Deportation (officially: "removal") is the forced removal from the USA. It can be conducted by an immigration court or expedited without a court. Regardless of the scenario — you have constitutional rights and defense options.
Types of Deportation
1. Removal proceedings (formal court)
- Full procedure before an immigration judge
- Notice to Appear (NTA) → master calendar → individual hearing
- Possible defense, attorney, appeal
- Typically lasts 1-5 years
- See [[removal-proceedings-immigration-court-eoir-co-robic]]
2. Expedited removal
- WITHOUT a court
- Applied at the border or within 100 miles of the border within 14 days of entry
- CBP officer decides alone
- Exception: if you express fear of return → credible fear interview
- After expedited removal: 5-year ban on re-entry
3. Administrative removal
- For individuals with aggravated felonies
- Not a full court process
- Narrow right to administrative review
4. Reinstatement of removal
- If previously deported and returned illegally
- Old order "reactivated" — without a new court
- Significant risk for individuals with a deportation history
5. Stipulated removal
- "Voluntary" consent to deportation (usually coerced in detention)
- DO NOT SIGN without an attorney
Who is a Priority for ICE (2026)
ICE has limited resources — prioritizes:
Priority 1
- National security threats (terrorism)
- Aggravated felons (drug trafficking, violent crime, certain theft)
- Gang members
- Border crossers (just arrived illegally)
Priority 2
- People with multiple misdemeanors
- DUI convictions (depending on state and severity)
- Visa overstay > 2 years
Low priority
- Long-term residents without papers with USC/LPR family
- DREAMers (arrived as children)
- Individuals with USC children/spouses
- No criminal record
Your Constitutional Rights
4th Amendment — privacy + search
- ICE must have a WARRANT signed by a judge to enter your home
- "Administrative warrant" (Form I-200) from ICE = NOT SUFFICIENT to enter without your consent
- DO NOT OPEN the door if they do not show a judicial warrant
5th Amendment — silence + attorney
- Right to remain silent — you do not have to answer ICE
- Right to an attorney — but at your own expense in civil matters
- "I do not wish to answer questions. I want to speak to my lawyer."
6th Amendment — public trial
- Your immigration court hearing is public (with exceptions)
- Family, journalists can observe
14th Amendment — equal protection
- No racial/nationality discrimination
- Everyone has equal procedural rights
Bans After Deportation
| Situation | Ban |
|---|---|
| Voluntary departure | 0 years (you can return immediately with a visa) |
| Expedited removal | 5 years |
| Standard removal | 10 years |
| Second deportation | 20 years |
| Aggravated felony | Lifetime (forever) |
| Unlawful presence 180-365 days + voluntary departure | 3-year bar |
| Unlawful presence 1+ year + departure | 10-year bar |
Waiver of Inadmissibility — Form I-601 / I-601A
After deportation / unlawful presence — you can apply for a waiver to return:
I-601 — General waiver
- For various grounds of inadmissibility
- Requires extreme hardship for USC/LPR family
- Complex process, requires an attorney
I-601A — Provisional waiver
- For unlawful presence (3/10 year bar)
- Filed before leaving the USA
- Allows you to leave, get a visa, return — without activating the bar
- Requires: USC/LPR spouse or parent + extreme hardship
Defense Options Against Deportation
1. No right to deportation
- "You are not removable as charged" — you defend that the charges are false
- For example, DHS claims you are without status, but you prove you have it
2. Apply for GC during proceedings
- Marriage to USC → I-130 + I-485 (AOS)
- The judge can adjudicate
3. Asylum / Withholding / CAT
- Fear of persecution/torture in your country
- See [[jak-dziala-asylum-w-usa]]
4. Cancellation of Removal
- LPR: 7 years residence + 5 years LPR + no agg felony
- Non-LPR: 10 years physical presence + extreme hardship
5. Special Immigrant Juvenile (SIJ)
- For children/young adults affected by abuse, neglect, abandonment
- State court findings required
6. T-visa / U-visa
- Victims of trafficking (T) or crimes (U)
- Requires cooperation with law enforcement
7. VAWA self-petition
- Victims of domestic violence from USC/LPR perpetrators
- Independent path without a sponsor
8. Prosecutorial Discretion (PD)
- DHS attorney "agrees" to close the case
- Sometimes for low-priority cases
9. Administrative Closure
- The judge "stays" the case in suspension
- Does not end but gives breathing room
10. Voluntary Departure
- You leave at your own expense
- NO bar after departure
- You can return with a visa
What Happens Step by Step — Typical Timeline
Day 0: ICE encounter
- ICE stops you (home, workplace, traffic stop)
- Your case appears in the database
- Arrest or Notice to Appear
Day 0-7: Detention or release
- If detained → ICE facility / detention center
- If low priority → "released on own recognizance" or bond
- ATD (Alternatives to Detention) — ankle monitor
Weeks 1-12: NTA + Master Calendar
- You receive NTA
- First master calendar hearing (1-3 months)
- Time to find an attorney
Months 3-18: Preparing defense
- Additional master calendar hearings (typically 2-4)
- Attorney files applications (asylum, cancellation, etc.)
- Gathering evidence
Month 12-36: Individual hearing
- Main hearing
- The judge decides — grant / deny
After the decision
- Grant: you receive status (GC, asylum, etc.)
- Deny: 30 days for BIA appeal
- Voluntary departure granted: 60-120 days to leave
What After Deportation
Physical departure
- ICE escorts you to the flight or to the border
- Sometimes commercial flight, sometimes ICE charter
- You receive a "warrant of removal" as documentation
Life After Deportation
- All assets in the USA — you may lose
- Bank account — remains, but harder to access
- Mortgage — still obligated
- Children born in the USA = USC, can stay or travel with the parent
- Pension / 401(k) — still yours, can withdraw
Returning to the USA
- Ban must expire
- Or waiver (I-601, I-212)
- Or through the U.S. consulate — visa application
- Illegal return = federal crime (up to 20 years imprisonment)
Polish Community Context
Polish Consulate
- Polish consulates in the USA assist Polish citizens in detention
- Can arrange travel documents
- Communication with family in Poland
- Monitoring treatment
- 24/7 emergency phone
Polish American Congress
- Lobbying for Polish community issues
- Advisory services
How to Protect Yourself FROM Deportation
- Obtain legal status as soon as possible (marriage, employee sponsorship, etc.)
- Naturalize as soon as LPR 5 years (protects against deportation)
- Avoid contact with police — even minor offenses are recorded
- NO DUI — gateway to removal
- Regularly file taxes — tax history helps in defense
- Keep documents — valid passport, valid GC
- Attorney on "retainer" if in low status
- Notify family of the situation — emergency plan
Official Links
- U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
- EOIR — Immigration Court
- USCIS — Form I-601 (Waiver)
- USCIS — Form I-601A (Provisional Waiver)
- ACLU — Immigrant Rights
- Polish Consulates in the USA
Related: [[removal-proceedings-immigration-court-eoir-co-robic]] · [[ice-kontrola-co-robic-prawa]] · [[adwokat-imigracyjny-jak-znalezc-i-wybrac-w-usa]] · [[jak-dziala-asylum-w-usa]]
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