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He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica - Travel - Nairaland

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He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Morbeta11(op): 5:31am On Jul 09, 2025
He was born to a US citizen soldier on an army base in Germany. Now he’s been deported to Jamaica, a country he’d never been to

Born on a US military base, the son of a US citizen father serving in the Army, Jermaine Thomas never considered he might not be American.

A month ago, he found himself shackled at the wrists and ankles and forced aboard a flight for Jamaica, his father’s birthplace and a country Thomas had never been to before.

“It’s too hard to put in words,” Thomas told CNN. “I just think to myself, this can’t really be happening.”

He is legally stateless, he told CNN. He is not a citizen of the US, although his father was a US citizen; Germany, where he was born at a US military hospital; Jamaica, his father’s homeland; or Kenya, where his mother was born.

Thomas, 39, says he spoke to CNN from a homeless shelter in Kingston, Jamaica, a city where he now finds himself stranded hundreds of miles away from his friends and family after an arrest for criminal trespass led to him being transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.

Family members told CNN they are scared to visit Thomas out of fear they might be unable to return to the US – caught up in the Trump administration’s sprawling deportation campaign.

Thomas says his only option now is to apply for Jamaican citizenship through his late father. But he does not plan to, since “my life, my kids, my family is back in the States,” he said.

Jamaica is “not a bad place,” he told CNN. “It’s just not the place for me. I don’t belong here.”

Born abroad, raised in the US
Thomas was born in 1986, at a US military hospital in Frankfurt, Germany, to a mother born in Kenya and a US citizen father who eventually spent more than a decade in the military, where he repaired Army helicopters. His father became a naturalized US citizen in 1984, according to documents reviewed by CNN.

A close family member of Thomas, who asked not to be identified due to fear of “retaliation” from immigration authorities, told CNN “There was never a question of whether he was American,” as far as his family believed, since he was born to an American father on a US military base.

The family returned to the US from Germany in 1989. A visa form listed the nationality of 3-year-old Thomas as Jamaican, according to court filings, and he entered the country as a legal permanent resident. His father, who died in 2010, would have handled the son’s paperwork, according to the family member, who said the family was unaware he was listed as Jamaican on the form.

Thomas, around a year old, at home in Hanau, Germany, where his father served as a soldier on a US military base.
Thomas, around a year old, at home in Hanau, Germany, where his father served as a soldier on a US military base. Courtesy Jermaine Thomas
Thomas grew up in Florida and Virginia but spent most of his adult life in Texas, where he worked a variety of odd jobs, including in construction, cleaning, and working for a car wash. He was often homeless and was convicted of various crimes, including drug possession, robbery and theft stretching back to at least 2006, which led to several years of incarceration. He served a 30-day sentence in 2011 for a misdemeanor domestic violence charge. Thomas most recently spent 2020 to 2023 incarcerated for driving while intoxicated and harassment of a public servant, a third-degree felony, according to Texas Department of Public Safety records.

Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin described Thomas as “a violent, criminal illegal alien from Jamaica” who “spent nearly two decades posing a significant threat to public safety” in a statement shared with CNN. “Dangerous criminal aliens like Mr. Thomas have no place in American communities,” she said.

Thomas acknowledged he has committed crimes, including violent crimes. He said he was “put in situations in life where, you know, your hand’s forced to survive one way or another.” He has the bipolar type of schizoaffective disorder, according to medical records reviewed by CNN, and says he was taking psychiatric medication in the US – although he’s now about to run out of his medications in Kingston.

His family member said Thomas has “made a lot of wrong choices” exacerbated by his mental health problems but he is “not violent.” They think he should face legal consequences for any crimes he has committed in the US instead of being deported to a foreign country where he has no legal standing.

An eviction changed everything
Thomas says the saga resulting in him being stranded and homeless in Jamaica started in February, when he was evicted from the apartment he shared with friends in Killeen, Texas, about an hour north of Austin.

Constables serving the eviction notice took all the items out of the home and left them in the front yard, Thomas said. Thomas returned the next day to check on his and his roommates’ belongings, along with his adoptive daughter’s dog. Then police arrived, saying they received a call about a dog chained up. He pointed out the dog was on a leash, not chained up, and when police asked for his identification, he refused, saying he had not committed any crimes. Then officers handcuffed him and took him to jail, and the dog to the pound, he said.

Records from the Texas Department of Public Safety show he was arrested on February 21 for criminal trespass, a misdemeanor. He pleaded no contest and was sentenced to 30 days in jail, along with a $100 fine and court costs. He told CNN he pleaded no contest because his court-appointed lawyer told him trying to fight the charge could leave him in jail for months.

