Pubdate: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2007 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/letters/ Website: http://www.sptimes.com/home.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: David Adams, Times Latin America Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) I'M NOT A CRIMINAL. I'M JUST A DISHWASHER A Man Tries to Return to Guatemala, But the $59,000 He Saved Working Here Is Confiscated MIAMI - After nine years of washing dishes illegally in South Florida, Pedro Zapeta decided his work here was done. He packed what little he had in the way of clothes and then filled his duffel with stacks of neatly rubber-banded cash. In all, $59,000, every penny he had saved. It was time to go home to Guatemala and build the home for the family he hadn't seen in more than a decade. He got as far as the airport. A security screener noticed the bricks of cash. What happened next was inevitable. The bag was opened. The cash was seized. Zapeta missed his flight. That was two years ago. Since then Zapeta has been stuck in legal limbo. The government is trying to deport him, but he doesn't want to leave without the money he worked so hard for. "It's ironic," says his attorney, Robert Gershman. "He was on his way out. The money was his exit." Even in the labyrinthine world of immigration law, Zapeta's case is unusual, experts say. Few illegal immigrants choose to return home permanently, instead hoping to avoid detection and stay long enough to win a resident green card. And while many illegal immigrants save assiduously, most choose to send their money home these days through wire transfers, or cash remittances. But Zapeta, 39, who doesn't have much of an education, sent no money back to Guatemala over the years. No Bank Account He didn't have a bank account. Because he had obtained false papers, he was scared he would lose his money if he opened an account that didn't bear his real name. He kept his savings by his bed in a house he shared in Stuart. He dreamed of building a house for his mother and four sisters, and maybe opening a store in his village, Totonicapan, about three hours from the Guatemalan capital. In late summer 2005, having avoided detection by immigration authorities, he bought a one-way airline ticket and headed for Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. "He puts the bag on the conveyor belt and when it went through the X-ray machine they see all the money in rubber bands," Gershman said. Customs officers confiscated the money, citing a law requiring anyone entering or leaving the country with more than $10,000 to declare the money to U.S. Customs. Zapeta wasn't arrested. Instead, he was given a receipt for his money, and allowed to go back to Stuart. "They arrested the money," Gershman said. "My client hasn't been charged with any crime." Zapeta says he had no idea he was violating the law. "In the court they said it was my fault. I don't think so," he said. "It was ignorance. It just seemed like a minor accident to me." For the past two years Zapeta has been fighting deportation proceedings in immigration court. At the same time he began civil proceedings to get his money back. Officials initially accused Zapeta of being a courier for the drug trade, but they dropped the allegation once he produced pay stubs from restaurants where he had worked, earning $5.50 an hour. U.S. officials say they cannot discuss ongoing court cases. Zapeta admits he entered the country illegally in 1996, across the Texas border. He also admits he bought a fake Social Security number for $25. But he doesn't believe his crime deserves such harsh punishment. "I'm not a criminal. I'm just a dishwasher," he said. "I haven't been home for 11 years. I want to build a house for my mother and start a business." Immigration advocates say despite Zapeta's illegal actions, his case cries out for compassion. After Zapeta's story ran on CNN and in the Palm Beach Post, well-wishers gave him nearly $10,000. That money sits in a trust. Taxes Deducted At first a judge ruled that Zapeta must forfeit the entire amount for the currency reporting violation. Prosecutors noted Zapeta never filed income taxes while in the country. Zapeta's lawyer countered that his pay stubs showed taxes had been deducted. In January, U.S. District Judge James Cohn revised that ruling, saying Zapeta could keep $10,000, the amount anyone is legally allowed to carry without filing a report. But Zapeta says he can't accept the ruling and has appealed it. His attorney complains the government appears more interested in Zapeta's money than doing justice. Had criminal charges been filed, Zapeta would have faced a maximum $5,000 fine. But the civil currency violation carries a maximum $250,000 fine, allowing the government to seize a greater amount. Zapeta is currently working legally. He was granted a work permit while his immigration case was being heard. So he's back at the restaurant, earning his $5.50 per hour. But time is running out. An immigration judge recently ruled Zapeta must leave the country by the end of January, or face forced removal. "I'm more than happy to go home, but not without my money," Zapeta says. "I'll go back to Guatemala tomorrow if they give it back to me. It's all I have." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake