STUART — A Martin County jury this morning sided with a local hospital in a closely watched lawsuit surrounding the private deportation of a brain-damaged Guatemalan patient.
Martin Memorial Hospital officials in 2003 sent Luis Alberto Jimenez, an illegal immigrant, on a chartered flight back to Guatemala after he had run up more than $1.5 million in medical bills in a case that garnered national attention.
Attorneys for Jimenez’s guardian, Montejo Gaspar, had asked the jury to find that Martin Menorial acted unreasonable in deporting Jimenez and asked for more than $1 million for his care in Guatemala and punitive damages on top of that.
The jury rejected their arguments in a verdict returned early this morning, ending about nine hours of deliberations that began Thursday afternoon.
“We are obviously pleased with the jury’s decision. We have maintained all along that we acted correctly and, most importantly, in the best interests of Mr. Jimenez,” Martin Memorial President and CEO Mark Robitaille said in an emailed statement this morning.
Jurors late Friday had requested to hear for a second time the videotaped deposition from former hospital CEO Dick Harman. In it, Harman said he approved Jimenez’s transfer because he thought Gaspar’s attorneys had exhausted their appeals to a judge’s ruling allowing the deportation.

Montejo Gaspar, left, the former guardian of Luis Jimenez, Thursday at the Martin County Courthouse. Sarah Grile/The Post
Health care and immigration experts nationwide have been closely watching the court action. Lawyers say it may be the first of its kind and underscores the dilemma facing hospitals with patients who require long-term care, are unable to pay and don’t qualify for federal or state aid because of their immigration status.
Jimenez, now 37, was a Mayan Indian sending money home to his wife and young sons when in 2000, a drunken driver plowed into a van he was riding in, leaving him a paraplegic with the mental capability of a fourth grader. Because of his brain injury, his cousin Gaspar was made his legal guardian.
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