"I keep thinking I'm back home until I wake up and walk around," Thomas said.
"I keep thinking I'm back home until I wake up and walk around," Thomas said. Courtesy Jermaine Thomas
The Killeen Police Department told CNN they became involved after a request from Animal Control but didn’t offer more details on how the arrest unfolded. CNN has reached out to the Bell County attorney’s office for comment about the public defender’s work on the case.

At the end of his 30-day sentence, Thomas was picked up by ICE and transferred to an immigration facility. After a few weeks, he says, he was put in a cell with men who said they were going to be deported to Nicaragua.

“I banged on the door and asked for an officer to come let me know what was going on,” he said. Then, he said, a supervisor assured him he was not going to be deported, just transferred to another facility.


Tell us your immigration crackdown story

But in the transport van, he said he was told some detainees were being deported to Nicaragua and the others to Jamaica. Despite his protests to the contrary, officers insisted he was a Jamaican citizen being deported to Jamaica, he said, and forced him on a plane. He said he was “treated like a fugitive,” surrounded by 10 US Marshals on the plane. ICE referred CNN to the Department of Homeland Security’s statement on the case.

Aboard a plane to a country he’d never been to on May 28, with only the clothes on his back, “All hope was lost,” he said. “I didn’t see a future.”

Battle for citizenship
Thomas said until his early 20s, he never considered he might not be a US citizen. Since his father was a US citizen, he never questioned his own immigration status.

It all changed in 2008, when he was picked up by ICE after he was released from a two-year jail sentence for felony drug possession charges. He recalled his father explained his situation to immigration authorities and he was released. Then, in 2013, he received a Notice to Appear from the Department of Homeland Security, which alleged he was a Jamaican citizen with criminal convictions in the US and thus subject to deportation.

The proceedings led to a lengthy legal battle centered on whether a US military base counts as “in the United States” for the purposes of birthright citizenship, a legal principle clouded by uncertainty after a recent Supreme Court ruling. While his lawyers have argued, as the son of a US citizen born on a US military base, Thomas is a citizen under the 14th Amendment, a 2015 appeals court ruling found he was not a citizen and was deportable. The Supreme Court denied a petition to hear his case, which was supported by several members of Congress in 2016.

In its denial, the Supreme Court supported the lower court’s finding that being born on a US military base did not count as being born “in the United States” for the purposes of the 14th Amendment, which guarantees citizenship to anyone born “in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” Although the US military controls its bases abroad, they aren’t considered US territory, according to the State Department.

Additionally, people like Thomas born to at least one US citizen abroad are typically automatically US citizens – though there are some restrictions, and the law has changed over time. But Thomas’ US citizen father “did not meet the physical presence requirement of the statute in force at the time of Thomas’s birth,” making him ineligible for citizenship through his father, too, the appeals judge ruled. At the time of Thomas’ birth, his father had only been in the United States – including his military service – for nine years; the law required he be in the country for 10 years to confer citizenship on his children. If Thomas had been born just a year later, he would be a US citizen.

In filings to the Supreme Court, Thomas’ lawyers referenced John McCain, the longtime senator from Arizona, who was born on a US naval base in the Panama Canal Zone. When McCain ran for president in 2008, his birthplace attracted scrutiny, since the Constitution requires a US president to be a “natural-born citizen,” a phrase inspiring debate. But a bipartisan legal review concluded he was indeed a natural-born citizen and eligible for the presidency. The government in Thomas’ case argued the Panama Canal Zone was at the time of McCain’s birth a US sovereign territory, unlike the military base where Thomas was born in Germany.

Thomas’ relative said they were shocked by the court finding against him, especially considering his father served 18 years in the military.

“My question is, why would you hold a child responsible for something that he had no control over or knowledge of?” they asked.

Despite the court ruling he was not a US citizen, Thomas stayed in the country, the only home he’s ever known. He said after his Supreme Court bid was rejected, he reported to immigration authorities in San Antonio for several months until, he says, an officer told him he didn’t need to report back anymore.

“I’d like for all those serving any branch of government service to know that this can happen to their children when they pass away, after putting their lives on the line for this country,” he said.

‘Like a life sentence’
Thomas struggled to understand his situation as a stateless person after the 2016 Supreme Court denial. “Who’s ever even really heard of such a thing?” he said. “What are you supposed to do when you’re stateless?”

He says he is not a citizen of Germany, where a birth certificate reviewed by CNN verifies he was born in a US military hospital, or of Jamaica, confirmed by a letter sent to Thomas by the Jamaican consulate in Miami and reviewed by CNN. Under the Jamaican constitution, children of Jamaican citizens born outside the country have to formally apply for citizenship. Neither is he a citizen of Kenya, where his mother was born and only fathers can pass down citizenship to children born abroad.

