Question:

If someone is going to be deported but they are holding him in jail will he get out sooner?

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He is in jail because he tried to cross illegally back into the USA and when they arrested him he was on imformal probation for a previous event..so they considered that a probation violation and sentenced him to 6 months in Count jail in California. My question..Do you think they will make him do the entire 6 months prior to deportation?? It really doesnt make since if they do considering they are going to deport him anyway.

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7 ANSWERS


  1. He will do the six months and be aware he may be prosecuted federally for unlaw ful entry into the US


  2. He'll do the 6 months & then be deported.

  3. Yes, if you are in violation of probation he must serve the 6 month sentence.  However, until he is turned over to the local authorities he must stay in federal lock up to attend his hearing before an immigration judge who will set his deportation date.  At that time he will be paroled into the US, but never leaving custody.  After his 6 months he will be sent back to ICE/Federal lockup and then deported with a 10 year ban from entering the United States.  If caught again, within that 10 years he will be deported again and banned for 20 more years at the end of that original 10 years.  If he is an idiot (seems like he is) and tries it a 3rd time, he will be caught then sentenced to 25 years in Federal prison...then deported for life.

  4. He will do what ever amount of time that he is required to do and then they will deport him once his time is finished.  But they will not deport him until his time is finished.

    They are required to have him serve out the time that he received to complete his punishment, before they can legally deport him.  I know that it doesn't seem to make a lot of sense to have him serve the 6 month and then deport him.  But that is what is going to happen.   That is his punishment for the violation that he received.

  5. Check out Customs and Boarder Patrol. I thought that they just shipped illegals back over sooner rather than waste taxpayer dollars housing them, but I could be wrong

  6. I would think that he would have to do his time in jail, if they just deported him, he might think that he could come back and commit a crime and then be deported again. If he went to jail for 6 mo. or whatever, I would think he would think twice about coming back here and doing another crime. Jail is not a very nice place.

  7. not necessarily.

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