News (Media Awareness Project) - Brazil: Deported Orphan Dies In Homeland |
Title: | Brazil: Deported Orphan Dies In Homeland |
Published On: | 2004-05-30 |
Source: | San Jose Mercury News (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 08:46:20 |
DEPORTED ORPHAN DIES IN HOMELAND
Minor Drug Offender, Sent Back To Brazil, Slain Amid Desperate Plot To
Return To U.s.
CAMPINAS, Brazil - An Ohio man deported to Brazil four years ago for a
minor drug infraction was gunned down here by drug-dealing teens. Friends
say he had sought the teens' help to smuggle guns into Brazil and use the
proceeds to sneak back into the United States.
The case of Joao Herbert, 26, gained international attention in 2000, after
his adoptive parents' inability to obtain citizenship papers for him, along
with newly toughened immigration laws and Herbert's first-offense
conviction for selling marijuana forced his deportation.
Herbert left Brazil at age 8 and grew up in Wadsworth, Ohio. An orphan, he
had no family in Brazil and as an adult he spoke no Portuguese. Sending him
back there would be tantamount to "a death sentence," his adoptive mother,
Nancy Saunders, warned at the time.
In Brazil, Herbert settled into a small brick house in Campinas, an
industrial town 60 miles north of Sao Paolo. It's on the edge of Sao Pedro
de Viracopos, one of the city's more notorious slums.
Herbert taught English in Campinas and even opened a school, the English
University. He moved in with one of his pupils, Paula Alexandre, 30. They
had a daughter in November.
Herbert's life came apart early this year just months after his baby
daughter, Nayrah, was born. He separated from his common-law wife, closed
the school and was using drugs, friends said. He also concocted a desperate
plan to sneak back into the United States and live under a new identity.
Herbert's idea was to purchase submachine guns in neighboring Paraguay, and
smuggle them back into Brazil.
Herbert planned to use the profits to cross into the United States
illegally and start a new life.
Tuesday, Herbert and some friends prepared for a barbecue and planned to
watch the Brazilian national soccer team play a televised exhibition match.
Three teenagers from the neighboring slum knocked on his door around 1:30
p.m. Friends say they warned Herbert that the kids were trouble.
The youths had been driving with Herbert two weeks earlier when police
stopped them, found two guns and confiscated the car. The teens now wanted
Herbert to repay them for the guns' loss. He had bought marijuana from the
teens, Herbert's friends said, and intended to use them to take his
weapons-buying plan to drug traffickers.
Herbert, trying to settle matters with the teens, walked off with them.
Once they had turned the corner, shots rang out. Someone shot him four
times in the head and chest. Bleeding profusely, Herbert staggered about 50
yards toward his one-story home and fell face-up onto red clay with his
eyes wide open.
"I believe he came to Brazil to die," said Alexandre.
Minor Drug Offender, Sent Back To Brazil, Slain Amid Desperate Plot To
Return To U.s.
CAMPINAS, Brazil - An Ohio man deported to Brazil four years ago for a
minor drug infraction was gunned down here by drug-dealing teens. Friends
say he had sought the teens' help to smuggle guns into Brazil and use the
proceeds to sneak back into the United States.
The case of Joao Herbert, 26, gained international attention in 2000, after
his adoptive parents' inability to obtain citizenship papers for him, along
with newly toughened immigration laws and Herbert's first-offense
conviction for selling marijuana forced his deportation.
Herbert left Brazil at age 8 and grew up in Wadsworth, Ohio. An orphan, he
had no family in Brazil and as an adult he spoke no Portuguese. Sending him
back there would be tantamount to "a death sentence," his adoptive mother,
Nancy Saunders, warned at the time.
In Brazil, Herbert settled into a small brick house in Campinas, an
industrial town 60 miles north of Sao Paolo. It's on the edge of Sao Pedro
de Viracopos, one of the city's more notorious slums.
Herbert taught English in Campinas and even opened a school, the English
University. He moved in with one of his pupils, Paula Alexandre, 30. They
had a daughter in November.
Herbert's life came apart early this year just months after his baby
daughter, Nayrah, was born. He separated from his common-law wife, closed
the school and was using drugs, friends said. He also concocted a desperate
plan to sneak back into the United States and live under a new identity.
Herbert's idea was to purchase submachine guns in neighboring Paraguay, and
smuggle them back into Brazil.
Herbert planned to use the profits to cross into the United States
illegally and start a new life.
Tuesday, Herbert and some friends prepared for a barbecue and planned to
watch the Brazilian national soccer team play a televised exhibition match.
Three teenagers from the neighboring slum knocked on his door around 1:30
p.m. Friends say they warned Herbert that the kids were trouble.
The youths had been driving with Herbert two weeks earlier when police
stopped them, found two guns and confiscated the car. The teens now wanted
Herbert to repay them for the guns' loss. He had bought marijuana from the
teens, Herbert's friends said, and intended to use them to take his
weapons-buying plan to drug traffickers.
Herbert, trying to settle matters with the teens, walked off with them.
Once they had turned the corner, shots rang out. Someone shot him four
times in the head and chest. Bleeding profusely, Herbert staggered about 50
yards toward his one-story home and fell face-up onto red clay with his
eyes wide open.
"I believe he came to Brazil to die," said Alexandre.
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