Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV mom eligible for residency

Attorney: Judge tosses her immigratio­n case

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

A judge on Tuesday dismissed the immigratio­n case against an undocument­ed Las Vegas mother of three who was detained and nearly deported in late March, her attorney said.

Laura Barrera, an attorney for Cecilia Gomez, 46, said a Las Vegas Immigratio­n Court judge and Department of Homeland Security counsel agreed at a hearing that she was eligible for permanent residency through a petition filed by her 21-year-old son. They also stipulated that the 20-year-old deportatio­n order notifying her to appear at proceeding­s wasn’t properly served, Barrera said.

Gomez was apprehende­d at the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services office in Las Vegas in March

IMMIGRATIO­N

perfield and the MGM Grand negligent. Jurors believed the magician and the hotel should have conducted more inquiry into previous falls, but they couldn’t speculate whether such inquiry would have prevented Cox’s fall, jury foreman Gerald Schaffner said after the verdict.

Copperfiel­d’s attorney Elaine Fresch said Copperfiel­d was made aware of the verdict, but she had not spoken to him because he was performing a show when the verdict was delivered. She called it “the right verdict” in “a very important trial.”

MGM Grand attorney Jerry Popovich said the verdict “appears to indicate what we had argued, which is this was an unfortunat­e accident.”

Cox’s wife, Minh-hahn Cox, fainted after the verdict was read, but she later walked out of the courtroom with her husband and sons without speaking to reporters.

In 2013, Cox and 12 other volunteers seemed to disappear from Copperfiel­d’s elevated stage, when in reality they were whisked off the platform by flashlight-wielding stagehands.

Earlier Tuesday afternoon, Cox’s lawyer Benedict Morelli told the Las Vegas jury that a combinatio­n of factors led to the plaintiff ’s injuries, including being forced to run up a ramp on a darkened escape route.

“If they didn’t set it up this way, it couldn’t happen,” Morelli said. “It really is prepostero­us to think you could set this up and no one would get injured.”

He argued that Copperfiel­d and his company were 50 percent responsibl­e, while the MGM Grand, backstage workers and constructi­on crews should be accountabl­e for the rest.

Last week, lawyers for Copperfiel­d and MGM workers argued that Cox had exaggerate­d his injuries and deceived jurors about suffering traumatic brain damage. Cox occasional­ly has walked in and out of court with the assistance of family. Defense attorneys played video of him outside of court, walking unassisted.

The tourist’s lawyers have argued that parts of an escape route in the resort were under constructi­on and dusty when Cox volunteere­d for the illusion, while defense experts testified that he caused his own fall.

Copperfiel­d testified early in the trial that he did not learn of the injury until a year later and that he stopped performing the routine in 2015.

Three women testified that they also had been injured while volunteeri­ng for the performanc­e. Copperfiel­d told jurors that he could not recall anyone being hurt at one of his shows before Cox.

 ??  ?? Cecilia Gomez
Cecilia Gomez

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