Pritzker grants clemency to U.S.
Veteran deported to Mexico
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[September 03, 2019]
Governor JB Pritzker has granted clemency to Miguel Perez, a U.S.
Army veteran who immigrated to Illinois as a child. Perez, who
served 7.5 years for a non-violent offense, was deported to Mexico
in 2018.
Perez joined the U.S. Army in 2002 and served two tours as a Special
Forces Mechanic in Afghanistan, where he was injured in an explosion
and suffered a traumatic brain injury. He returned from service with
PTSD, which still requires medical treatment to this day. Perez was
a legal resident whose service in the armed forces was supposed to
provide him an expedited path to citizenship under a 2002 Executive
Order by President George W. Bush, but due to oversight, he was not
afforded that opportunity.
In 2008, Perez was convicted of a non-violent offense, served 7.5
years and was released from Hill Correctional Center in September
2016.
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In late 2016, he petitioned the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, arguing that a
pardon might prevent deportation. The PRB recommended clemency in April 2017,
but then-Gov. Rauner denied the petition in February 2018. Perez was deported in
March 2018 without prior contact with his family, left at the Mexican border
nearly penniless without clothing or shelter.
“Miguel Perez should not have been deported. The bigoted immigration policy of
President Trump and failed leadership of former Governor Rauner have caused
unfortunate circumstances for a U.S. veteran who served two tours in
Afghanistan,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “In evaluating this request for
clemency, I recognize this pardon is not a perfect solution, but it is the most
just action to take to allow a U.S. veteran the opportunity to be treated fairly
by the country he served.”
Perez has active VA benefits that he can’t access in Mexico. His family,
including two children and parents, live in Illinois and are U.S. citizens.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |