79-Year-Old World War II Refugee Remains in ICE Custody After Living in the U.S. for Over 70 Years
Born to Polish parents in a German refugee camp, Paul John Bojerski’s immigration case highlights the complexities and impracticalities of mass deportations.
In October, Paul John Bojerski, a 79-year-old grandfather who has been in the United States since he was five, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for not complying with a deportation order that was issued nearly 60 years ago. On Tuesday, a judge ordered Bojerski to remain in ICE detention as she considers the complications of the case.
Over the summer, Bojerski was told during a routine meeting with immigration officials that he must self-deport or face detention based on an unenforced deportation order issued in 1968, the Orlando Sentinel recently reported. But with no passport or country to return to, David Stoller, Bojerski's immigration attorney, says Bojerski has nowhere to go.
"There are situations where it is just impracticable to try and deport them," Stoller told WESH 2 News, a local NBC News affiliate.
Bojerski, whose birth name is Zbigniew Janusz Bojerski, was born to Polish parents in a German refugee camp in 1946 following World War II and has been in the U.S. since his parents legally immigrated in 1952, according to the Sentinel. Although he was admitted as a lawful permanent resident under the Displaced Persons Act of 1948, Bojerski never became a citizen. Following a conviction for larceny and receiving stolen goods in his early 20s, Bojerski was ordered to be deported, reports the Sentinel.
However, attempts to deport Bojerski failed after Poland and West Germany refused to take him. And in 1969, the year following his deportation order, a court issued another order allowing Bojerski to be released from custody and apply for employment authorization, according to Stoller.
After his release, Bojerski ran into legal trouble again and was convicted of rape in 1972. Bojerski's wife of 37 years, Gayle Bojerski, told the Sentinel that the conviction stemmed from a fraternity party incident involving multiple students. Although Bojerski was convicted and served three years in prison, he maintains that he was not involved in the incident. After his release, Bojerski would go on to complete school and become an optician, according to the Sentinel, which ultimately led him to move to Florida, where he met his wife and worked until his retirement.
Bojerski later applied for permanent residency through his wife, arguing that he was eligible because the 1968 deportation order had been fulfilled, and cited multiple trips out of the country where he had been able to reenter without issue or questioning by immigration officials. But the court did not rule the deportation order fulfilled—and therefore invalid—and denied his application for permanent residency. Instead, the court issued a new supervision order in 2010.
After 15 years of compliance under the most recent supervision order, Bojerski was taken into ICE custody during his follow-up immigration meeting on October 30. Since being detained, Bojerski—who's undergone three back surgeries—has been in declining health. According to his wife, Bojerski is unable to take his regular medications and is now in a wheelchair. Last week, Bojerski was left on the floor for hours and suffered a minor concussion after facility staff were locked out and unable to help after he fell from his chair while sleeping.
During his bond hearing on Tuesday, Judge Romy Lerner said she had "concerns" about detaining Bojerski given his age and health, according to the Sentinel. But for now, Lerner has postponed making a determination on whether he could be released on bond, given the case's complications. "Unfortunately," Lerner said during the hearing, "no matter what I decide, the government may appeal my decision, which may involve you remaining in detention even if I were to grant the bond." The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) lawyer confirmed that she would appeal a decision to grant Bojerski bond—despite agreeing that he is not a flight risk—and will issue a new deportation order to deport him to a third country if Lerner rules the 1968 deportation order invalid, reports the Sentinel.
Bojerski's immigration case highlights the complexities and impracticalities facing the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign. Despite the DHS regularly boasting about arresting the "worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens," to fulfill the promise to "Make America Safe Again," 65 percent of people detained by immigration officials have no criminal record. And 95 percent have no violent convictions. But even those who do have a felony conviction may not all be violent criminals currently reflected in today's crime statistics. Some are people, like Bojerski, who've rebuilt their lives after paying their debt to society, and who are doing their best to follow immigration law through its many forms and iterations.
*CORRECTION: This article originally misstated the nature of the West German government in 1968.
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So, we need an old convicted rapist to stay here. Got it.
Never change, Autumn.
You know this story is fiction as autumn has told us Trump is targeting only brown people
Neither she nor Little Emma have the slightest bit of credibility.
I'm convinced Autumn does these stories to drive clicks. This guy has had 60yrs to try to be a US citizen and didn't. I'm thinking there is a little more to the story we are not being informed of
Autumn Billings is ignorant and not very observant for an assistant editor.
West Germany has never been under communist rule.
If West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and his Christian Democratic Union weren't godless commies then I don't know who would be.
West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
Wasn't Joe Biden just talking to that guy recently?
Yes, I think Otto Von Bismarck, an old friend of Biden’s, was also present.
I saw the same thing. That was almost certainly supposed to be East Germany - which would make sense given the polish border shifts that occurred as a result of the war.
It is now.
I give it 50/50 that Autumn thinks "The sun never sets on the British Empire" is because it's East of us.
Bonn appétit.
Convicted of rape.
Repeat offender.
Buh-bye.
But he's an old man with back problems!
Can't do the pelvic thrusts he used to. He's safe now.
