You mean to say we're still having an immigration crisis in America?
But the Democrats said it was no longer a problem.
Did they lie to us?!
A Mexican woman who sued the administrators of an immigration detention center in Houston, alleging that she was raped on the premises, dismissed the charges after confessing that she lied with the hope of obtaining a visa designed for victims of certain crimes.
The woman, named “Jane Doe” in court documents, filed a lawsuit in 2020 against CoreCivic Inc., the company contracted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement to run the Houston Processing Center, where she claimed the rape took place the night before she was deported two years earlier.
Based on the false allegations, she sought monetary relief for bogus injuries she claimed she suffered that CoreCivic and other defendants in the case failed to prevent. The woman said in the lawsuit, Jane Doe vs. CoreCivic, before the U.S. Southern District of Texas that she was sexually assaulted and impregnated in the Houston facility, where she was detained for two months.
The lawsuit was widely publicized by Jane Doe lawyers when it was filed last May.
The plaintiff said she was raped around midnight on the eve of her scheduled deportation June 1, 2018, in a dark room in the facility where guards placed her with two other female detainees.
However, a transcript of a phone interview with a Harris County Sheriff’s Office investigator and an ICE special agent shows the plaintiff confessing that she lied in order to get a visa to stay in the U.S.
In the interview, the agents informed the plaintiff that they found and interrogated the other two women, who said they were not raped and did not witness any sexual assault. The accuser, insisting that she was raped, then admitted it did not happen at the CoreCivic facility, as stated in the lawsuit.
She told the investigators the rape happened in Nuevo Laredo, on the Mexican side of the border with Texas, just after she was deported.
The plaintiff told the agents that she wanted to apply for a visa for victims after her deportation to come back legally to the U.S. She said some women in Nuevo Laredo recommended that she say she’d been raped to qualify.
LOS ANGELES, CA - JULY 14: A flag flies at the Metropolitan Detention Center prison as mass arrests by federal immigration authorities, as ordered by the Trump administration, were supposed to begin in major cities across the nation on July 14, 2019 in Los Angeles, California. The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was expected to be target hundreds of Angelenos for deportation, plus family members and others they encounter and suspect of being undocumented. The city of Los Angeles declared itself a sanctuary city to reflect its policy since the 1970s of not allowing police to help immigration officials because the city wants its immigrant populations to not be afraid to cooperate with police or call in crimes and emergencies. Elected officials and activists have continued to lash out against the raids. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)