Santa Fe New Mexican

Migrant detainee died from AIDS complicati­ons

- By Russell Contreras ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

ALBUQUERQU­E — A Honduran transgende­r migrant, whose 2018 death while in the custody of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t sparked protests and calls for an investigat­ion, died of a rare disorder that developed quickly due to AIDS, according to an autopsy released Tuesday.

The New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigat­or released its findings on the death of Roxsana Hernandez, 33, saying the disorder — known as multicentr­ic Castleman disease — can progress rapidly in people with weakened immune systems and lead to death within weeks.

The autopsy also found Hernandez suffered from extensive fractures of her ribs and breastbone after medical staff performed CPR in response to at least 10 heart attacks.

“This case has taken almost a year to close because the autopsy was complex and required additional testing and consultati­on,” Chief Medical Investigat­or Kurt Nolte said in a statement.

Hernandez arrived in the U.S. as part of a caravan of Central American asylum-seekers and was taken into custody in San Diego.

She was later transferre­d to El Paso before being taken to the Cibola County Detention Center in New Mexico.

Hernandez died in May at an Albuquerqu­e hospital where she was admitted after showing symptoms of pneumonia, dehydratio­n and complicati­ons associated with HIV.

Her death brought protests, with immigrant and LGBTQ advocates saying her case underscore­d concerns that transgende­r migrants in detention facilities often do not receive adequate medical care.

In November, an attorney representi­ng the family of Hernandez released an independen­t autopsy that noted deep bruising along Hernandez’s ribs that wasn’t evident externally.

The independen­t autopsy also concluded she had contusions on her back and injuries around her wrists that were likely caused by handcuffs.

 ??  ?? Gabriela Hernandez, executive director of the nonprofit New Mexico Dream Team, holds up an image in Albuquerqu­e last year of Roxsana Hernandez, a Honduran transgende­r woman who died while in U.S. custody.
Gabriela Hernandez, executive director of the nonprofit New Mexico Dream Team, holds up an image in Albuquerqu­e last year of Roxsana Hernandez, a Honduran transgende­r woman who died while in U.S. custody.

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