ON
← Back to feed
United StatesHealth7 days ago

A woman's hypothermia death in Pittsburgh after her release from ICE custody is ruled a homicide

A medical examiner has determined that the death of a Haitian asylum seeker who died of hypothermia after being released from ICE custody was a homicide. Her attorney stated that her family plans to file a lawsuit against Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

A medical examiner has ruled the death of a Haitian asylum seeker after being released from federal custody a homicide. An attorney representing her family said he expects her relatives to sue Immigration and Customs Enforcement in connection with her death.

Daphy Michel, 31, died March 2. She was found at a bus shelter in Pittsburgh. The Allegheny County Medical Examiner's Office found her cause of death to be hypothermia and ruled the manner a homicide, “indicating the death was caused by the actions of another individual” and should not be interpreted as a declaration of criminal guilt, the office said in a statement. The office released its findings Friday.

Michel was a native of Haiti who was seeking asylum in the U.S. after arriving at the southern border in 2022, said Joseph Patrick Murphy, her family's attorney. She was granted humanitarian parole based on urgent humanitarian need, but she did not live to see a hearing scheduled for two weeks after she died, he said.

The medical examiner's office said Michel was a vulnerable adult “suffering from untreated severe mental health issues and a significant language barrier” at the time of her release on Feb. 27, the office said.

She was arrested last summer for yelling at imaginary people due to her psychiatric challenges, Murphy said. She spent six months in Washington County Jail, where she underwent multiple psychiatric examinations as she awaited her first hearing, he said.

A magistrate said he could not hold her for trial for threatening imaginary people, Murphy said. Afterward, ICE arrested her in her cell, put an ankle monitor on her and took her 25 miles (40 kilometers) away to Pittsburgh, where she sat at a bus shelter for days in winter, he said.

“She was in September clothes and it was February, and the weather overwhelmed her and she went into hypothermia,” Murphy said.

The medical examiner's finding of homicide is different from a criminal charge, meaning “somebody did or failed to do something that brought about her demise,” Murphy said. He said he expects Michel's family to file a lawsuit against ICE in connection with her death.

In an email, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Lauren Bis said, “ICE had NOTHING to do with this woman’s death. She passed away THREE days after ICE encountered her."

She called Michel “an illegal alien from Haiti” who was placed in removal proceedings after her arrest.

Michel had all her belongings and a fully charged phone when she was released, with public transportation available, Bis said. ICE learned the day after Michel died that her ankle monitor “had been tampered with," but county medical examiner staff “refused to cooperate or even talk with” ICE officials, she said.

Popular Reads

ICE called the U.S. Marshals Service, who retrieved the ankle monitor but were refused information about Michel's condition, Bis said. ICE learned of her death via news media, she said.

In a statement, Allegheny County Executive Sara Innamorato called Michel's death “a tragedy and appears that with a little humanity, it could have been completely avoidable.”

U.S. Rep. Summer Lee, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, said her death was preventable and that “she deserved care, shelter, language access, and medical support.”

ICE is no longer reporting the deaths of detainees within 30 days of their release from custody, ending a 2021 Biden-era policy. Health experts say the change will reflect fewer deaths than actually occur without addressing issues in medical care.

___

Dura reported from Bismarck, North Dakota.

Read the full article at ABC News (US)
Source document: Pennsylvania county medical examiner's office

3 reports

ABC News (US)IndependentCenter7 days ago
A woman's hypothermia death in Pittsburgh after her release from ICE custody is ruled a homicide

A woman from Haiti who was seeking asylum in the U.S. died from hypothermia days after being released from federal custody. The Pennsylvania county medical examiner's office has ruled her death a homicide.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report on the ruling of a death as a homicide without apparent ideological framing. It does not include commentary, opinion, or biased language that would indicate a leaning toward either side of the political spectrum.

Official sources cited

  • government Pennsylvania county medical examiner's office
Associated PressIndependentCenter7 days ago
A woman's hypothermia death in Pittsburgh after her release from ICE custody is ruled a homicide

A woman who died of hypothermia in Pittsburgh after being released from ICE custody has been ruled a homicide.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on an official ruling without apparent framing or slant. It does not include commentary, quotes, or context that would indicate a particular ideological leaning.

Official sources cited

  • government Official ruling by authorities
The Washington TimesIndependentLeft8 days ago
A woman's hypothermia death in Pittsburgh after her release from ICE custody is ruled a homicide

A medical examiner has determined that the death of a Haitian asylum seeker who died of hypothermia after being released from ICE custody was a homicide. Her attorney stated that her family plans to file a lawsuit against Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the death as a homicide and highlights the potential legal action against ICE, which suggests a critical perspective toward immigration enforcement practices. This framing implies a critique of ICE policies without providing balanced counterpoints or emphasizing procedural aspects

Official sources cited

  • government Medical Examiner Report

Go to the primary sources (3)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentPennsylvania county medical examiner's office
  • governmentOfficial ruling by authorities
  • governmentMedical Examiner Report