Purple heart recipient deported after 48 years in U.S.

IM2

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This guy is not a criminal. He is a war hero who served the country and took a bullet for America. That's something Donald Trump never did. Yet this guy gets deported. Trump, convicted of 34 felonies, is the president. This country is going in the wrong direction.



This is bs.
 
This guy is not a criminal. He is a war hero who served the country and took a bullet for America. That's something Donald Trump never did. Yet this guy gets deported. Trump, convicted of 34 felonies, is the president. This country is going in the wrong direction.



This is bs.

Yes. All of your OP’s are bs.
 
A Purple Heart recipient, Sae Joon Park, who had lived in the U.S. for 48 years, was deported to South Korea after facing charges related to drug possession and failure to appear in court. These charges stemmed from untreated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which he developed after being shot in combat during the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama. Despite being a green card holder and receiving a Purple Heart for his bravery, his criminal record prevented him from obtaining citizenship or relief from deportation.


 
This guy is not a criminal. He is a war hero who served the country and took a bullet for America. That's something Donald Trump never did. Yet this guy gets deported. Trump, convicted of 34 felonies, is the president. This country is going in the wrong direction.



This is bs.


Yes this is wrong...question though...hes been here 48 years...why hasn't he pursued citizenship?
 
A Purple Heart recipient, Sae Joon Park, who had lived in the U.S. for 48 years, was deported to South Korea after facing charges related to drug possession and failure to appear in court. These charges stemmed from untreated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which he developed after being shot in combat during the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama. Despite being a green card holder and receiving a Purple Heart for his bravery, his criminal record prevented him from obtaining citizenship or relief from deportation.


He's damned lucky he's being deported to SK. Most of them get deported to shitholes.
 
A Purple Heart recipient, Sae Joon Park, who had lived in the U.S. for 48 years, was deported to South Korea after facing charges related to drug possession and failure to appear in court. These charges stemmed from untreated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which he developed after being shot in combat during the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama. Despite being a green card holder and receiving a Purple Heart for his bravery, his criminal record prevented him from obtaining citizenship or relief from deportation.




Oops, there's my answer. Still, the guy turned his life around, served the country and was even shot for our country.

Surely he deserves citizenship if anyone does.
 
Oops, there's my answer. Still, the guy turned his life around, served the country and was even shot for our country.

Surely he deserves citizenship if anyone does.
He could have applied and been a citizen in a whole bunch of years before he got the heave ho. That would have been a good decision.

His crimes were his poor decisions. .
 
This guy is not a criminal. He is a war hero who served the country and took a bullet for America. That's something Donald Trump never did. Yet this guy gets deported. Trump, convicted of 34 felonies, is the president. This country is going in the wrong direction.



This is bs.

Did he get due process?
 
15th post
No it's not wrong. If he's in the country illegally, then he needs to go, unless there is a legal way for him to stop it.
I disagree. Service to your country should be the quickest path to citizenship. He put his life on the line, he deserves to be in this country.
 
A Purple Heart recipient, Sae Joon Park, who had lived in the U.S. for 48 years, was deported to South Korea after facing charges related to drug possession and failure to appear in court. These charges stemmed from untreated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which he developed after being shot in combat during the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama. Despite being a green card holder and receiving a Purple Heart for his bravery, his criminal record prevented him from obtaining citizenship or relief from deportation.



And these are kind of laws we need to be looking at and make common sense exemptions for. There are always going to be cases like this with existential circumstances that don't fit perfectly into the framework of the law. There needs to be common sense applied to these cases.
 
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