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Ibrahim Cetindemir has a valid work permit and is an active DACA recipient but was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents after successfully summiting both Denali and Mount Rainier.
Ibrahim Cetindemir has a valid work permit and is an active DACA recipient but was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents after successfully summiting both Denali and Mount Rainier.

A Denali Climber’s Experience Being Detained by ICE

Ibrahim Cetindemir was pulled off his train and detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in Montana while making his way back home to North Dakota

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Ibrahim Cetindemir has a valid work permit and is an active DACA recipient but was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents after successfully summiting both Denali and Mount Rainier.

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A trip to Denali鈥檚imposing20,308-foot peak is a risky endeavor for any mountaineer. But for amateur climber Ibrahim Cetindemir, the scariest part of his expedition was coming home.听

On June 24, after successfully summiting both Denali and Mount Rainier,in Alaska and Washington, respectively,Cetindemir was pulled off his train and detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents in Malta, Montana, while making his way back home to听Williston,听North Dakota, where he works as a server and part-time photographer. Cetindemir,听28, who with his family fled听threats of violence in Guatemala to come to the United States 15 years ago,is a recipient of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a policy that grants undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children temporary reprieve from deportation, along with work permits and the ability to apply for a Social Security number.

Cetindemir on Mount Rainier
Cetindemir on Mount Rainier (Ibrahim Cetindemir)

Centindemir says that two CBP agents boarded听the train and asked each passenger for their citizenship status. He told them that he鈥檚 a DACA recipient and presented documentation, including his driver鈥檚 license and work permit. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 think that they were too sure of what DACA was to begin with,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd I just knew I was going to get stopped at the following station.鈥澨

The agents disembarked, and Cetindemir continued on the train for an hour or so, but at the next stop, four to six CBP agents boarded his car and escorted him off, he says. 鈥淚 really wasn鈥檛 worried at all, because I knew I had my DACA and that it was valid,鈥 Cetindemir says. 鈥淚 knew for a fact I didn鈥檛 have any criminal activity and my record was clean. So I just thought it was going to be an inconvenience. I assumed that they were going to take me to their office or their station, verify that my DACA is valid, and just let me go.鈥澨

But instead, the agents looked through their databases and found a deportation order from 2014, issued after Cetindemir鈥檚 family members overstayed their visas and were twice denied requests for asylum. Cetindemir chose to remain in the country illegally, and was granted DACA status in 2016. 鈥淚 said, 鈥榃ell, if you actually do have that, my DACA should supersede the deportation order.鈥 And that鈥檚 when they said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e 99 percent sure that DACA doesn鈥檛 work like that, and more than likely you will be deported.鈥 I thought that sounded a bit sketchy, and I that鈥檚 when I started to get worried.鈥

According to Helena,Montana, immigration attorney Shahid Haque, Cetindemir鈥檚 gut was right. The 2012 DACA issued by the Department of Homeland Security states that even individuals who have received a final order of deportation are eligible for DACA status.听Haque says that in the wake of the听illegal-immigration crackdown, however, people with final removal orders have become 鈥渆asy pickings鈥 for the CBP and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents looking to comply with stricter policies, and in Cetindemir鈥檚 case, they appeared confused by federal听directives and the DACA process. 鈥淚t seems like he got caught up in an issue where Border Patrol and ICE believed they could try to strip him of his DACA status for apparently no reason other than that he had a prior deportation,鈥 Haque says. 鈥淭hat would seem an egregious overreach.鈥澨(A CBP spokesperson declined to comment on these specific accusations.)听

Questioning Cetindemir about his听citizenship status,听however, was well within CPB鈥檚 purview. A 1953 addendum to the听Immigration and Nationality Act听 Border Patrol officers to conduct immigration checks on 鈥渁ny railcar, aircraft, conveyance, or vehicle鈥澨齱ithin 100 air miles of the U.S. border, including oceans. , about two-thirds of the nation鈥檚 population lives within this geographic zone, thanks to the concentration of large coastal cities. Such听searches have been happening long before the recent immigration crackdown: a 2013 from the legal-aid organization Families for Freedom鈥攑art of New York University鈥檚 law school鈥攄etails hundreds of mistaken听arrests of immigrants with legal status resulting from CBP checks, including 12 U.S. citizens.听

Additionally, the legality of stripping someone of their DACA status is murky. While Haque notes that DACA is 鈥渄iscretionary鈥 and there is听technically no law听delineating听the reason听someone can have their DACA removed,听he points to a 2018 ruling by a federal court in California that set a precedent; it says that any decision to revoke DACA needs to be governed by the standards with which it was issued in the first place鈥攆or example, that the recipient maintains a clean criminal record. Cetindemir claims he disclosed his final removal order on his DACA application, meaning that once his status was granted by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, his deportation order should no longer have been an issue.听

