A Palestinian refugee was denied permission to attend his son's funeral despite being the sole caregiver for him.
Maher Tarabishi, a 45-year-old Palestinian refugee from Jordan, was arrested by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in October. He had been held at a detention center in Texas for three months, during which time his 30-year-old son Wael's health had deteriorated rapidly due to the rare metabolic disease Pompe.
In late December, Wael was hospitalized twice and underwent surgery eight days before he passed away on January 23rd. The family said that Tarabishi had been the primary caregiver for Wael and had kept him alive with around-the-clock care.
ICE officials told Elhorr, his lawyer, that they had received no request from anyone to attend Wael's funeral, despite preliminary discussion about a temporary release on compassionate grounds. On January 23rd, Tarabishi was in disbelief when he learned of Wael's death over the phone with his daughter-in-law.
Elhorr immediately filed a motion to reopen Tarabishi's case with the Board of Immigration Appeals, which had previously denied him asylum due to alleged ties to a terrorist organization that has since been deemed an exaggeration by the family.
Maher Tarabishi, a 45-year-old Palestinian refugee from Jordan, was arrested by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in October. He had been held at a detention center in Texas for three months, during which time his 30-year-old son Wael's health had deteriorated rapidly due to the rare metabolic disease Pompe.
In late December, Wael was hospitalized twice and underwent surgery eight days before he passed away on January 23rd. The family said that Tarabishi had been the primary caregiver for Wael and had kept him alive with around-the-clock care.
ICE officials told Elhorr, his lawyer, that they had received no request from anyone to attend Wael's funeral, despite preliminary discussion about a temporary release on compassionate grounds. On January 23rd, Tarabishi was in disbelief when he learned of Wael's death over the phone with his daughter-in-law.
Elhorr immediately filed a motion to reopen Tarabishi's case with the Board of Immigration Appeals, which had previously denied him asylum due to alleged ties to a terrorist organization that has since been deemed an exaggeration by the family.