Jorge Vargas Perez spends all day buried in legal cases when he's allowed to visit the law library in the Faribault state prison. He sifts through about 40 books that cover topics like child support and criminal procedures.
He hopes to become a paralegal and tackle his own case — as a non-U.S. citizen who for that reason doesn't qualify for several prison programs offered by Minnesota.
"Once you are faced with literally the possibility of losing all that you know, all that you love, and the place you call home, you get moving," he wrote from prison in an email to Sahan Journal. "Either that, or you lose yourself to drugs and other trivial prison endeavors. I chose the former."
Vargas Perez, 35, of Woodbury, holds a green card as a legal permanent U.S. resident. But because he's not a citizen, Minnesota has denied him prison programming and benefits granted to other inmates. He wasn't eligible for work release or supervised release after serving two-thirds of his prison sentence, and couldn't enroll in a drug rehabilitation program.
A probation violation landed Vargas Perez in prison in 2021. Within the first few weeks, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) served him with an immigration detainer, which asks local law enforcement officers to notify immigration agents before a non-citizen is released.
Advocates say immigration-related limitations placed on more than 200 Minnesota inmates who are legal residents but not U.S. citizens, or immigrants who don't have legal status, hinder them from improving themselves through rehabilitation or work programming.
"They're not eligible for any sort of work release programs. This is where it becomes more punitive," said Linus Chan, an immigration attorney and director of the Detainee Rights Clinic at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Unlike most inmates in Minnesota, those with an immigration detainer aren't eligible to spend the last third of their sentence on supervised release. Any sentence exceeding a year is considered an aggravated felony by ICE, and can make an inmate eligible for deportation.