Around the time Cetindemir was told he would be deported, the CBP gave him access to his phone. He began calling friends and started a on Reddit detailing his ordeal and asking for help. Soon a slew of people and organizations, from immigrants-rights groups to local journalists, rallied around him. 鈥淓veryone started making phone calls,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y cell was right by the front desk, and I could hear the phone ringing throughout the night. People were asking, 鈥榃here鈥檚 Ibra? Where is he going to go next?鈥 And I think that definitely helped.鈥

After spending the night at a CPB station in Malta, Cetindemir was transferred into ICE听custody听and brought to the Cascade County Jail in Great Falls,听Montana,听where he was put in an overcrowded cell.听鈥淚 think that was one of the scariest parts of the experience,鈥澨齢e says. 鈥淚 had never been to jail before, so I didn鈥檛 know what to expect.听The moment I walked through the door, I heard someone in the back yelling, 鈥楬ere comes some fresh ass.鈥 And I was like, Oh听man, I don鈥檛 know what this is.鈥 That night he slept on the floor about two feet from the toilets, but overall, he says, he didn鈥檛 mind the conditions. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all relative, right? I was just coming off Denali, sleeping in a tent in temperatures in the negatives.听For me, it wasn鈥檛 that bad, because I鈥檓 used to doing things that make me uncomfortable.鈥

His bigger concern听was losing his gear. 鈥淚 was traveling with four听different bags full of climbing and photography gear. Border Patrol听told me I was only allowed to take one 40-pound bag [when being transferred into ICE custody].That was honestly the most stressful thing. I worked really hard to buy all my climbing gear, I wasn鈥檛听going to lose it.鈥澨齏hile Cetindemir did not have access to his听bag while in custody, it would be all he鈥檇 be allowed to carry with him if deported. 鈥淚f I actually did get deported, I knew I would still be climbing somewhere and was going to need it. So I packed my 8,000-meter boots, my tent, all the relevant and most essential items I would need for climbing again.鈥澨

Finally, after about听40 hours in custody, Cetindemir鈥攁long with his听gear鈥攚as released. 鈥淭hey told me, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got a clean record, and we鈥檙e going to set you loose. Sorry for the inconvenience.鈥欌

Despite recent reports of misconduct by CPB and ICE agents, Centindemir notes that he was treated with kindness and respect by the individuals handling his case for the duration of his detention.听鈥淏oth CBP and ICE agents treated me well,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey acted professionally and responded to my questions. They provided me with food and water, and Iwas allowed to sort out my gear and repack my bag.鈥澨

Haque says there鈥檚 not a clear explanation as to听why听Cetindemir was held for as long as he was. 鈥淚f [they were trying to check on his immigration status] I don鈥檛 see why it couldn鈥檛 have been confirmed quicker, or why they were even trying to engage in that exercise.鈥澨

A CBP spokesperson sent 国产吃瓜黑料 the following statement: 鈥淥n Monday, June 24, 2019, Ibrahim Cetindemir was encountered during a transportation check on an Amtrak train and removed for processing.听Records indicated that he was previously ordered to be removed from the country and that he was not eligible for DACA relief. He was processed and turned over to ICE/ERO (Enforcement and Removal Operations)听for removal.听ICE/ERO checked additional systems and determined that Cetindemir was eligible for DACA status and was released from their custody.鈥

Cetindemir on Mount Rainier
Cetindemir on Mount Rainier (Ibrahim Cetindemir)

Despite his ordeal, Cetindemir says he won鈥檛 be deterred from doing the two things he loves听most: traveling and climbing. 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to be intimidated and don鈥檛 feel like I should be afraid. As long as my DACA is still valid, I should be able to travel freely within the country,鈥 he听says. 鈥淚鈥檓 still going to take the train again at some point. They won鈥檛 keep me from doing it.鈥澨齋till, Cetindemir admits that his immigration status has kept him from achieving his biggest ambitions. His dream was always to become part of an elite Rangers unit in the U.S. Army, but DACA recipients are ineligible for military service. And heimagines leading听expeditions up 8,000-meter Himalayan peaks, but if he travels outside the country, he won鈥檛 be allowed to reenter.听

鈥淚鈥檝e got a whole list of peaks I want to climb, but there really isn鈥檛 a way for us to change our status,鈥 Cetindemir says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e stuck in a legal limbo.鈥澨

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