Law US citizen wrongfully arrested by border patrol in Arizona held for nearly 10 days

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.

Hermosillo not only told immigration officials he crossed the border illegally, but he also signed a statement swearing that as well.
No law enforcement agency has ever gotten a false statement/confession.
 
Respect my parties authority! You think the party of Honest Abe would fib? Lol, yeah right
 
Even without a DL, police can identify you with just your full name and birth date, even if your license has been suspended or revoked.
- I know LEO's here do all the time. Unless they want to be pricks or someone is really a suspect.
 
This is an article from Jan 2023:

The Border Zone Next Door, and Its Out-of-Control Police Force​

Recommendations for the Biden Administration to Rein in Customs and Border Protection

Within this vast enforcement zone, Border Patrol can set up checkpoints to stop and question every driver based on no suspicion whatsoever. CBP agents can board buses and trains and check the immigration status of the people on board (if the bus or train operator consents). Agents can also set up roving patrols to stop cars if they have a “reasonable suspicion” of anyone committing an immigration violation on board.6 A “reasonable suspicion” in theory should be based on specific facts about a person or their actions, but in practice it can be almost anything, including either speeding up or slowing down when seeing a Border Patrol vehicle, staring at or looking away from an agent, living in a city where agents believe there is a large undocumented population, or speaking Spanish.7

The practical effect of living within the 100-mile enforcement zone depends on where exactly you’re located. In many areas, you can live your entire life in the border enforcement zone without getting pulled over by Border Patrol or driving through one of their checkpoints. For now, there are no checkpoints along the coasts. There are a few intermittently along the northern border, concentrated in New York and New England,8 although roving patrols occur along the entire U.S.-Canada border. However, for many residents of southern border communities spanning from southern California to the Rio Grande Valley, permanent checkpoints and other encounters with Border Patrol are a daily fact of life.9

now, many of the examples presented were trump's first term, but not all.....

U.S. citizens are also not safe from abuse by CBP. Francisco Erwin Galicia, an 18-year-old born in Dallas, was arrested at a checkpoint in 2019. He presented state identification, but Border Patrol agents did not believe he was a citizen and detained him incommunicado for 23 days in a holding cell without a bed before he was transferred to ICE custody and then released. He lost 26 pounds.26 Other citizens have been wrongfully deported before agents acknowledged their mistake, including Julio Cesar Ovalle, whom the Border Patrol arrested on the way to the grocery store, and a four-year-old girl who was mistakenly sent to Guatemala from Dulles Airport.27 CBP agents tased pastor Steven Anderson without justification in Arizona in 2009.28 In 2015, agents did the same to college student Jess Cooke in upstate New York.29
The difference between then and now would be the far greater number of such incidents just since Trump took office, wouldn't you say?
 
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