At the request of a Chicago-area congressman, the U.S. House advanced a special measure
Tuesday to allow an illegal immigrant who cared for her paralyzed
husband for 14 years before his death to stay in the country.
Chicago-area Rep. Dan Lipinski introduced the bill in January.
It was approved without controversy on a voice vote for the special
benefit of Corina Turcinovic.
The measure would allow Turcinovic to remain in the United
States and apply for permanent legal residency. It must pass the
Senate and the president must sign it to become law.
"This is a simple case of justice," Lipinski said. "Ending
this ordeal for Corina is now in the hands of the Senate.
Bureaucratic red tape should not get in the way of justice."
Turcinovic's attorney, John Colbert, said his client was
"extremely happy -- but guarded" because she knows how difficult
it is to get private bills passed.
"They're allocated in just really exceptional circumstances,
which I believe our case is," Colbert said. "We're optimistic at
this stage that it'll get to the Senate and pass there as well."
Lipinski's office said his measure is the first private bill to
pass the House in two years, and that only four of 236 private
bills have passed both chambers and been enacted into law since
2003.
Turcinovic's husband, Maro, had applied for U.S. citizenship but
a "bureaucratic mistake" led to the denial of his application. If
it wasn't for the error, Turcinovic could have stayed legally as
the wife or widow of a U.S. citizen, according to Colbert. Maro
Turcinovic became paralyzed in 1990 after being hit by a drunk
driver, and he died in 2004.
Corina Turcinovic was on her way to O'Hare International Airport to be deported in January when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement stopped the proceedings to give Congress more time to decide on Lipinski's bill. She received a one-year stay of
deportation in February.
Turcinovic was released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody earlier this year.
The Associated Press
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