Deportations of Southeast Asian Americans stress families and finances, advocates say

Jenny Srey and her husband, Ched Nin, were planning to grow their family in 2016.

But Nin, who immigrated to the U.S. in 1986 as a refugee from Cambodia, was not a U.S. citizen. A 2010 felony second-degree assault conviction for an incident involving a BB gun had made him eligible for deportation, and in 2016, he was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The detention kicked off an emotionally and financially taxing experience for the family, Srey recalled. She and her three children were anxious, Srey said, and she added that she was diagnosed with depression and insomnia. The family had to pay for therapy as well as thousands of dollars in legal fees.

“Just detention itself is expensive because we had to drive out to see him, we had to accept phone calls, we had to pay for attorneys,” Srey said. “We were trying to do all of that and at the same time maintain our home. It was hard. We had to do fundraisers and we had to ask our family for help just to be able to do all of that and keep our home.”