Texarkana Gazette

Man scheduled for transplant gets deportatio­n reprieve

-

HARTFORD, Conn.—Federal immigratio­n officials granted a six-month reprieve on Thursday to a Connecticu­t immigrant facing deportatio­n, a move his supporters say won’t be long enough to allow him to undergo a scheduled kidney transplant.

Dozens of people, including Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, rallied in front of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t offices in Hartford in support of Nelson Rosales Santos, 49, who was scheduled to be deported to Honduras on Monday, despite suffering from advanced renal failure. Some held signs that read, “Where is Our Humanity” and “Stop Separating Families.”

Santos received the stay of deportatio­n from ICE officials just hours before the gathering.

“This case should be treated differentl­y,” said Malloy. “After all, we were told by our president and attorney general that they were only going to go after the bad hombres. Well, he’s not a bad hombre.”

His family and supporters say

Santos entered the country illegally but has lived in Stamford for 30 years, is married to a U.S. citizen and has three children, ages 19, 14 and 11, who all were born in the U.S.

He also has diabetes, high blood pressure and kidney failure, requiring dialysis every two days.

If Santos is forced to fly to Honduras, a country he has not seen in three decades, he would not have immediate access to dialysis and likely would be dead within a week, said his attorney, Glenn Formica.

“I don’t want to die,” Santos said Thursday. “My kids and wife need me.”

Federal immigratio­n officials had no immediate comment on Santos’ situation.

Santos works as a chef and has routinely received waivers allowing him to stay in the U.S., his supporters said.

His wife has successful­ly petitioned immigratio­n officials to allow her husband to be considered for permanent resident status. But because of his 30-year-old deportatio­n order, he was told he must leave the country during that process, said Catalina Horak, who is working on Santos’ behalf with the immigratio­n support group, Building One Community.

Formica said he was filing two separate requests to delay Santos’ deportatio­n. The first, before the federal Board of Immigratio­n appeals, argues that the original deportatio­n order was defective. The second, before ICE, requested the humanitari­an stay of the deportatio­n to allow Santos to receive a new kidney. He said he will seek to extend that stay to at least 12 months.

Santos, who has private insurance through his wife, had a surgery date scheduled for later this month, but doctors told him they would not do the procedure until they receive assurances that he will be available for 12 months of follow-up visits and treatment, Horak said.

Santos is willing to leave the country as required while awaiting his green card, Horak said, but can’t do that until his medical situation is resolved.

“He works, he has insurance, he has a private donor,” Horak said. “He’s not doing this on anyone else’s dime. He has an avenue for legalizing his situation. That’s what makes this case so compelling.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States