Former Syracuse basketball player Ajak chooses deportation over voluntary departure after ICE detention, vowing never to return to the U.S.

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Former Syracuse basketball player Ajak chooses deportation over voluntary departure after ICE detention, vowing never to return to the U.S.
Former Syracuse basketball player Ajak chooses deportation over voluntary departure after ICE detention, vowing never to return to the U.S.

The source stated that Ajak was offered a choice between a voluntary departure or a deportation order, and he opted for the latter.

The U.S. government pays for the deportation order, while voluntarily leaving allows eligibility for future entry.

"If this is how I’m leaving, I never want to step foot in this country again," Ajak said.

Ajak was held at the Moshannon Valley Processing Center, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Pennsylvania, and had been living in Syracuse.

He was arrested four times between December and when he was placed in ICE custody for trespassing, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. He admitted Thursday he had been in the country illegally after his F-1 student visa had expired, which also resulted in him not being able to attend the Newhouse School of Public Communications at the university.

Ajak came to the United States from Kenya in 2014 to pursue an education and basketball opportunities in Pennsylvania and played for the Orange from 2020 through 2023 under Jim Boeheim.

At 6-foot-10 and 215 pounds, he played in 35 games. He scored 21 career points and had 43 rebounds, 26 assists and 27 personal fouls.

Ajak was born in South Sudan, but his family fled to Kenya when he was an infant during the country’s civil war.

James Thornton

James Thornton

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