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Monday, December 22, 2025

Bring Him Home: America Owes This Wounded Veteran More Than a “Review”

Rep. Seth Magaziner presses Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem after connecting Sae Joon Park live during a Department of Homeland Security hearing on Dec. 11. [Screen capture from CBS]
Rep. Seth Magaziner presses Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem after connecting Sae Joon Park live during a Department of Homeland Security hearing on Dec. 11. [Screen capture from CBS]

When Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told lawmakers on December 11 that the case of Sae Joon Park would be “reviewed,” it marked a rare moment of acknowledgment in an otherwise merciless immigration system. But a review alone is not enough. For Park—a wounded U.S. Army veteran and Purple Heart recipient—justice demands something far more concrete: a path home to the country he once risked his life to defend.

Park’s story should never have ended in exile. Now 55, he was forced to leave the United States for South Korea on June 23 under pressure from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the result of a decades-old removal order tied to past drug convictions and a missed court appearance. He boarded that flight not as a returning son, but as a man banished from the only country he truly knows.

Park immigrated from South Korea to the United States at age seven. At 19, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and was deployed to Panama during Operation Just Cause, the 1989 military campaign to oust dictator Manuel Noriega. During combat, Park was shot in the spine. He survived, but the injuries left lasting damage—both physical and psychological. He received the Purple Heart, yet like so many veterans, he returned home carrying untreated post-traumatic stress disorder.

That trauma derailed his life. Park struggled with drug addiction and was eventually convicted of possession and bail violations, serving three years in prison. But his mistakes were not the end of his story. After his release in 2012, Park rebuilt his life. He remained sober for more than 14 years, reunited with his family in Hawaii, and complied with annual immigration check-ins. He did everything the system asked of him—except one thing: he never became a U.S. citizen.

That single fact erased everything else.
Under the Trump administration’s hardline immigration enforcement, Park was treated not as a rehabilitated veteran, but as a deportable “criminal.” Despite posing no public safety risk, despite more than a decade of compliance, ICE pressed him to leave. Faced with detention and separation from his family, Park chose what officials euphemistically call “self-deportation.”

Sae Joon Park, a Purple Heart recipient and U.S. Army veteran, was forced to self-deport to South Korea on June 23 after nearly 50 years in the United States. (Top right) Park during his time as an active-duty soldier. (Bottom right) His Purple Heart award, issued for wounds sustained in combat. [Screen capture from Hawaii News Now]
Sae Joon Park, a Purple Heart recipient and U.S. Army veteran, was forced to self-deport to South Korea on June 23 after nearly 50 years in the United States. (Top right) Park during his time as an active-duty soldier. (Bottom right) His Purple Heart award, issued for wounds sustained in combat. [Screen capture from Hawaii News Now]

In truth, it was exile.
Now in South Korea—a country he has not lived in since childhood—Park is adrift. He speaks Korean poorly. He struggles to navigate daily life. The stigma of deportation weighs heavily, even among relatives. In interviews, he has described his PTSD worsening, his emotions unraveling. “Every morning I wake up crying for no reason,” he said. He has spoken of the pain of leaving behind his 85-year-old mother and the anguish of knowing he may not be present for his daughter’s wedding.

This is not law enforcement. It is abandonment.
Park’s case reached national attention after Rep. Seth Magaziner of Rhode Island confronted Secretary Noem during a House Homeland Security Committee hearing. When Noem claimed the U.S. does not deport veterans, Magaziner connected Park live via Zoom from Korea. “This man,” Magaziner said pointedly, “is a Purple Heart recipient who was effectively deported to a country he hasn’t lived in since he was seven.” The moment cut through bureaucratic abstraction with human truth. Faced with the facts, Noem pledged to review the case.

Other lawmakers—including Sens. Mazie Hirono and Richard Blumenthal—have also pressed DHS to explain not only Park’s exile, but similar actions against other veterans’ families. Their message is clear: enforcing immigration law without mercy or context is not strength—it is moral failure.

Even legally, Park’s case deserves reconsideration. As his attorney has noted, a recent federal appeals court ruling suggests that drug possession alone may no longer constitute a deportable offense. The remaining barrier—a bail-jumping conviction—must be understood in context: a traumatized veteran struggling with untreated mental illness. Supporters are urging prosecutors to reopen and vacate that conviction, a move that could finally clear Park’s path home.

But beyond statutes and motions lies a deeper question: What does America owe those who served it? Is military sacrifice honored only when it is neat and flawless? Is “America First” a slogan that ends at the immigration court door?

Park does not regret serving. He does not deny his mistakes. What he does not deserve is to be cast aside by the very nation that once sent him into combat.

Bringing Sae Joon Park home is not charity. It is the minimum respect owed to a wounded veteran. A review is a start—but justice demands action.

By Mooyoung Lee  [lee.mooyoung@koreadaily.com]

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Korea Daily Digital
Korea Daily Digital
The Korea Daily Digital Team operates the largest Korean-language news platform in the United States, with a core staff of 10 digital journalists and a network of contributing authors based in both Korea and the U.S. The team delivers breaking news, in-depth reporting, and community-focused coverage for readers nationwide.