Baltimore Sun Sunday

ICE deports ‘crucial witness’ in Hard Rock Hotel collapse

- By Derek Hawkins and Kim Bellware

WASHINGTON — A metal worker considered a “crucial witness” in the collapse at the Hard Rock Hotel constructi­on site in New Orleans in October was deported Friday to his native Honduras.

Lawyers for Delmer Joel Ramirez Palma said the 38-year-old may have been targeted for deportatio­n because he voiced concerns about the project — a claim immigratio­n officials have denied.

Palma escaped the 18-story structure by jumping between floors as the steel and concrete from the upper floors came crashing down around him. The Oct. 12 catastroph­e left three workers dead and dozens of others injured.

Two days later, as he was recovering, federal immigratio­n agents arrested Palma while he was fishing at a National Wildlife Refuge.

Palma was not authorized to work in the United States and had been fighting a removal order since 2016. He was scheduled to check in with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in mid-November.

Palma, who worked constructi­on in New Orleans for 17 years, had repeatedly reported safety issues at the Hard Rock site to supervisor­s and was always told to go back to work, according to his lawyers, who helped him file a complaint with the Labor Department.

The day before the collapse, his lawyers said, he told some of his co-workers that he noticed the floor underneath him was moving, as if being shaken in an earthquake. When they discussed what happened later, they were within earshot of several supervisor­s, according to his lawyers.

Shortly after the incident, Palma spoke in a video interview with a Spanishlan­guage news outlet about the collapse and his escape, and joined a lawsuit with other injured workers against the contractor­s and developers.

After spending weeks at an ICE staging facility in Alexandria, Louisiana, Palma was put on a Friday morning deportatio­n flight to Honduras, ICE spokesman Bryan Cox confirmed to The Washington Post on Saturday.

Cox called claims that Palma was targeted for speaking out about the conditions at the constructi­on site “false” and “wildly irresponsi­ble.”

“Mr. Ramirez-Palma’s latest applicatio­n for a stay of removal had already been denied by ICE on Oct. 3, more than a week before the incident cited by his supporters,” Cox said in an emailed statement.

Days before Palma’s deportatio­n, the secretary of the Louisiana Workforce Commission asked the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, to release Palma.

In a letter to William P. Joyce, director of ICE’s New Orleans field office, Secretary Ava Dejoie said Palma was a “crucial witness” in the ongoing investigat­ion.

“His detention and pending deportatio­n hamper the ongoing investigat­ions,” Dejoie wrote in the letter, which was obtained by The Post.

“If he is deported, the public may never know what key informatio­n is being deported with him. The investigat­ions will undoubtedl­y suffer.”

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