Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago man says deportatio­n was retaliatio­n for speaking against conditions in detention

- BY ELVIA MALAGÓN, STAFF REPORTER emalagon@suntimes.com | @ElviaMalag­on Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from the Chicago Community Trust.

A West Elsdon man who says he was deported as retaliatio­n for speaking out about his immigratio­n case is asking a federal judge to allow him to return to the U.S., according to court documents.

Attorneys representi­ng Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez, who was deported in June to Mexico, argue he should have been allowed to stay in the U.S. and renew his applicatio­n for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The program shields thousands of immigrants from deportatio­n and allows them to lawfully work in the U.S.

Lopez Gutierrez’s DACA applicatio­n was initially approved in 2013. He didn’t renew his status in 2015. His Chicago-based attorney, Wally Hilke, said Lopez Gutierrez still remains eligible to renew his DACA benefits that would allow him to stay in the U.S. As part of the recent filing in U.S. District Court, Lopez Gutierrez is seeking a decision from U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services about his DACA renewal applicatio­n.

Lopez Gutierrez, who goes by the nickname “Beto,” wasn’t able to join a virtual news conference Wednesday about the recent court filing because of technical issues, but his supporters read a statement where he contends his deportatio­n was a form of retaliatio­n by the government.

He was deported in June, a day after he showed up for a “check in” with ICE in Iowa. His attorneys had been told Lopez Gutierrez would be allowed to return home pending his case. Instead, he was deported to Reynosa, a Mexican city along the U.S. border. Lopez Gutierrez, who had lived in Chicago since he was 9 years old, traveled to Guadalajar­a where his family had relatives.

“I’m far from my home and family when they need me the most during the pandemic,” Lopez Gutierrez said in the statement.

ICE did not immediatel­y return requests for comment. USCIS declined to comment. An ICE spokespers­on previously told the Sun-Times the detainment just before his deportatio­n was because Lopez Gutierrez’s case appeal was dismissed by the Board of Immigratio­n Appeal in April, and a petition to review that dismissal was denied by the U.S. Circuit of Appeals in May.

His immigratio­n troubles started in May 2019 when he and his friends were stopped in Tiffin, Iowa, while driving home from a camping trip in Colorado. He was charged with possession of marijuana, a charge that was later dropped, and spent the next nine months in immigratio­n custody, according to court records.

Last year, he filed a complaint in federal court against the government because of his detainment. In February, an immigratio­n judge allowed Lopez Gutierrez to be released on bond pending his case.

Xanat Sobrevilla, an organizer with Organized Communitie­s Against Deportatio­ns, said they believe he was deported during the June check-in because he had spoken out about the conditions inside the facilities he had been held in by immigratio­n. They also believe the amount of attention his immigratio­n case garnered factored into why he was deported so quickly, Sobrevilla said.

“We want USCIS to address this atrocity, we want Beto home,” Sobrevilla said.

The legal challenge comes a day after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced changes to the DACA program. The federal agency said it would reject any new applicatio­ns, and it would require participan­ts to renew every year.

Hilke said he didn’t think the recent changes will affect Gutierrez’s applicatio­n for DACA renewal.

“We think his claim that he’s entitled to DACA, that he qualifies for it and that he should be back in Chicago is just as solid now as it was a week or even a year ago, which is when they should have approved his renewal to begin with,” Hilke said during the news conference.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? DACA recipient Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez speaks to reporters about his nine-month fight against being deported March 3.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES FILE DACA recipient Jesus Alberto Lopez Gutierrez speaks to reporters about his nine-month fight against being deported March 3.

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