Cile Precetaj deported Albania
© Ryan Garza / Detroit Free PressCile Precetaj of Troy sits with her children Migena Gojcaj, 6, and Martina, 4, and Mikey Gojcaj, 11, on Monday, Dec. 2, 2013, at her home in Troy after she was given a 24-hour notice that she is being deported.
A Michigan mother with no criminal record was deported to Albania without being offered the opportunity to say goodbye to her three children or husband, family members say.

While a spokesperson for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said ICE notified family members of Cile Precetaj's impending departure and told family members to pack her bags 10 days ago, her husband said that he did not learn that his wife was deported until 4 a.m. Thursday, when she called him from Germany telling him that she was en route to Albania with two ICE agents.

"My kids are devastated. They can't stop crying," Pete Gojcaj told the Free Press Thursday morning. "My children are traumatized. ...

"They got on the bus crying," he said, noting he sent them to school to keep things as normal as possible. "They said, 'This is not the government they teach us about in school.' "

CE spokesman Khallid Walls said Thursday that the family was notified "several days in advance of her impending departure" and that they turned in her luggage and other personal belongings.

But the family maintains they were never given a deportation date, nor any definitive information about if or when she might be deported. All that happened, the husband said, was 10 days ago he got a call from ICE telling him to pack his wife's suitcase and bring it to Detroit's ICE headquarters.

Pete Gojcaj said he did as instructed - his children helped pack the suitcase - but they had no idea what was coming or when. His wife called him periodically from Calhoun County, where she was jailed during her legal fight against deportation, with no updates. He and the kids waited and prayed, he said, hoping for a miracle.

On 4 a.m. Thursday, the phone call from Germany cleared up any confusion. Mom was gone.

Gojcaj would eventually learn from his wife that five ICE agents picked her up at the Calhoun County jail on Wednesday, shackled her and took her to Detroit to prepare her for removal from the U.S. Two ICE agents, he said, went with her. His wife told him that the ICE agents warned her not to make a fuss or they would put her in restraints.

The family is in shock, and reeling.

Cile Precetaj, an Albanian immigrant, was one of more than a dozen mothers locked up at the Calhoun County jail awaiting deportation. All have American-born children.

Precetaj, 46, has been seeking asylum in the U.S. since 2000 and has no criminal record. She was spared deportation in 2014 by an executive order, but was arrested on April 26 during a routine monthly visit to the ICE office in Detroit.

Her three children, ages 8, 10, and 16, live with their father, Pete, a Yugoslavian immigrant who has lived in the U.S. for 30 years and owns a restaurant.

Meanwhile, ICE has long stressed that it had legal standing to remove Precetaj from the U.S. and that it allowed her to remain in the U.S. to pursue all of her legal options before being deported.

"In June 2005, Ms. Precetaj, an unlawfully present national of Albania, was ordered removed from the United States by a federal immigration judge," ICE has stated, noting her multiple appeals have failed. "For more than a decade between 2007 and 2018, ICE allowed Ms. Precetaj to remain free from custody while exhausting all of her legal options for relief. On April 26, Ms. Precetaj filed a stay with the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. She will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of her immigration case."

Last week, the 6th Circuit denied her stay, though she has another appeal pending.

In Precetaj's application for asylum, she claimed that she feared for her life in Albania and that her family was constantly threatened by criminal groups that sought to kidnap her and make her a prostitute. She also has expressed fears about an abusive fianceé she left in Albania.

"I want people to pray for us," Precetaj said in a phone interview from jail this week. "We never did any crime. We just came here to this country to have better life and better education for our kids. That's the only reason we came here and I pray to God it's going to work out."