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  1. #1
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    Mexican boy brought to the U.S. for medical treatment dies

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/4583108.html

    AP Texas News



    Feb. 26, 2007, 3:43PM
    Mexican boy brought to the U.S. for medical treatment dies


    By BETSY BLANEY Associated Press Writer
    © 2007 The Associated Press

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    LUBBOCK, Texas — An 8-year-old Mexican boy who was separated from his mother for months after she illegally secreted him into the U.S. for treatment of a fatal disease has died.

    Luis Carranza, who suffered from acute lymphoblastic leukemia, died Thursday in El Paso, Child Protective Services officials said.

    His mother, Guadalupe Carranza, had been deported as an illegal immigrant but was permitted to return to the U.S. to be with Luis until his death. It was not immediately clear Monday whether she was with Luis when he died, officials said.

    "Luis was a remarkable boy, and I don't think anybody around here will forget him soon," CPS spokesman Greg Cunningham said. "He showed incredible strength to hang on for so long. That really inspired a lot of people here."

    Luis' death came just less than two years after his mother first brought him to Lubbock for treatment. His mother had been bringing him to the West Texas city from El Paso for months when, in late 2005, they were separated.

    The Lubbock hospital called Child Protective Services to report medical neglect because his mother was 10 days late for a chemotherapy treatment. Within a couple of weeks, a judge placed Luis and his two siblings in foster care, allowing their mother to share custody because it was not a typical neglect case.

    Carranza left Luis and his two siblings in Lubbock and returned to El Paso to arrange for Luis' brother and sister, unlike Luis both U.S. citizens, to stay with their grandparents.

    But Carranza didn't return for a court hearing two weeks later, and in October 2005 immigration authorities in El Paso discovered her and sent her back to Mexico.

    It was around that time Luis' treatment pushed his leukemia into remission and doctors grew upbeat. But the chemo and radiation so weakened his body and suppressed his immune system that Luis began to have seizures. He had "terminal and irreversible" brain damage, doctors wrote in court documents.

    He lapsed into a vegetative state in early 2006, and his doctors, concluding he had little chance of recovery, insisted on a do-not-resuscitate order, meaning no life-saving measures would be taken. His mother tried to sneak across the border but was again caught and sent back to Mexico, officials said.

    Attorneys for the children and the mother, CPS, and even the judge, contacted U.S. border officials, Mexican authorities and even members of Congress to try to bring Carranza to her son's side.

    In April, Luis contracted pneumonia and was taken to a Lubbock hospital, where he was not expected to survive. Later that month, the office of U.S. Sen. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison intervened and Carranza was allowed to cross the border.

    An attorney in the case said that despite Luis' condition, he seemed to sense his mother presence. His condition improved and CPS approved his returning to El Paso with his mother. U.S. officials, who initially gave Carranza a humanitarian visa, agreed to let her stay until Luis died.

    Luis was at his grandparents' home when he died, Cunningham said.

    "We all knew he was suffering and we're all confident that he's gone to a better place," he said.


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  2. #2
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    If her son had been treated in Mexico, then she would have been by his side. Who paid for all this medical treatments and court cost?????

    The child met the same fate he would have in Mexico.

    Dixie
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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