LOS ANGELES — Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is caring for a 4-year-old girl who has been given permission to stay in the U.S. under humanitarian grounds. Concerns were raised that she might face deportation and lose access to crucial medical care, as stated by her family on Tuesday.
The decision was made following concerns raised by the family’s legal team, warning that the young girl known as “Sofia” could face a life-threatening situation if she were to be sent out of the country.
A representative from the law firm representing Sofia’s family disclosed that the girl’s mother has been granted humanitarian parole for a period of one year, a report confirmed by KABC, an affiliate of ABC Los Angeles.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services did not immediately respond to KABC’s request for comment.
Sofia, who lives in Bakersfield, suffers from “short bowel syndrome,” which prevents her from being able to properly absorb nutrients and fluid from food on her own, according to her lawyers. The condition reportedly stems from a botched surgery she had when she was born in Mexico.
Sofia began receiving treatment for this condition at CHLA when she and her parents crossed the border from Mexico in 2023 on humanitarian parole, the lawyers said.
Sofia’s medical care, which consists of her receiving specialized IV treatments for up to 14 hours a day, can only be administered in the U.S., per the equipment manufacturer, her lawyers said.
Last week, the family’s lawyers said Sofia’s mother, Deysi Vargas, previously received three letters from the Department of Homeland Security saying her humanitarian parole is being terminated.
“It is time for you to leave the United States,” one of the letters, dated April 11, stated. The letter went on to say, “If you do not depart the United States immediately, you will be subject to potential law enforcement actions that will result in your removal from the United States — unless you have otherwise obtained a lawful basis to remain here.”
At a May 28 news conference, Gina Amato Lough, directing attorney at Public Counsel, said: “Deporting this family under these conditions is not only unlawful, it constitutes a moral failure that violates the basic tenets of humanity and decency.”
That same day, a senior official for the Department of Homeland Security told KABCthat any reporting that Sofia’s mother and her family are actively being deported is “FALSE” and their application for humanitarian parole was “still being considered.”
Vargas said the treatment in the U.S. has allowed Sofia to “live her life” with her family, but if she and her daughter are forced to return to Mexico, Sofia “will be at the hospital day and night.”
“We cannot let our country turn its back on this child, or on any of our immigrant neighbors who are simply fighting for a better life, ” Lough said.
While Sofia’s treatments so far have led to improvements in her health, she is “not at the point where she can survive on her own,” her lawyers said.
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