You know guys, I can't even... Literally putting the rape in rapefugee.
Following a conviction for larceny and receiving stolen goods in his early 20s, Bojerski was ordered to be deported...
However, attempts to deport Bojerski failed after Poland and West Germany... refused to take him...
After his release, Bojerski ran into legal trouble again and was convicted of rape in 1972...
Bojerski was convicted and served three years in prison...
Bojerski later applied for permanent residency through his wife, arguing that he was eligible because the 1968 deportation order had been fulfilled, and cited multiple trips out of the country where he had been able to reenter without issue or questioning by immigration officials. But the court did not rule the deportation order fulfilled—and therefore invalid—and denied his application for permanent residency...
the court issued a new supervision order in 2010...
Is this a joke? I really need to hear the SarcJeff defence for this one.
The rape didn’t last long and he felt bad about it afterwards.
"Lie down, close your eyes and think of the Cato Institute."
But the deportation lasted decades.
He couldn't get it up and complete the deal so it wasn't a real rape. No one complained because she was asking for it and who dresses like that anyways if they didn't want it.
The US funded West Germany and now essentially keeps it safe from a phantom Russian invasion. Take him back or lose the protection.
Autumn reduces rape to "legal trouble". I bet the girl asked for it by wearing a short skirt. Good to know rape isn't that serious and can be brushed off.
Lost me at "convicted of rape."
Reason really picks the worst examples for these tearjerker open borders articles.
How can there be a 79 year old refugee from a war that ended 80 years ago?
Proof time travel is real!
WWII adjacent. Close enough for union work.
Hah. Temporary means decades. Haven't you been following TPS?
Worse, how was West Germany under communist rule in 1968 when he was ordered deported?
The Left: "WHY AREN'T THEY DEPORTING OLD WHITE PEOPLE??"
Also The Left: "WHY ARE THEY DEPORTING OLD WHITE PEOPLE??"
A convicted rapist and thief who ignored deportation orders and acted with impunity his whole life -- that's who you want protected? Where is MeToo on this?
Did you copy this story from the Babylon Bee, because it is unreal?
The thing that amazes me is, if a career criminal is the best poster boy they can come up with, just exactly how careful ARE the ICE being? Pretty darned careful.
Or, of course, Billings is just totally blind to the optics of objecting to deporting a career criminal. I guess that's probably more likely.
Open borders at any cost!
Why are these sob stories always convicted rapists? And why is that fact always buried in the articles?
It's almost as if the people writing the sob stories understand that they can't win an honest argument.
Open borders at any cost!
I have to agree. With so many people, you'd think you'd have a million random Joes who just kept their head down and worked in a factory for 30 years. But the articles are almost always about someone for whom there is a serious, genuine reason. Either they have a criminal record a mile long, ignored multiple deportation orders going back decades, or both.
Because if the story headline was "Convicted rapist refuses deportation order to get free medical care" no one would read it.
...was convicted of rape...
A rapist you say?
Man, you assholes sure can pick 'em.
Autumn is PWNED
Indeed.
I say Burundi. Can we deport him to Burundi?
How about Afghanistan. They know how to deal with a rapist.
65 percent of people detained by immigration officials have no criminal record. And 95 percent have no violent convictions.
At a glance, this seems impossible to reconcile with "(illegal?) immigrants commit crime at the same rate as natives" unless, in fact, DHS is putting forth a pretty good faith effort at going after the worst.
And, from a libertarian perspective; LOL@"95% aren't violent". All property crimes, scamming people, and selling sketchy pharmaceuticals! Yay!
They are counting only convictions. A large number have been charged for crimes but deportation process started before trial.
It is a trick CATO turned to for retards to buy and repeat.
They also ignore the percent with final deportation orders which is over 60%.
I love seeing "libertarians" not caring much about property crimes.
Because, lord knows, the entire concept of libertarianism is based, very heavily, on respected property rights.
LOL. Reason really knows how to pick the best examples.
During his bond hearing on Tuesday, Judge Romy Lerner said she had "concerns" about detaining Bojerski given his age and health, according to the Sentinel. But for now, Lerner has postponed making a determination on whether he could be released on bond, given the case's complications. "Unfortunately," Lerner said during the hearing, "no matter what I decide, the government may appeal my decision, which may involve you remaining in detention even if I were to grant the bond." The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) lawyer confirmed that she would appeal a decision to grant Bojerski bond—despite agreeing that he is not a flight risk—and will issue a new deportation order to deport him to a third country if Lerner rules the 1968 deportation order invalid, reports the Sentinel.
TRANSLATION: the judge feels bad for the poor old man who has defied a deportation order for decades and is a convicted rapist, but knows that trying to reward him for his lawlessness would be futile.
Wow, this is low even for you Reason.
Autumn is an editor at Teen Reason - Feelingz magazine.
"Bojerski's immigration case highlights the complexities and impracticalities facing the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign."
It does nothing of the sort, and you know it, and thus you're a liar.
Autumn, you keep finding the worst examples.
There are no complexities here and the only difficulty is the other countries refused to accept a convicted thief and rapist.
