By DENISE LAVOIE
FILE – In this Nov. 17, 2011 file photo, Onyango Obama, uncle of President Barack Obama, leaves Framingham, Mass., District Court, after a hearing on an August drunk driving charge. Obama, the 69-year-old half brother of the president’s late father, faces a deportation hearing Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013, in Boston. He has lived in the United States since the 1960s. He was ordered to leave the country in 1992, but remained. (AP Photo/MetroWest Daily News, Ken McGagh, File) MANDATORY CREDIT
BOSTON (AP) — President Barack Obama’s Kenyan-born uncle was expected to appear at a deportation hearing to argue that he should be allowed to stay in the United States despite a 21-year-old order to leave the country.
Onyango Obama, the 69-year-old half brother of the president’s late father, had a hearing scheduled Tuesday in U.S. Immigration Court in Boston.
He has lived in the United States since the 1960s, when he came here as a teenager to attend school. Obama, a liquor store manager, was ordered to leave the country in 1992, but remained.
His immigration status did not become public until his arrest for drunken driving in 2011 in Framingham, just west of Boston. After his arrest, he allegedly told police, “I think I will call the White House.”
Earlier this year, the Board of Immigration Appeals sent the case to the Executive Office for Immigration Review for reassessment.
Margaret Wong, Obama’s Cleveland-based immigration attorney, called him a “wonderful older gentleman.”
“He has earned his privilege to stay in the United States. He has been here for 50 years,” she said Tuesday before the hearing.
The White House has said it expects the case to be handled like any other immigration case.
In the drunken driving case, Obama admitted to sufficient facts, meaning he did not plead guilty but acknowledged prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him. A judge continued the case for one year without a finding, saying the charge would be dismissed if Obama did not get arrested again during that time. Wong said Obama has successfully completed that program.
In the president’s memoir, “Dreams from My Father,” he writes about his 1988 trip to Kenya and refers to an Uncle Omar, who matches Onyango Obama’s background and has the same date of birth.
He is the second Obama family member to be found living illegally in the United States. His sister, Zeituni Onyango, the president’s aunt, made headlines when she was granted asylum in 2010 after her first asylum request in 2002 was rejected and she was ordered deported in 2004.
She did not leave the country and continued to live in public housing in Boston. Her status was revealed just days before Obama was elected in November 2008. At the time, then-candidate Obama said he did not know his aunt was living here illegally and that he believes laws covering the situation should be followed.