Situations like Thomas’ are relatively new and uncommon in the US, according to Betsy Fisher, an immigration lawyer and lecturer in refugee law at the University of Michigan Law School.

A stateless person is “a person whom no state considers as a national under the operation of its law,” she said. There were estimated to be over 200,000 stateless people in the US in 2022, according to the University of Chicago Law School’s Global Human Rights Clinic.

Legally speaking, Thomas has likely been stateless his whole life, Fisher explained, which made him “vulnerable to being deported and experiencing this loss of community, connections, legal identity, everything that he’s experiencing in Jamaica.”

His situation “falls kind of perfectly in these cracks between ways to be a US citizen,” she said.

US law doesn’t require a person be a citizen or have any legal status in a country to which they’re deported, she said, and the US isn’t a party to either of two UN conventions on statelessness, which offer people at least some protections. Nonetheless, it’s “a recent phenomenon that a stateless person would be deported to a country where they don’t have a legal connection.”

“It’s been hard, inconvenient, and often I think seen as inhumane to deport someone to a place where they’re not going to have any legal status,” she said.

Attempts during Joe Biden’s administration to provide protections for stateless people in the US have been rescinded under the Donald Trump administration, she said.

“We’re really moving backwards on this issue,” she said. “This would be something that Congress could very rapidly fix if they were motivated to do so.”

Thomas’ relative described his stateless status as being “like a life sentence.”

“You live on the fringes of society, because you don’t have no legal status that gives you a chance to work, to have housing, to do anything,” they said.

Homeless in a foreign country
Waking up each day in the sweltering heat of Kingston, hundreds of miles away from his friends and family, “it takes me a while to get a grip on reality,” Thomas said.

“I just can’t realize that I’m still here,” he said. “Like this is a bad dream. This is a nightmare, but I’m really here.”

He originally stayed in a hotel room paid for by Jamaica’s Ministry of National Security, he told CNN. But he says he’s now in a homeless shelter, which can be loud, hot, and chaotic. “I’m always hungry, completely exhausted, on constant alert” in the shelter, he said.

Since he’s neither a Jamaican citizen nor a foreign citizen, he’s unable to apply for a legal ID and work in the country, he said. “I don’t know what I’m about to do,” he said. “I don’t know nobody.”

Although the people he has interacted with in Jamaica have been “respectful and hospitable,” most of them speak Jamaican Patois, an English-based creole language he finds difficult to understand. “There’s a lot of barriers and a lot of complications,” he said.

Thomas’ relative said it is “horrible” to monitor his harrowing situation from afar, speaking with him daily via social media messages. His family, some of whom are not US citizens, told CNN they want to visit but feel terrified they will be barred from returning to the US.

“It’s like I’ve lost him forever,” the relative said. “Because I will never go there, because chances are, I will not be allowed back.”

Thomas, meanwhile, misses “the feeling of freedom and being free to be myself” in the United States.

“I just want to know when I’m going home,” he said.

.
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/07/08/us/jamaica-deportation-migrant-ice-us

Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Frenchkiss564: 9:00am On Jul 09, 2025
Probably would have been saved, if he wasn't into crime.

Smh
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by wealth2u(m): 1:35pm On Jul 09, 2025
This one na Ajegunle Bross na 😂😂😂

Him location says it all......
Baba don go flex tire
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by free2ryhme: 1:36pm On Jul 09, 2025
Morbeta11:
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/07/08/us/jamaica-deportation-migrant-ice-us
Trump has destroyed this man's life forever

chai 😭😭😭😭
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by mercysamuelson(m): 1:36pm On Jul 09, 2025
Na wa o. Everything ti doju ru bi ese tailor. May God continue to help us.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by cenaman(m): 1:36pm On Jul 09, 2025
I really blame his father, how can he register him as a Rastafarian instead of US citizen.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Nobody: 1:36pm On Jul 09, 2025
Just the Trump administration

He will get his citizenship when a sane administration gets in.

The story would have been different if he was White.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by rattlesnake(m): 1:37pm On Jul 09, 2025
He's a criminal thsts why he was removed violent crime no excuse
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by autoez: 1:38pm On Jul 09, 2025
Trump is at it again. If some people had the opportunity to pour the blame on Tinubu, they will have. 🤣
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by IykeSent(m): 1:38pm On Jul 09, 2025
Born on a U.S. military base. Raised in America. Father was a U.S. soldier. Yet he was deported to Jamaica — a country he’s never been to. If this is how America treats its own, what hope do immigrants and Black foreigners really have?
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Nobody: 1:38pm On Jul 09, 2025
Frenchkiss564:
Probably would have been saved, if he wasn't into crime.

