Thousands were adopted to the US but not made citizens. Decades later,
they risk being deported
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[October 25, 2024]
By CLAIRE GALOFARO and KIM TONG-HYUNG
The United States has brought hundreds of thousands of children from
abroad to be adopted by American families. But along the way it left
thousands of them without citizenship, through a bureaucratic loophole
that the government has been aware of for decades, and hasn’t fixed.
Some of these adoptees live in hiding, fearing that tipping off the
government could prompt their removal back to the country the U.S.
claimed to have rescued them from. Some have already been deported.
A bill to help them has been introduced in Congress for a decade, and is
supported by a rare bipartisan coalition — from liberal immigration
groups to the Southern Baptist Convention. But it hasn’t passed.
Advocates blame the hyper-partisan frenzy over immigration that has
stalled any effort to extend citizenship to anyone, even these adoptees
who are legally the children of American parents.
They say they are terrified about what could happen if former President
Donald Trump is reelected because he has promised massive immigration
raids and detention camps.
Here are the findings of the AP report:
How did this happen?
The modern system of intercountry adoption emerged in the aftermath of
the Korean War. American families were desperate for children because
access to birth control and societal changes had caused the domestic
supply of adoptable babies to plummet. Korea wanted to rid itself of
mouths to feed.
Adoption agencies rushed to meet intense demand for babies in the United
States. But there were few protections to ensure that parents were able
to take care of them, and that they acquired citizenship.
The U.S. had wedged foreign adoptions into a system created for domestic
ones. State courts give adopted children new birth certificates that
list their adoptive parents’ names, purporting to give them all the
privileges of biological children.
But state courts have no control over immigration. After the expensive,
long process of adoption, parents were supposed to naturalize their
adopted children, but some never did.
Has the U.S. tried to rectify this?
In 2000, U.S. Congress recognized it had left adoptees in this legal
limbo and passed the Child Citizenship Act, conferring automatic
citizenship to adopted children. But it was designed to streamline the
process for adoptive parents, not to help adoptees, and so applied only
to those under 18 when it took effect. Everyone born before the
arbitrary date of Feb. 27, 1983, was not included. Estimates for how
many lack citizenship range from around 15,000 to 75,000.
Efforts since to close that loophole have failed.
“It’s the most classic example of wanting to bang your head against the
wall, because how in the world have we not fixed this?” said Hannah
Daniel, director of public policy for the Ethics and Religious Liberty
Commission, the lobbying arm of the Southern Baptist Convention. Foreign
adoption is particularly poignant for Evangelical churches, which preach
it as a Biblical calling.
“In this day and age in Congress, if not doing anything is an option,”
Daniel said, “that is the bet I’m going to take.”
How do adoptees find out they aren’t citizens?
There is no government mechanism for alerting adoptees that their
parents did not secure their citizenship. They usually find out by
accident, when applying for passports or government benefits. One woman
learned as a senior citizen, when she was denied the Social Security
she’d paid into all her life. If they ask the government about their
status, they risk tipping authorities off to them being here illegally.
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The outfit Leah Elmquist traveled in when she was adopted from Korea
at five months old to a family in America, is arranged for a
photograph at her home in Las Vegas on Monday, June 24, 2024. (AP
Photo/David Goldman)
For some, their legal status is fixable through the arduous
naturalization process — they have to join the line as though they’d
just arrived. It takes years, thousands of dollars, wasted days,
routine rejections from immigration offices on technicalities, the
wrong form, an errant typo. But others are told there’s nothing that
can be done. The difference is in visas: Some American parents
brought babies in via the fastest route — like a tourist or medical
visa — not imagining complications down the road. This was
particularly prominent in military families, who adopted children
where they were rather than going through an adoption agency that
brought them to the U.S.
Their status can mean they can’t get jobs or driver’s licenses, and
some aren’t eligible for government benefits like financial aid and
Social Security. Some who have criminal histories, even drug
charges, have been deported back to the countries where their
American parents adopted them from.
How are the adoptees affected?
— One was brought from Iran by her father, an Air Force veteran
working there as a military contractor in 1972. She works in
corporate health care, owns her own home and has never been in
trouble. She is in her 50s, and she doesn’t know if she’ll be
eligible for Social Security or other benefits. She lives in fear
that the government will come for her.
— Joy Alessi was adopted from Korea as a 7-month-old in 1967. She
learned as an adult that her parents never naturalized her, and she
lived in hiding for decades. She was finally naturalized in 2019 at
52 years old. She says she was deprived all those years of what
American citizens take for granted, like educational loans.
— Mike Davis was adopted to the United States from Ethiopia in the
1970s by his father, an American soldier. Davis, now 61, got into
trouble with drugs as a young man, but then grew up, got married and
had children. Years later, he was deported. Without him as
breadwinner, the family lived in cars and motels, and are desperate
to bring him home. He’s lived in Ethiopia for two decades now, in a
room with a mud floor and no running water.
— Leah Elmquist served for a decade in the U.S. Navy, but she wasn’t
a citizen. She was adopted from South Korea as a baby in 1983, just
6 months too old to be grandfathered into citizenship by the 2000
legislation. When Trump won in 2016, she said she felt fear more
intense than the night before she deployed to Iraq. She was
eventually naturalized, after what she describes as a crushing
process with immigration, including having to take a civics test.
— Debbie and Paul, a couple in California, adopted two special needs
children, a boy and a girl, from a Romanian orphanage in the 1990s.
Debbie sometimes lays awake at night thinking that her children
wouldn’t survive a detention camp. The girl is a Special Olympian
who can’t compete in international competitions because she can’t
get a passport.
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This story is part of an ongoing investigation led by The Associated
Press in collaboration with FRONTLINE (PBS). The investigation
includes several stories:
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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