From Fairmont Sentinel:
“US military veteran sues after
twice being denied a passport”
A Minnesota man and military
veteran whose request for a passport was denied twice is now asking a federal
court to intervene and declare that he is a U.S. citizen, according to a
lawsuit filed Thursday. The complaint, filed by the American Civil Liberties
Union of Minnesota, says the U.S. State Department has required information
from Mark Esqueda that is burdensome and goes beyond what is legally required.
Both of his passport applications were made during President Barack Obama’s
administration. Esqueda’s lawsuit says that he was born in the U.S. and is
entitled to rights of citizenship, including the right to travel freely across
U.S. borders. The suit names Secretary of State Michael Pompeo as a defendant. “To
have them question my citizenship is an insult,” Esqueda, 30, of Lake Huron,
said in a statement. “I was born here, raised here and served my country here.”
The State Department says it does not comment on pending litigation. According
to the complaint, Esqueda was born in Hidalgo, Texas, in 1988 and a midwife and
police officer were present during his birth. He spent most of his childhood in
Minnesota, served in the Marines from 2007 to 2011 and later served in the
National Guard. While in the Marines, he served in Iraq and Afghanistan and
held a military clearance level of “secret,” which the lawsuit says is given
only to U.S. citizens and required a thorough background check. Esqueda applied
for a passport in 2012 and included a copy of his birth certificate. The State
Department requested additional information, but Esqueda did not have it and
his application was denied, the lawsuit says. He spent the next several years
gathering more documentation and applied for a passport again in 2015. This
time, he also provided a signed report from the police officer who was at his
birth, documentation about his military security clearance and information
about government benefits his family received when he was a child. The
complaint says the State Department demanded more information, alleging the
midwife at Esqueda’s birth was unreliable. Esqueda then submitted five
affidavits from friends and family in Hidalgo, but his application was
ultimately denied in January 2017. The lawsuit says Esqueda is concerned that
questions about his citizenship will put his other rights in jeopardy. He’s
asking a judge to declare that he is a U.S. citizen and is entitled to a
passport.
^ This is overt discrimination on
the part of the US State Department. Mark
Esqueda has documentation from both an American police officer present at his
birth as well as the US Marines and the National Guard. The State Department
has become too obsessed with trying to find problems where there aren’t any
problems rather then seeing concreate facts placed in front of them. This trend
(started under Obama and still going
strong under Trump) needs to stop. Esqueda served our country and deserves to
be treated with respect and dignity and to finally have his case and his US Citizenship
resolved once and for all. ^
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