An ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ immigration advocacy group has started a campaign to push for the release of a "dreamer" from ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ who has remained in custody for months despite his deportation order being canceled.
Carlos MartÃnez, who earned a software engineering masters degree from the University of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ and was one of the first young people to qualify for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals in 2012, was detained after crossing to Mexico for about 45 minutes almost a year ago.
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MartÃnez recently spent 19 days in isolation at the Eloy Detention Center after testing positive for COVID-19, his family says.
MartÃnez has been detained since he briefly crossed the border into Nogales, Sonora in August, saying he was frustrated about being unable to find a job and wanting to visit family in Mexico.
He has been held at Eloy's immigration detention center since then.
The ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Dream Act Coalition, a Phoenix-based organization that advocates for the rights of "dreamers," started a campaign Monday to pressure Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to release MartÃnez.
"It is time to raise our voices to tell the people that we cannot turn our eyes and ignore what is happening," Karina Ruiz, executive director of the coalition said. "They are letting us die, because (those centers) do not have the essential measures to be healthy or maintain social distance."
The coalition held an information session on Facebook Live Monday night telling the community abut the case and to launch a phone campaign at ICE.
The goal, the coalition says, is for MartÃnez to finish recovering from COVID-19 at the family's ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ home.
As of June 21, ICE reported that 191 detainees and more than 100 employees at the privately-run detention facility have tested positive for the coronavirus.
Ruiz said the group will focus this week on promoting calls to ICE to have MartÃnez and others there released.
Salvador MartÃnez, says his son recently spent 19 days isolated due to the spread of the coronavirus in the facility.
“They were just giving him two Tylenol in the morning and two in the afternoon, and they had him locked up alone in a cell. The food was brought to him there,†MartÃnez said. He added that his son is better, “but not quite well. And morally he is broken.â€
An appeal filed a day late by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement prosecutor on the judge's decision is keeping MartÃnez detained.
On June 30, the Board of Immigration Appeals accepted the motion for late filing of the appeal. In it, the Department of Homeland Security indicated that its assistant chief counsel filed the brief one day later by "error."
In its motion the prosecutor says she mixed the filing deadline for MartÃnez with another case due a day later.
The situation has been desperate and frustrating, said Claudia Arévalo, the ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ lawyer who represents MartÃnez.
"It was not a good reason," Arévalo said of the missed filing deadline. “And with lawyers, (the Board of Immigration Appeals) has a zero tolerance policy. They deny us everything, especially in this administration."
The deportation order was canceled by a judge based on testimony that included the impact it would have on the MartÃnez family; his arrival in the US as a 9-year-old; and his college achievements.
But the family's celebration lasted only a few minutes because the prosecutor announced her intention to appeal.
MartÃnez cited his clean record when he rejected the prosecutor's offer to voluntary deport to Mexico in November. When he asked to end the appeals and allow himself to be deported, a judge convinced him to stick with the process after reviewing his education and work history, Arévalo said.
Arévalo twice filed for humanitarian parole due to MartÃnez's emotional decline, but was denied. A third petition filed a few weeks ago based on the spread of the coronavirus at the detention center is pending.
Reporter Stephanie Casanova translated this story.Â