he can go back to the states he just needs a valid passport and he might not need
the citizenship
The child is an American citizen if the child was born on American soil. The child should be able to stay in the US with the father. Unless the mother takes the child with her. There could be a custody dispute between the mother and father, it should be what is best for the child.
If you are a citizen then you shouldn't be deported, but with the Homeland security laws that were passed after 9-11 that may no longer be true. I do know that Bush made the claim that all citizens were "enemy combatant's" and that our civil rights could be taken from us with a charge like that. All they had to do is pick us up, stuff us in a van, and we would be taken into some black hole or room. This did happen to people. So, it is possible that you could be deported. I don't know if Obama has lifted some of the Bush things concerning this matter.
Once you are officially married to an American citizen, you can not be deported from the country, unless you engage in a criminal offense.
If they're lucky. Otherwise, they'll get a neat vacation at government expense at the Greybar Hotel. Deportation can NOT happen to a citizen, only an alien.
They will be deported
Battle off Barbados happened on 1778-03-07.
If you are in the country illegally you will most likely get deported.
You need to apply yourself but using them as character witnesses can help. You need to prove something horrible will happen to you if deported.
Once you have citizenship within the United States, you are not going to be deported. If something were to happen or say your Visa ran out (if that is what you are on), you could be deported back to your home country.
The same thing that would happen to a citizen, the person will be taken into custody by authorities and jailed in a local and/or state and/or federal facility. The difference between the citizen and the immigrant obviously would be that after the unlawfully present immigrant has served the imposed sentence(s) he or she will be deported and permanently barred from entering the U.S.
Any child born on U.S. soil is a natural citizen of the U.S. The mother/father does not attain citizenship merely because of the birth. If they were illegally in the U.S. at the time of the birth, they are still considered "Illegal" and are subject to deportation.AnswerIf the child is born in America, he or she is legally an American citizen. If the parent is deported, the child has to have a financial sponsor. AnswerThen, That American-born child can file immigration papers for his/her parents when he/she is 21 years old. It is a long wait, but right now it seems that it's the only way for the parents to become legal immigrants.
They could be placed in the custody of relatives who are legal US residents or made "wards of the court" and placed in a foster or group home in the state where they now reside.