Los Angeles Times

Detained janitor who worked at MIT awaits fate

El Salvador man’s case becomes a rallying cry for foes of crackdown on immigratio­n.

- Associated press

BOSTON — Francisco Rodriguez-Guardado’s first son was born just days after he was taken into custody by federal immigratio­n officials for deportatio­n back to his native El Salvador. He has yet to meet his son but is told there’s a resemblanc­e.

“They tell me he has my eyes,” the 43-year-old said with a mix of wistfulnes­s and pride this month in an interview at the Suffolk County House of Correction­s.

Rodriguez-Guardado, a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology janitor whose case became a rallying cry for local opponents of President Trump’s immigratio­n crackdown this summer, awaits his fate in the Boston jail.

His supporters say his case and others like it highlight how the Republican administra­tion’s get-tough approach on illegal immigratio­n has swept up not just hardened criminals — the “bad hombres” Trump frequently railed against on the campaign trail — but also otherwise law-abiding, contributi­ng members of American society.

Arrests of immigrants in the country illegally have increased about 37%, from about 55,000 during the first six months of last year to 75,000 in the first half of this year, according to data from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Of those, non-criminal immigrants made up nearly 20,000 of all arrests, a 145% increase.

Rodriguez-Guardado did not have a criminal record and was a known commodity, volunteeri­ng at his church and his children’s school and even running his own carpet-cleaning business, argue his supporters, who include his labor union, the faculty at MIT and prominent politician­s such as U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, both Massachuse­tts Democrats.

“There was simply no need for detention,” said Adriana Lafaille, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union. “This is someone who complied with everything the federal government asked him to do.”

But Jessica Vaughan, a director at the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, countered that Rodriguez Guardado shouldn’t be allowed to remain because he had been granted “multiple opportunit­ies” to resolve his legal status.

Rodriguez-Guardado entered the U.S. illegally in 2006, was denied asylum in 2009 and had a subsequent appeal rejected in 2011. In June, ICE officials declined to renew the temporary authorizat­ions that allowed him to remain in the country and ordered him to make travel arrangemen­ts back to El Salvador.

Rodriguez-Guardado was arrested July 13 because the plane ticket he booked wasn’t “timely,” ICE spokesman Shawn Neudauer said. Rodriguez-Guardado’s lawyer, Matthew Cameron, maintains that the agency never specified a deadline, so his client booked the flight for after his son’s expected birth date.

Cameron is asking the federal Board of Immigratio­n Appeals to reopen Rodriguez-Guardado’s asylum case. He has sued ICE in federal court, accusing the agency of unlawful arrest.

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