The teens claimed CBP targeted them because they hadn’t booked hotels for their entire stay in Hawaii.

“They found it suspicious that we hadn’t fully booked our accommodations for the entire five weeks in Hawaii,” Pohl said. “We wanted to travel spontaneously. Just like we had done in Thailand and New Zealand.”

  • Thoralf Will
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    1641 month ago

    I don’t get it. Why would anyone still travel to the US without being forced to?

    • @Infernal_pizza@lemm.ee
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      1001 month ago

      There’s a significant amount of the US population who still don’t realise how bad things are, you really expect everyone outside the US to be any better?

      • @Ledericas@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        tariffs hasnt hit the shelves yet for most people, so they are still ignorant to the situation. also they dont think rfk jrs, autism database will affect them yet.

    • RejZoR
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      431 month ago

      I wouldn’t go to USA even if you pay me. To be “mistakenly” deported to El Salvador and then they fucking “don’t know” how to get you out. Fuck no.

      I used to say this about 3rd world countries to avoid them, now USA is on that list. Imagine USA being that bad. Well, it is that bad now. When it was under Biden, I wouldn’t even think about it. With this orange baboon, no fucking chance you see me go to USA.

      • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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        121 month ago

        Even before, having to be treated like cattle in their border checks for hours? No thank you.

    • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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      161 month ago

      Read the article - they clearly don’t read the news, and had no idea that other Germans had already been detained.

  • @Absaroka@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Both say they were handcuffed and sent to a detention center, which they claimed was more like a prison.

    “We were searched with metal detectors, our entire bodies were scanned, and we had to stand naked in front of the police officers and were looked through,” Pohl said. “Then we were given green prison clothes and put in a prison cell with serious criminals.”

    Among them was someone who had spent 18 years behind bars for murder, the women said, and they were left sleeping in a double cell with tiny barred windows and metal bunks with moldy mattresses.

    I really want to know what changed that made the above happen much more often.

    In December, if Customs had concerns about two teenagers trying to sneak into the US to work on a travel visa, where did they go? How was it handled? Because it feels like overkill and probably much more expensive than what we used to do.

    Why are we sending backpacking teenagers with visa concerns to the same place as a murderer?

    Why are they being strip searched like they were drug smugglers?

    But the women — who were planning to continue on to Los Angeles and then Costa Rica after Hawaii — insisted they were interrogated by CBP for hours, and that transcripts show their words were “twisted” and outright falsified.

    “They contained sentences we didn’t actually say,” Pohl said of interrogation transcripts they were sent home with.

    “They twisted it to make it seem as if we admitted that we wanted to work illegally in the US,” she told the German outlet Ostee Zeitung.

    And then this feels like the after-the-fact coverup. Whatever they held them on was super flimsy, so they tried to make it sound worse when they realized this was going to hit the news.

    • @Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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      51 month ago

      Per that last bit, I’m guessing they never had a lawyer present. Would make any of those fabricated statements null and void, if the constitution meant anything.

    • @JeremyHuntQW12@lemmy.world
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      130 days ago

      This is pretty standard treatment. There are only a limited number of holding cells in an airport, moslty for men.

      If there is no returning flight that day they are sent to a local jail (known as a remand centre outside of the US) and stripping and searching is standard at those places.

      The women said that they were going to do work in the US.

      • @Absaroka@lemmy.world
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        129 days ago

        The women said “They twisted it to make it seem as if we admitted that we wanted to work illegally in the US.”

  • @unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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    731 month ago

    “But at the time, we didn’t think it was happening to Germans,” Lepere said. “That was perhaps very naïve. We felt so small and powerless.”

    They never think it could happen to them until it does. It already happened to Germans months ago tho and there was lots of press coverage, so this case of “i didnt know” is extra odd. I guess people just dont pay attention to actual relevant news.

    • @Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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      601 month ago

      They were teenagers who had spent the last 5 weeks traveling the world. They probably just didn’t think keeping up with developments in the US was important. That plus a healthy dose of white privilege (and probably a wealthy background given that they were teenagers on a world tour) telling them oppression was something that happens to other people.

  • @mapmyhike@lemmy.world
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    591 month ago

    “We wanted to travel spontaneously.”

    This is how my sister and I do our road trips. We get in the car and drive until we are tired then search for a hotel. If we find a town we like we might stop there even if the day is young.

