A man twice deported from the United States to Mexico now faces an illegal immigration charge after Wyoming police arrested him on suspicion of drunk driving near Cheyenne.   Â
The Wyoming U.S. Attorney’s office charged Lino Quintana-Morales, 40, on Friday with one count of illegal reentry for being in the country after having been deported twice prior, according to a charging affidavit in the federal case. Â
Quintana-Morales faces up to two years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines if convicted. Â
The affidavit by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Officer Marco Gonzales, says Wyoming police arrested Quintana-Morales near Cheyenne on July 4 for drunk driving and booked him in the Laramie County Detention Center. Â
Gonzales tried to interview Quintana-Morales the next day at the jail, but Quintana-Morales invoked his right to remain silent and declined to answer questions without an attorney present, the affidavit says. Â
The ICE officer got ahold of Quintana-Morales’ fingerprints July 14, and they matched Quintana-Morales’ preexisting immigration record, the affidavit says. That record showed two deportation documents, one revealing the authorities had removed Quintan-Morales to Mexico from Texas in 2012, and another showing they took him to Mexico, again from Texas, in 2019. Â
There was no record that Quintana-Morales had applied to the U.S. Attorney General’s office or the secretary of Homeland Security for permission to reenter the country, Gonzales wrote. Â
Criminal HistoryÂ
Gonzales also reviewed Quintana-Morales’ criminal history in the U.S. Â
According to the affidavit, this includes:Â
- A March 22, 2012, theft conviction in Goshen County, Wyoming, for which Quintana-Morales was given 60 days in jail.
- A March 27, 2013, DUI conviction in Scottsbluff County, Nebraska, with 12 days in jail. Â
- A March 27, 2013, drug possession conviction in Scottsbluff — six months in jail.
- A July 6, 2018, domestic assault conviction in Scottsbluff — 180 days in jail.
- A Dec. 21, 2018, conviction for reentry of removed aliens — one year and one day in prison.Â
The affidavit says Quintana-Morales’ 2019 deportation happened after he walked across the border. Â
Construction Work In CheyenneÂ
Quintana-Morales told police he had been living recently in Omaha, Nebraska, the affidavit relates, and that he had been doing construction work in Cheyenne at the time of his arrest. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




