ICE Detains Soldier’s Honduran‑Born Wife on Fort Polk as Trump Ends Leniency for Military Families
The Associated Press reports that U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Matthew Blank’s 22‑year‑old wife, Annie Ramos, was detained by immigration agents last Thursday inside Fort Polk, Louisiana, just days after their March wedding, as the couple began paperwork for her military benefits and a green card. DHS says Ramos, who was brought from Honduras to the U.S. as a toddler in 2005, has a long‑standing in‑absentia removal order from that year and "has no legal status," defending the arrest as enforcing the rule of law under the Trump administration’s mass deportation push. Ramos applied for DACA in 2020, but her husband says the application has been stuck "in limbo" amid ongoing legal attacks on the program, leaving her exposed when she tried to regularize her status through his service. Immigration‑law expert and retired Army officer Margaret Stock says that before recent policy changes, Ramos’s case would have been straightforward to resolve through tools like parole in place or deferred action, but DHS in April 2025 scrapped guidance that treated a service member in the family as a significant mitigating factor and now states that "military service alone does not exempt" relatives from enforcement. Military family advocates and more than 60 members of Congress have warned that arrests of troops’ spouses and relatives are demoralizing during wartime and could undercut recruitment and readiness, even as DHS appears increasingly willing to pick up family members at bases and military installations when they come forward to seek legal status.
📌 Key Facts
- Staff Sgt. Matthew Blank, 23, brought his wife Annie Ramos, 22, to Fort Polk on Thursday so she could start benefits and green‑card steps; ICE detained her on base and she remains in federal immigration detention.
- DHS says Ramos entered the U.S. from Honduras in 2005 as a small child, missed an immigration hearing that year, and has been under a final removal order ever since; it states she has "no legal status" and that the administration will not "ignore the rule of law."
- Ramos applied for DACA in 2020 but her case has not been resolved amid litigation over the Obama‑era program, leaving her vulnerable when she tried to legalize through marriage.
- In April 2025 DHS revoked a 2022 policy that treated military service of an immediate family member as a "significant mitigating factor" in deportation decisions and now says military ties alone do not shield anyone from consequences of immigration violations.
- Advocates like the Foreign‑Born Military Spouse Network and experts such as Margaret Stock say DHS once routinely used parole in place and deferred action to protect troops’ spouses, and warn that current arrests of military family members are "bad for morale" and could damage recruitment and readiness in wartime.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2024, Black service members comprised 21.4% of active-duty Army personnel, totaling 95,149 troops, compared to approximately 13.6% of the U.S. population being Black.
How many people are in the US military? — USA Facts
As of 2023, there are approximately 820 individuals who are DACA recipients either currently serving in the U.S. military or who have signed contracts to serve.
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA) Recipients in the Military — USCIS
Key drivers of migration from Honduras to the U.S. include violence, with at least 247,000 Hondurans internally displaced by violence as of recent estimates, as well as climate-related events such as prolonged droughts and hurricanes contributing to emigration.
Central American Migration: Root Causes and U.S. Policy — Congressional Research Service
In 2022, among foreign-born individuals in the U.S. military, 30% identified as Asian and/or Pacific Islander, 24% as other racial or ethnic groups, reflecting diversity in the immigrant military population.
Bright and Blurred Boundaries in the US Military: Experiences of Non-Citizen Service Members and Veterans — Springer Link
Immigration policies that reduce protections for military families, such as revoking leniency, are reported to harm military recruiting and readiness, with experts noting that benefits like family protection were key to expanding ranks.
What to know about deporting family members of US troops — WTOP
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