  • @GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world
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    571 month ago

    This has been happening for a long time. It’s just that they are from first world country. Welcome to how it feels to be from a third world country. Not only US but I have been stopped at Munich and Frankfurt airport and thoroughly scanned and document checked while everyone just walk through security.

    • @vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      I’m from Canada and had to explain to border officers what my accommodations and means of personal support would be for a two week stay in the US. I was almost denied entry because I wasn’t carrying sufficient cash on hand.

      That was almost twenty years ago.

    • @breezeblock@lemm.ee
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      81 month ago

      You’re saying you’ve been arrested, handcuffed, strip searched, sent to jail and then deported – and that’s been happening for a long time?

      The people just walking were checked at departure and are local citizens.

    • @Underwire@lemmy.world
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      -151 month ago

      I don’t know the full context of your situation, but sometimes it’s easy to fall into the mindset of always feeling like a victim. I’ve seen people of all backgrounds get scanned or checked at airports. Have you considered if there might have been a specific reason you were stopped?

      Personally, I’ve been stopped several times too, and in some cases, I later realized it was due to something simple, like forgetting to take keys out of my pockets, which triggered the sensors.

      • @GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world
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        81 month ago

        I just wrapped up my 46th country. Happened to me everytime and to most of the people coming from SEA and northern Africa.

        • @Underwire@lemmy.world
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          -61 month ago

          I think you are really exaggerating there. It doesn’t happen for all people coming from SEA or northern Africa. You don’t see all the people from SEA or north Africa being pulled and scanned every time.

          I don’t know for the US but clearly not in Europe. You really need to think about why you always getting scanned.

          I have read somewhere that someone is always scanned at the airport because they were in the S database of France.

          • @GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world
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            41 month ago

            Very very normal for anyone flying to first world country from a third world country and you are person of color. I recommend u go see the pyramid, fly back on Egypt air to Frankfurt. You will see in person.

      • @AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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        41 month ago

        You’re comparing between different sample pools, which matters when we’re talking about probability adjacent stuff. We’re not asking “from this large pool of people at an airport, who is likely to receive additional scrutiny?” Because of this, your comment about how you’ve seen people of all backgrounds get scanned isn’t relevant to OP’s point.

        The scope we’re looking at is the pool of experiences across one person’s trips. Imagine if it was every time that you got stopped for additional checks at an airport, even when you couldn’t see any mistakes that you had made. If you get checked because your keys triggered the sensors, then that’s a mistake that you can learn from, but consider how it would feel if you meticulously complied with everything you were meant to do, but were still consistently pulled aside for additional checks.

        I know that on the internet, you never know whether someone is being hyperbolic, or straight up spinning a yarn, but try to take OP on faith here and consider how dismissive your comment comes across. I don’t know OP’s particular circumstances, but I have previously made a comment similar to yours to a friend, who called me out on being an asshole. Back then, I was oblivious to the reality of these things.

        My friend explained that the first time they were pulled aside for additional checks, they opted to believe that it was just a random thing. The second time, they felt more uneasy, but actively resisted the “victim mentality” (their words). By the 20th time, they had come to expect it as inevitable, and that no change to how they packed, or what they wore would change things. They desperately wanted to believe that they weren’t being targeted for additional searches, but after a certain point, it becomes impossible to believe that these things are random.

        • @Underwire@lemmy.world
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          -41 month ago

          Like I said, I don’t know the full context of OP’s situation—I just wanted to offer another possible explanation, which may or may not apply to them.

          I’ve come across similar comments from people who are convinced they’re facing discrimination, but when you take a closer look at the facts, it’s not always so clear-cut. For example, I once saw someone say they always get rejected from jobs, often instantly, and were certain it was because of the photo on their résumé. But when you actually read their CV and look at the roles they applied for, it turned out they didn’t meet any of the listed requirements. Having two years of bootcamp experience won’t typically land you a role at a startup asking for four years in a specific tech stack.

          If you always assume you’re a victim, it can prevent you from growing and might lead you to overlook areas where you could improve.

          Again, I’m not denying that discrimination exists or saying OP is imagining things—I just think it’s important to consider all angles.

  • @boaratio@lemmy.world
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    521 month ago

    The most shocking thing about this is the five weeks. Like as Americans we have no clue how the rest of the world lives. The entire country of France stops working for 6 weeks in the summer. And we fight to get 2 weeks if we’re lucky.

      • @boaratio@lemmy.world
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        51 month ago

        I feel solidarity for you. My dad was a self employed mechanic, and the only vacation he ever took was when he broke his leg.

