While Juan Manuel Montes Bojorquez, 23, was walking to a taxi station in Calexico, California, a Border Patrol agent on a bicycle stopped him, asking him for identification. Having accidentally left his wallet in a friend's car, Montes claims he had no identification on him, and no way of proving his status as a "dreamer" allowing him to live in the United States legally.
Another officer was called to the scene and took Montes into custody that night, Feb. 17, driving him to a station near the border. Hours later, at about 1 a.m., immigration officials walked Montes across the border, physically removing him from the U.S. and leaving him in Mexico near Mexicali, Baja California.
Montes, immigration advocates and lawyers say, is believed to be the first "dreamer" — a beneficiary of President Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — to be deported. They say he has an active work permit.
The Department of Homeland Security disputes these claims and has provided no record of the incident. Officials only confirmed that Montes was deported when he tried to re-enter the country on or about Feb. 19, which he admits.
Attorneys on behalf of Montes filed a lawsuit under the Freedom of Information Act on Tuesday demanding that the federal government turn over all information about his sudden removal. The conflicting accounts surrounding the case leave many questions unanswered, but the allegations heightened existing concerns that DACA recipients are now being targeted for deportation, despite President Donald Trump's pledges to "show great heart" toward the immigrant youth.
"We have through the last few weeks attempted to get the records or any explanation about what happened to Juan Manuel," said Nora Preciado, a Los Angeles attorney with the National Immigration Law Center and one of the lawyers who filed the lawsuit. The lawyers on March 15 requested all records of Montes' interactions with immigration authorities, but DHS has not yet provided them. "We're trying to get answers," Preciado told the Washington Post.
A DHS spokeswoman said Montes was apprehended by Border Patrol officers after he illegally entered the country by climbing over the border fence in downtown Calexico, according to a statement provided to reporters. He was arrested minutes later for illegal entry, the spokeswoman said, adding that Montes' DACA status expired in August 2015.
The DHS spokeswoman also noted that Montes had a previous conviction for theft that resulted in probation. The lawsuit admits this fact, but argued that the conviction would not disqualify him from DACA, which requires a background check.