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Former Army specialist fighting deportation | KING5.com | Seattle Area Local News... The government, it seems, doesn't believe Mr. Chaudhry is the innocent, good Samaritan he claims to be. The court documents from that case cite a series of misrepresentations about his past, examples of fraud and the use of passports and at least one credit card belonging to other people. They detail his alleged use of aliases, his arrest and conviction on fraud charges in Australia years ago and his subsequent denial of that criminal history when applying for visas and jobs. ...
let's examine something more about this:
Former Army specialist fighting deportation | KING5.com | Seattle Area Local News
we need to hear both sides of this matter
one thing i would want to examine is the nature of his discharge from the military; seems his disability is not service connected
Even if this story is bull****, he deserves more than those lawbreaking assholes that sneak over the border. What do we have now, 12,000,000 of those suckers running around here now not getting deported? They want to called them undocumented immigrants.....yeah, unbelieveable.
So you support the DREAM act?
Don't try to corner me, that's bull****. Nothing is clear cut, except for partisan hacks. Is it clear cut for you?
Don't try to corner me, that's bull****. Nothing is clear cut, except for partisan hacks. Is it clear cut for you?
Immigration and Customs Enforcement wants Chaudhry removed from the country because of two incidents he allegedly misrepresented to government officials after he came to America in September 2000.
One incident stems from a criminal conviction that took place in Australia in 1996, when Chaudhry was a taxi driver. An Australian citizen didn’t have money for his fare and left his passport as a pledge to return with cash. Chaudhry allegedly used it to try to open a bank account and obtain medical benefits, according to court records. Australian police also determined that Chaudhry had used a credit card that wasn’t his.
Chaudhry did not acknowledge that conviction in a 2001 visa application, according to court records.
The other incident dates to an application Chaudhry filed to become a reserve officer at the Yakima Police Department. He allegedly misrepresented his citizenship, according to court records.
Chaudhry counters that he didn’t understand what was happening when he pleaded guilty to the fraud charges in Australia, and he says he doesn’t remember misrepresenting his citizenship in Yakima.
He came to the country legally, and he said he joined the National Guard in March 2001 out of a desire to serve. He suffered back injuries while training to go to Iraq with the 81st Brigade Combat Team in 2003. He never deployed.
Read more: Ex-soldier in Lacey fights deportation to Pakistan | Military News - The News Tribune