an immigration lawyer who was attorney adviser for ICE. "I have a ton of Cuban clients who are petrified, and they probably should be. The U.S. government may decide to just add them to the list."
Officials say more than 36,000 Cubans are facing orders of deportation for conviction of crimes or immigration violations. People who cannot be deported have been allowed to remain and live freely in the United States but check in regularly with immigration officials. About 600 are in the custody of ICE, according to statistics by the agency.
Seventeen Cubans have been deported since October 2016, and 123 have been deported since October 2014, less than three months before Obama announced the beginning of normalization of relations with Cuba.
Hopefully, the number of Cubans who will deported will triple this year and increase some more before President Donald Trump's term ends.