Latinx Tech Engineers Are Getting Caught Up in Deportation Drives

Carlos Martinez Baldenegro graduated top of his class in computer science yet suffered years of recruitment discrimination in the tech industry. Now he may be forced to leave the United States.

Jose Fermoso
OneZero

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Photo courtesy of the Martinez family

CCarlos Martinez Baldenegro was speeding south toward the Mexican border. It was August 7, 2019, and his 84-year-old grandmother had suffered a heart scare in Cananea in the Mexican border state of Sonora. He had dropped everything to head to Mexico so that he could see her before she died. It was a huge mistake.

Martinez is an undocumented immigrant, the child of economic migrants who came to the United States in the 1980s. He grew up and earned a master’s degree in computer science. As a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) designee, leaving the country would mean Martinez would legally abandon his rights to stay. But he didn’t know that. In previous years, he could’ve asked for an advance parole permit to cross under humanitarian grounds, but the Trump administration ended that option in 2017. He didn’t know that either.

Ten minutes after crossing into Mexico, Martinez stopped for gas at Nogales, a border city where more than a thousand refugee families…

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