Nelson Kargbo was 11 when he was forced at gunpoint to become a child soldier for a brutal revolutionary insurgency in the west African country of Sierra Leone.
He was injected daily with a mixture of cocaine and gunpowder called "Brown Brown," given marijuana before firefights, then sent into battle ahead of the adults to draw the enemy's gunfire. Sickly and left for dead by the rebels, he eventually was rescued. At the age of 15 he emigrated with his family to Minnesota where he received refugee status in 2000 and became a permanent resident in 2003.
Now 30, Kargbo sits in a Carver County jail, held for deportation for nearly two years by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Even though an immigration judge ruled two weeks ago that he cannot be deported because he will face torture in his native country, ICE is holding him for 90 days to review his case.
"I just want to get out and be with my family and get a job and support my family," Kargbo said in a telephone interview from jail.
Kargbo's status remains unclear because of a criminal history that his lawyers link to the trauma of his childhood in Sierra Leone. Last week a lawsuit was filed on his behalf by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Minnesota and an immigration law clinic at the University of Minnesota known as the Center for New Americans, which contend the 90-day extension is cruel and unconstitutional.
Kargbo has schizophrenia and post-traumatic stress disorder, according to court testimony. His traumatic life, his lawyers say, led to a series of 11 criminal offenses, 10 misdemeanors and petty misdemeanors and one gross misdemeanor, beginning in 2004. His rap sheet includes convictions for possessing burglary tools, for which he got a 10-day sentence, shoplifting, being a public nuisance, four disorderly conduct arrests, terroristic threats and a DWI. He was arrested in 2013 for misdemeanor domestic assault of Marquette Ford, the mother of his three children.
Ford has asked the victim's advocate to cancel a no-contact order and urged that the domestic assault charge be dropped. "Nelson is the best thing for these kids, and I want him to be back with them," she wrote.
"When I look back on those years, I see myself as being young and stupid," Kargbo wrote in a legal memorandum he submitted in June. "I have grown up."