Smh
Even if he was a certified criminal, you cannot deny him citizenship!
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by cyberbro: 1:39pm On Jul 09, 2025
That's how he gets treated even though his father was American and served the country in a foreign land... Shame! 🥺

I bet if this guy was white, they'd grant him citizenship without hassles. Same Trump regime chasing people away recently welcomed "persecuted" White South Africans... To me, this is just a colour game, white supremacy at its peak!
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by autoez: 1:39pm On Jul 09, 2025
rattlesnake:
He's a criminal thsts why he was removed violent crime no excuse
Trump isn't going to be president forever. He's giving the Democrats an easy ride in the next polls.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Izuchukwu70: 1:40pm On Jul 09, 2025
He said he misses the feeling of freedom? ? Freedom in America. There is more freedom in Jamaica and Nigeria than America. He's talking about making money. Apart from the money nothing dey America. Infact any other race is inferior and 2nd class to the Whites. Black people being at the lowest level.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by SalamRushdie: 1:40pm On Jul 09, 2025
He was was clearly not a citizen when he was born and never took any step to regularize his status even though he has been aware since 2008
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by SalamRushdie: 1:42pm On Jul 09, 2025
cyberbro:
That's how he gets treated even though his father was American and served the country in a foreign land... Shame! 🥺

I bet if this guy was white, they'd grant him citizenship without hassles. Same Trump regime chasing people away recently welcomed "persecuted" White South Africans... To me, this is just a colour game, white supremacy at its peak!
Whose fault was it that his father didn't fix it before he brought him to the US and besides the father wasn't a US citizen at the time he gave birth to him in 86 and then the guy himself has been aware since 20008 and yet did nothing to regularize
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Arostar2023: 1:42pm On Jul 09, 2025
free2ryhme:
Trump has destroyed this man's life forever

chai 😭😭😭😭
Or the man carry his hand destroyed himself. He was arrested on criminal trespass...
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by sylve11: 1:43pm On Jul 09, 2025
While it may present challenges, opting for a life away from crime is undoubtedly the smartest choice. Had he taken steps to distance himself from criminal activities earlier, he would have been in a far better position to address his documentation issues.

My strong commitment to staying clear of crime nor be play. undecided cool
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by prinsam30: 1:44pm On Jul 09, 2025
Jamaica make sense na, Just thank ur God say no be Nigeria dem deport u to, u for don dey beg for ikeja under bridge by now
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Chisave: 1:45pm On Jul 09, 2025
CoronaVirusPro:
Just the Trump administration

He will get his citizenship when a sane administration gets in.

The story would have been different if he was White.
But from the statistics, more whites have been deported to countries like mexico, Ecuador and co
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by EKOMADENG: 1:45pm On Jul 09, 2025
Trump a knuckle head and a psychopath.

That's all I can say.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by omoadeleye(m): 1:45pm On Jul 09, 2025
He too doesn't look like a US citizen at all, he doesn't even look black American, so they just have to do what needs to be done, go back to Jamaica bro
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by free2ryhme: 1:46pm On Jul 09, 2025
Arostar2023:
Or the man carry his hand destroyed himself. He was arrested on criminal trespass...
then he is finished

You are stateless yet involve in criminal activities
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Nobody: 1:46pm On Jul 09, 2025
Chisave:
But from the statistics, more whites have been deported to countries like mexico, Ecuador and co
That’s where you got it all wrong. Latinos are not White. They feel they are, but Caucasians like Trump don’t believe they are white.

They call them brown.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Akharmony: 1:47pm On Jul 09, 2025
Go back home bro. It looks like nothing is working for him in the US. .
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Righteousness2(m): 1:49pm On Jul 09, 2025
Frenchkiss564:
Probably would have been saved, if he wasn't into crime.
You have said it all .

Nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnñnnnnnnnnn
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Helinuse: 1:50pm On Jul 09, 2025
Now his head will correct. At least he won’t go around shouting “d e a t h to America or Israel.”


May God bless Trump
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by Nobody: 1:52pm On Jul 09, 2025
omoadeleye:
He too doesn't look like a US citizen at all, he doesn't even look black American, so they just have to do what needs to be done, go back to Jamaica bro
How do Black Americans look? Give me an insight.

Do you know how many tribes make up that name Black Americans? It consist of every black nation in the world. It’s not a race compared to Caucasians.

If you say he does not look like black Americans, then tell me how black Americans look.
Re: He Was Born To A US Citizen Now He’s Been Deported To Jamaica by AK481(m): 1:52pm On Jul 09, 2025
He was I to crime , that made it worst for him.
I knew something was difficult in his case .
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