The guy can go. I don't care if he has to spend the rest of his life in an internment camp either because Germany or Poland - or, now that we can deport to willing third countries, another country - aren't willing to accept a rapist and a thief.
>jerski bond—despite agreeing that he is not a flight risk
The only reason to grant the guy bond is if *he was a flight risk* - if he flees to another country, good!
>65 percent of people detained by immigration officials have no criminal record. And 95 percent have no violent convictions.
And yet you highlight by using *this guy* as an example?
95% have no violent convictions - but you are using a convicted RAPIST? You know, a violent conviction?
Autumn does not view rape as violent. Just a different fetish thing, most likely.
>West Germany—both under communist rule at the time—refused to take him
This is just . . . hilarious.
Autumn, honey, it was called *WEST* Germany because it wasn't *EAST* Germany. You know, the Germany that was under communist rule? Which West Germany was famously not. Ever.
Even if we're going to say that what becomes West Germany was under communist control until the post-war agreements - that was long settled by 1968.
The sleight of hand logic on ICE deportation is something you expect out of MSNBC, I mean MS Now.
Let's say ICE deported 5,000 people. 5% of that is 250. If you told someone in country X that his government let in 250 violent criminal foreigners (rapists, killers, traffickers), they would be outraged. That the figure represents "only" 5% of all illegals would be a moot point. You're not going to spare 95% of nonviolent illegals at the cost of hundreds of untrackable criminals roaming around in your country.
35% of 5,000 is 1750. Now tell someone that there are that many illegals in this country who stole money, stole identities, committed fraud, and destroyed properties. "Oh but that's nonviolent crimes" Again, ineffective.
The correct way to look at this is that 40% of all ICE detainees are criminals of varying degree. 40%. Less than 1% of blacks commit violent crimes, and they're the most violent demographic. If 5% of illegals commit violent crimes, that effectively gives them the crown. And they're not supposed to be in the country.
You can make an argument that this person deserves mercy because he was stuck in a gray zone. I won't begrudge a judge sparing a 79 year illegal who served his time. But the problem is, Reason wants this to be the norm. They see nothing wrong with a government just throwing their hands up in the air and not following up on deportation they issued on criminals. The Maryland Man stayed in this country for DECADES after the court deemed him as a gang member and deportable. Can any American citizen get away that long for not paying taxes to IRS?
It is the textbook definition of government picking "winners and losers". It's like saying someone deserves to squat in my house if they work for cheap at a farm. It is not how a civil society operates. We can all try to ignore it and until something truly AWFUL happens. And at that point, the borders might be finally closed. And trust me, there are no shortages of people in this country to who hates America and would kill many of us.
After his release, Bojerski ran into legal trouble again and was convicted of rape in 1972.
Reason always finds the most sympathetic cases.
Bojerski—who's undergone three back surgeries—has been in declining health. According to his wife, Bojerski is unable to take his regular medications and is now in a wheelchair.
ENTER THE PANDERVERSE!
the complexities and impracticalities
It's really not all that complex or impractical. You're just trying to make it seem that way. Confusing and muddling reality is the only way to make your narrative work.
Your articles are like a child being given a jar of red paint and a jar of blue paint and being asked to tell which is which. You then have a little (or a large) tantrum, hurl both jars at the wall to create a purple stain, and scream "I CAN'T TELL!!!"
Well, yea, you could have. If you weren't such a petulant brat.
Altruist Totalitarianism makes everything sooo simple. Everyone EXCEPT God's Own Trump and his buddy Epstein are pederasts. Q.E.D.
The reason you overcomplicate things is to try and obfuscate lies you weave within them.
Because your goal, like Autumn's, isn't reality. It's narrative.
Fire Ms. Billings
“ However, attempts to deport Bojerski failed after Poland and West Germany—both under communist rule at the time”
West Germany has never been under communist rule!
This little one assumes that christian National Socialism "wasn't really" communism because they loved Jesus.
What a poster boy. The best they can find.
Convicted of rape. C'mon.
Like every prisoner, he was innocent!
To be fair, exceptions like these should just be thrown out by judge. The guy has been a peaceful resident for decades after serving his time, with no practical way to exile him. Move on to a real case.
Looking at the MAGAt comments before logging in and muting them makes it unsurprising. You realize MAGAts believe that forcing women to die in unwanted childbirth is simply part of the rape act from which they struggle to distance themselves while encoraging it.
More women in first-world society these days die trying to kill their babies than they do in physician-assisted childbirth.
I hate to say something as pedestrian as "karma" - but, I mean, that's the term.
Trying to couch simping for a larcenous rapist as a bold defense of human liberty is why I stopped giving to Reason.
No, no!
Keep sending $5. It's like leaving a $1 tip; they know you recognize them as the shits they are.
Autumn Billings is a TDS-addled lying pile of steaming shit who should fuck off and die.
We're supposed to feel sorry that nobody wants a thievin' rapist.
Yawn.
The point that deportations can be impractical or violate rights is one thing. But criticizing deporting illegal rapists who also committed petty crimes just because they have been here a long time is not going to be a winning argument.