“As a family we decided to apply for our passports,” he said. Even though I am an American citizen…I carry my passport with me everywhere I go.”
From KTEP:
EL PASO, Texas (KTEP) -On his first day in office, President Trump rescinded a longtime policy that limited immigration enforcement at hospitals, churches, schools and other “sensitive locations.”
The policy stems back to the early 1990s when a group of students and staff at Bowie High School sued the Border Patrol over allegations of racial profiling and won.
Decades later that hard-fought legal battle is in doubt as the Trump administration carries out a plan for mass deportations that includes using appearance or language to target suspects.
It brings back painful memories for Ernesto Muñoz, one of the Bowie High School students involved in the lawsuit. Border Patrol agents routinely stopped students near campus. “They would say things like ‘you match the description of someone we just witnessed crossing illegally and that is why we are stopping you,” Muñoz said.
The school sits on 60 acres less than a mile from the U.S. Mexico border in South Central El Paso.
“It wasn’t out of the ordinary to have Border Patrol vehicles come up from out of nowhere and drive up onto the curb,” Munoz said.
He and many students who lived in the area walked to school. More than 80 percent of El Paso residents are Mexican-American. “Agents would step out of the vehicle, round us up and have us stand against the vehicles. And, we would have our backpacks emptied out,” Muñoz said.
It happened so frequently in 1992 seven students and members of the faculty sued the Border Patrol over the alleged illegal stops, searches and arrests.
“A parade of witnesses, students, teachers, the coach, the principal’s secretary, all these people that described what had been done to them,” said Albert Armendariz Jr. is one of the attorneys representing the Bowie students and staff members.
Among the incidents: in the Spring of 1992, agents stopped four students on the way to school and took them to an immigration detention center. All were U.S. citizens or legal residents.
In October 1991, Border Patrol agents questioned the principal’s secretary on the way home. She was also a U.S. citizen, Armendariz said.
“They made her get out of the car. They searched her car. They searched her truck. They interrogated her and, they had absolutely no reason to stop her.That is completely unlawful,” he said.












