Chicago Sun-Times

Constructi­on worker home after 9 months at ICE center

- BY CARLOS BALLESTERO­S, STAFF REPORTER cballester­os@suntimes.com | @ballestero­s_312

After spending nine months in four detention centers across the Midwest, a 24-year-old Southwest Side constructi­on worker eligible for deportatio­n protection­s under the DACA program is back home.

Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez was released last week on $25,000 bond from a detention center in Minnesota after being arrested by immigratio­n agents in May after a routine traffic stop in Iowa.

Lopez Gutierrez will now fight his deportatio­n case from the outside and will reapply for a work permit under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

“I want to thank the community that made it possible for me to reunite with my family,” Lopez Gutierrez said in Spanish at a news conference Tuesday. “Being away from family and deprived of your freedom affects you mentally and physically. We’ve won this battle even though the war goes on.”

Lopez Gutierrez was 9 when he emigrated from Mexico to Chicago. He received a two-year work permit under DACA in 2013 but did not renew it.

ICE detained Lopez Gutierrez because his DACA protection­s expired in 2015. Because he’s never been convicted of a crime, Lopez Gutierrez is eligible to renew his DACA, which allows him to petition to be released from immigratio­n detention.

Lopez Gutierrez petitioned ICE for his release in July, but the agency didn’t get back to him until Dec. 18, two days after his lawyers sued the government for not responding sooner.

“DACA is designed to help people like Jesus get released from immigratio­n jail and get their DACA renewed when the government tries to deport them. That should’ve happened seven, eight, nine months ago — not last week,” said attorney Wally Hilke with Beyond Legal Aid.

Hilke said Lopez Gutierrez will file his DACA renewal later this week. “Please make sure to renew your DACA,” Lopez Gutierrez said. “I’ve learned from my mistakes the hard way.”

Lopez Gutierrez’s older brother, Miguel Lopez, led the way in rallying support for his release.

The elder Lopez, who’s an active member of local immigrant rights group Organized Communitie­s Against Deportatio­ns, sat teary eyed next to his brother Tuesday.

“It’s taken me a while to process,” he said. “I’m just starting to get used to the fact that he’s back with us.”

Carlos Ballestero­s is a corps member of Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of Chicago’s South Side and West Side.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez said Tuesday, “We’ve won this battle even though the war goes on.” He was arrested by immigratio­n agents in May after a routine traffic stop in Iowa.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez said Tuesday, “We’ve won this battle even though the war goes on.” He was arrested by immigratio­n agents in May after a routine traffic stop in Iowa.

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