Page 55 - AVN October 2023
P. 55

“She’s a real firecracker with her personality and also the way she has sex.”
—Mick Blue
Born and raised in Manila, Philippines, Miles grew up poor and experienced homelessness as a teenager. Despite her childhood circumstances she graduated from college with a degree in computer engineering and got a job at Dell doing technical support in a call center for two years.
“When you call the 1-800 number, it’s all routed to Asia cause the labor is cheap,” says Miles, whose former classmates now are all programmers in the UK.
While CJ worked at Dell she dated one of the trainers, an American from Texas who was three years older than her. She was 24.
“He was training me. It’s all Americans there, so everybody loves Asian girls,” CJ says. “So anyway after two years he went back to Texas. And I was like OK, I don’t know what to do in the Philippines now.
“Maybe I’ll go to Japan and be an entertainer. Because in Dell I made 100 dollars a month. That’s all you can make—even if you finish college.
“And I’m like, how will I support my whole family? So I was thinking how will I get to America? There’s no way you can come here if you don’t have any family that can petition you.”
Miles says her former boyfriend agreed to petition to get her into the US.
“So within 90 days I have to get married to him or else I’m going to get deported,” she says. “That’s the rule. It’s the fastest way to get to America is a fiancee or spouse.
“But when I got to Texas his sister told me that he was married the whole time I was dating him in the Philippines. As soon as I got there he just divorced his wife. So now when I got there I feel like he regretted everything that he did. But I’m there already, so he feels like I’m a burden.”
Miles tells AVN her ex physically abused her during a six-month span in 2006, after she moved into his home in Orange, Texas.
“And I couldn’t leave because I don’t know where to go and he’s the one who petitioned me,” CJ says. “And I don’t want to go back home because I don’t have anything.
“So I just stayed with him for six months. I don’t have any social security number, I cannot work.
“All my friends were like you should go home. But I said I’m not going back to the Philippines. And then his sister and his mom called the immigration and tell them, ‘My son is beating her up.’ Because they couldn’t take it anymore because it’s all girls in the family, in one house.
“So immigration wrote me back and they gave me citizenship. That’s how I got my papers.” CJ’s troubles were not over, though.
“Then his sister’s like, ‘OK, you can leave now you have a paper.’ Because I couldn’t tell to
the police what he was doing to me because I feel like I owe him how I got in America. I’m like I don’t know where to go?” CJ adds.
One day when her ex was at work and she was still staying at his house, she noticed he had a MySpace page, where he was talking to a lot of girls.
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