  • @obvs@lemmy.world
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    491 month ago

    When the world thinks “illegal immigration” we all think “Germans sneaking into Hawaii”.

    • @Kinperor@lemmy.ca
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      111 month ago

      They finally found the culprit for the shit state of the United State: It’s all those pesky german young adults backpacking through the world and visiting Hawaii for like a few weeks or something!

  • Geetnerd
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    481 month ago

    When they denying whiter than white German kids, shit done got real.

      • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        51 month ago

        To anyone who was paying attention this was already a pretty clear possibility last year. Not to mention that all the people voting for this outcome also make it an unpleasant place to visit on a more personal level, even if the election had gone the other way.

        • @YesButActuallyMaybe@lemmy.ca
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          51 month ago

          You have to understand that there are people who have better things to do with their time than keep up with foreign politics or arrange their lives around it. You could just say nothing and not shit on people who don’t want to lose a thousand dollars because a nation decided to have shit for heads this season.

          • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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            -31 month ago

            People who travel to shitholes like the US for several weeks at the time clearly don’t have “better things to do with their time”.

      • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        51 month ago

        Is losing your non-refundable booking a worse outcome than a few nights in a detention cell?

    • @ragas@lemmy.ml
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      111 month ago

      I guess they learned their lesson.

      I think it is sad, I would really like to travel in the USA as I think the nature and the culture are really interesting. But for my entire adult life the USA actually would have been a gamble to travel to.

      The laws around entry to the country are also really weird, as the immigration officer that checks your visa has the ultimate authority of whether you are allowed entry. There are no concrete laws that limit their say over this.

  • @SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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    471 month ago

    Having not fully booked your accommodation for the entire trip could get you denied entry to the US before Trump. Just saying. Especially if you aren’t white. Same with not having an outbound ticket.

    • @ThisOne@lemmy.world
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      I met a good chunk of Europeans and Aussies while thru hiking on the AT a few years ago.

      All of those folks did not have full accommodations booked in advance, that would have been impossible. They seemed to find that pretty normal and were not turned away.

      • @taxiiiii@lemmy.world
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        11 month ago

        Where you intend to stay is part of the questioning when you enter and they can get quite suspicious if you don’t have a plan. Source: An Austrian, white friend of mine who went to the US. He also just wanted to travel around but was warned in advance (by other, mostly white europeans) that he shouldn’t state that when asked. It’s just not worth the risk.

        While that’s not the same as having to show hotel bookings for the whole stay, it is a thing travelers have had to worry about for quite some time now. I’m sure it’s worse and more complicated for anyone of color.

  • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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    461 month ago

    Every time I’ve been to Cuba I show up in the airport and basically have a car rented, maybe first night in a hotel. Then we drive wherever we feel like and usually pick up a hitchhiker or two that will have a “sister” that has a room for rent.

    It has almost always been clean, friendly, cheap, and a good breakfast. Rinse, repeat. I love travelling like this and have generally done this everywhere I’ve gone in the third world. Apparently the US doesn’t even measure up to third world.

  • @secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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    I completely believe these women, and I am sure Border Patrol invented sentences and put them in the transcript, altering what the women said in some parts and outright making stuff up in others. People assume transcripts are correct, but any corrupt authority can alter them or attribute anything to anyone. I called the Border Patrol to find out more and they surprisingly admittted to this corruption, saying “Yep, we alter transcripts all the time in between felching each other and praising Moloch.”

  • @thorhop@sopuli.xyz
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    301 month ago

    Look at those evil immigrants. No doubt they’ll… they’ll… hold on, can we use some AI to replace the stock photo with brown people? Thank you.

  • @astutemural@midwest.social
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    261 month ago

    Oh no! This dastardly Europeans wanted to come here and work! How dare they! Deport them!

    This country was cooked a long time ago.

    • @Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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      231 month ago

      From another story about the event, it wasn’t even like odd jobs for a host, it was small job remote work for people in Germany and Asia. Stuff they would be doing at home and just kept doing during downtime on a long vacation.

      Don’t reply to any business emails while lounging by the pool, you need a work visa for that!

      • Übercomplicated
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        61 month ago

        This is a much, much better article. I’m surprised at the NYPost’s shoddy quality (though I don’t know much about them); the headline especially feels misleading. Thanks for sharing a better source.

        • @Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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          81 month ago

          The NYPost is a crappy conservative tabloid. I don’t know why people keep posting stories from it.