A Trinidadian-born Iraq war veteran, who legally lived in the United States for more than 20 years, is now facing deportation after being detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
According to reports coming out of the United States via MSN news and Arizona Central, Marlon Parris, 44, who served six years in the US Army with three deployments to Iraq, was arrested on January 22 near his home in Laveen, Arizona, as he made his way to an ATM. He is currently being held at a private detention facility in Florence, Arizona, while awaiting a February 27 immigration court hearing.
The arrest has prompted the national veterans' advocacy group Common Defence to launch a petition demanding Parris' release, the reinstatement of his green card, and executive action to protect non-citizen military veterans.
"Veterans who have raised their right hand to serve this country, regardless of what we sent them to do, regardless of where they originated from, do not ever deserve to be tossed away," said Jojo Sweatt, a Marine Corps veteran and the group's organizing director, in a report published by The Arizona Republic.
Parris is a father of seven.
His legal residency status in the US was thrown into question after a 2011 conviction for a non-violent drug-related offence. He served five years in prison.
His wife believes the arrest stems from US President Donald Trump's intensified immigration enforcement policies, which prioritise the removal of non-citizens with criminal records, regardless of their military service.
"We were taking care of the green card issue," she said in a news report. "Nothing has changed except the president."
Parris immigrated to the US from Trinidad and Tobago in 1997 as the son of a naturalised American citizen. He joined the Army in 2001, serving until 2007 when he was honourably discharged with diagnoses of PTSD and brain trauma from his time in armoured tanks.
In 2017, he successfully renewed his green card and travelled abroad several times with his wife without incident. However, in October 2023, while returning from Barbados, customs officers at Miami International Airport confiscated his green card. Although he had been consulting an immigration attorney to resolve the issue, ICE agents showed up three months later to detain him.
Parris' arrest has heightened concerns among veterans' advocates who fear that more immigrant veterans could face a similar fate.