A mother of five from Milwaukee was deported to a country she has never visited after her lawyer made a shocking mistake.
Ma Yang, 37, was deported last month to Laos, despite not speaking Lao’s language and not having friends or family in the country, According to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The army now clings to their papers, and Yang has run out of insulin for their diabetes and an increasingly less and high supply of high blood pressure medicines, he said.
“The United States sent me back to die,” he said. ‘I don’t even know where to go. I don’t even know what to do.
Yang was born in a refugee camp in Thailand, daughter of Hmong refugees after the Vietnam War, TMJ 4 reports. Then they brought her to the United States when she was only eight months.
Since then it has become a permanent legal resident of the United States, but when it declared itself guilty of its role in a marijuana traffic operation in 2020, its permanent resident state was at risk.
Even so, she believed that she would be allowed to stay in the country, since she has generally refused to accept US deportees, with records that show that zero people were deported to the country in the last fiscal year.
But to his surprise, Yang was sent to a series of commercial flights from Chicago to Atlanta to South Korea and, ultimately, to last year.

Ma Yang, 37, was deported last month to Laos, despite not speaking the language of Lao and not having friends or family in the country.

Left behind his five children, whose ages vary from 22 to six years
When Laosiana de Votentiane arrived on March 6, Yang said she was interrogated by the military authorities, she was then sent to a room house, where the guards did not allow her to go or contact anyone for five days.
He spent his days walking in circles when the guards refused to let her leave or contact anyone for five days.
Then, recently, Yang was left to remove cash and buy a cell phone, which finally allows him to reach his 16 -year -old partner, Michael Bub, an American citizen.
At that moment, they told him that he could leave if he wanted to, but still, he says, he does not know where he would go.
‘How do I rent, or buy or anything without papers?’ She asked. ‘I am nobody at this time.’
Yang now struggles to obtain responses from Laos military officers about their life situation and what is supposed to do now.
Meanwhile, Bub, who has had two brain surgeries and is partially paralyzed, has been struggling to take care of his children as a single father.
He has not been sleeping, and pointed out that the last time he saw Yang was when he hastened the essential elements and money before his flight.

The family has been fighting for the responses of the Army of Laos
“I think I shouted in the car for half an hour,” he said.
His eldest daughter, Azia, at the age of 22, has also been forced to intervene to take care of her brothers, the youngest of which she is six years old.
The problems began shortly after the family moved to a house that prosecutors say it was part of a marijuana traffic operation.
Prosecutors have affirmed that Yang helped count and package cash that was sent by mail to marijuana suppliers in California, saying that they found cash bags recorded between magazine pages.
Yang finally took a guilt agreement and turned two and a half years in prison, claiming that his lawyer incorrectly told him that the guilt agreement would not affect its immigration status as head of the green card.
But his legal permanent residence was revoked.
After his sentence, Yang was transferred to an ice detention center in Minnesota, where by a lawyer, he signed a document that agreed that an order of deportation against him would be issued in exchange for being released from the arrest.
At that time, Yang said that he expected his second lawyer to open his criminal case again and that the conviction threw himself on the argument that he had a bad legal representation the first time.
If expelled, he reasoned, the deportation order would become irrelevant.
But the lawyer never fought the charges.
“I’m still screwed in this system,” he said.

His lifelong partner, Michael Bub, who has had two brain surgeries and is partially paralyzed, has been struggling to take care of his children as a single father.
In mid-February, Yang said he received a call from ICE asking him to go to his office in Milwaukee for a check-in.
It was then that she was arrested and sent to Indiana, said Yang.
Even so, someone told him that he would probably sit in jail for a few months, then release him, since he would probably not recover it.
But after only two weeks, she was sent to a retention installation in Chicago and then to the airport, where an officer forced her to put her digital footprints in a document that indicates that she would not return to the United States.
Now, Yang says that she feels betrayed by the United States, noting that Hmong soldiers recruited by the CIA helped the US army in the Vietnam War, then confronted persecution and violence for their role.
‘How did you send us back when we fight for you?’ He asked, rhetorically. ‘How okay?’