An Arizona state police detective resigned after discovering she’s been living in the U.S. illegally for decades.

Family members had apparently told 42-year-old Carmen Figueroa that she was born in the U.S., but she was actually born in Sinaloa, Mexico, and brought to America as a child.

She discovered her status after the State Department processed a passport application submitted by her brother, who had tried to join the Air Force, and confronted her mother.

ADVERTISEMENT

Figueroa resigned Monday but would have been fired for fraud and misrepresentation if she hadn’t, said a state police spokesman.

Arizona law requires sworn police officers to be U.S. citizens.

State police were notified of Figueroa’s status Aug. 22, and she was placed on paid administrative leave Sept. 4, although officials said it was always clear she would lose her job over the issue.

Figueroa had previously worked as a secretary for the federal Bureau of Prisons as a secretary and for the Pima County court system, where she also worked as an officer.

The spokesman said Figueroa submitted a Texas birth certificate when she was hired by the state police, along with a driver’s license and high school diploma from California.

ADVERTISEMENT

State police said there was nothing suspicious about the documents, but they declined to discuss whether authorities now questioned their legitimacy.

Figueroa worked in southern Arizona and spent most of her 10 years with the department as a Tucson-area Highway Patrol officer and spokeswoman before she became a criminal investigations detective in 2010.

The state police spokesman said Figueroa had an exemplary record, adding that her departure did not put any investigations or prosecutions at risk.

ADVERTISEMENT

Watch this video report posted online by KPHO-TV:

CBS 5 – KPHO