Hospital’s motives questioned in lawsuit over deported Guatemalan man
Tuesday, July 7th, 2009 by Daphne Duret
Opinion Zone Editorial |
STUART - By the summer of 2003, Martin Memorial Medical Center patient Luis Alberto Jimenez spent his days lounging by the nurse’s station on the fourth floor, eager to talk to passers-by and tell them how he missed the wife, kids and family he had back in Guatemala.
He refused to use the bathroom on his own, saying he would only do so when he went back to Guatemala. He told nurses he was sad and wanted to go home. Angry outbursts led doctors to put him on medication to control his behavior.
It was for these reasons, Martin Memorial attorney Scott Michaud told a jury Tuesday, that hospital officials devised a plan to send the undocumented immigrant back to his homeland more than three years after he suffered severe brain injuries and broken bones in a car accident.
But William King, an attorney for Jimenez’s legal guardian who subsequently sued the hospital, told the jury that hospital officials forcibly removed Jimenez from the country to shirk mounting costs they had to bear with little reimbursement.
“Martin Memorial’s actions were carried out through a thorough series of calculated decisions made at the highest level,” King said, later adding: “They tried to make an end run around immigration laws.”

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