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Chicago Killing Raises Immigration Questions
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What The Court HeardJose Medina-Medina, the 25-year-old accused in the… |
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What The Court HeardJose Medina-Medina, the 25-year-old accused in the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Loyola University student Sheridan Gorman, appeared in court Friday as his attorney described a troubled medical and educational history. According to the defense, he is illiterate, has severe brain damage, and struggles with memory problems. The attorney said he attended school only until age seven in Venezuela and later suffered a gunshot wound to the head during a 2018 robbery while living in Colombia. Those claims do not change the central fact that a young woman is dead, and a family is grieving. They do, however, raise a hard question about how a man with such a history moved through multiple countries and multiple systems before this case reached a courtroom in Chicago.Custody, Release, And The Usual ExcusesMedina-Medina is charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder, unlawful weapon possession, and aggravated discharge of a firearm. Prosecutors say he was arrested before and later released from local custody, which is the kind of public safety policy that tends to look wise only in press releases. His public defender is asking that he remain detained while the case moves forward, saying he could face ICE action if released. That…
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