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Arrested By ICE And Deported In A Vegetative State: A Costa Rican Man’s Family Seeks Answers After His Death

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When Greidy Mata said goodbye to her brother Randall before he emigrated from Costa Rica to the United States in search of work, she hugged a man who was “big, tall, and full of remarkable vitality.” Ten months later, when Randall was deported back to the Central American country, the person Greidy received at the airport was unrecognizable.

“It was a shocking sight,” she recounts over the phone. “He couldn’t speak or move, the wounds on his body were neglected and open, he was filthy, smelled bad, and his mouth was full of dried blood.”

Randall Gamboa, 52, was deported by U.S. authorities and arrived in Costa Rica in a vegetative state, suffering from encephalopathy and rhabdomyolysis. He could no longer walk or eat on his own. Less than two months later, Gamboa died in a hospital in Pérez Zeledón, his hometown in the south of the country.

Greidy, her mother, and the rest of the family want answers and say they are willing to take Randall’s case to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR). The family went through a “calvary” that began in February, when Randall was arrested by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Texas, after crossing the border from Tijuana, Mexico.

Randall was first held at the Webb County Detention Center, and later transferred to Port Isabel, both in Texas. During his time in those centers, he called his family every day, but on June 12, he disappeared. “He wasn’t answering our calls, and we were very worried. Finally, someone at the detention center said he had a health issue and that’s why he wasn’t answering us. But they didn’t give us any more information,” says Greidy.

Randall’s family turned to two lawyers who ended up scamming them, until they finally found a third attorney who managed to locate him in a Texas hospital at the beginning of August. By then, Randall was bedridden, in a vegetative state, and the lawyer began the process to have him returned to Costa Rica.

“We were suffering because he was missing, but when we realized his condition, we consulted doctors and understood that it was a very serious situation and that we could lose him,” says Greidy.

Despite their fear and worry, Greidy and her family were “determined to bring him back to his homeland, to the warmth of his people.”

Trump

Randall was finally flown back to Costa Rica on an air ambulance on September 3, in a trip paid for by ICE. He was immediately hospitalized in the emergency room of a medical center in San José, the capital of Costa Rica, and a few days later was transferred to the hospital in Pérez Zeledón. After nearly two months in the hospital, he died on October 26.

Costa Rica seeks clarification from the US

Randall’s family has called on the Costa Rican government to demand answers from the United States. In early October, when Randall was still alive, Costa Rican Foreign Minister Arnoldo André said they would “raise this issue with the U.S. government.”

“I have personally taken charge of this, reviewed the consular file, and I am escalating communication with the State Department through a diplomatic note. This needs to be clarified,” André said during a congressional hearing.

A day after Randall’s death, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement indicating that authorities “will continue to make every effort to clarify the circumstances” and that the ministry has “maintained communication with the Costa Rican’s family to provide them with guidance and support.” However, Costa Rica has not yet received an official response from the United States.

Greidy says that with this statement, the government is doing “the bare minimum,” but they are still waiting for President Rodrigo Chaves to speak out. “They don’t want to get involved in this because they are friends of the United States,” she says.

One person who did speak out forcefully was Óscar Arias, two-time president of Costa Rica (1986-1990 and 2006-2010) and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1987). In a post on his social media, Arias described the reaction of the United States government as “complicit silence.” “Almost two months have passed since Randall returned to the country, and our government has been unable to obtain an explanation from the authorities in Washington. Randall’s family deserves to know the truth and what happened to him while he was in the custody of U.S. immigration authorities,” the former president wrote.

Arias added that “the immigration policy promoted by President Donald Trump embodies the worst anti-values that any American policy has ever professed: it is racist, xenophobic, and normalizes inhumane treatment of migrants.”

Randall Gamboa en una imagen cedida por su familia.

Limited alternatives

Following Randall’s death, the family announced that it would “begin recovering data, organizing the information, seeking out lawyers who are experts in international law, and proceeding with an official complaint before the Inter-American Court.”

Juan Ignacio Rodríguez, legal adviser for the International Institute for Social Responsibility and Human Rights, a Costa Rica-based NGO dedicated to promoting compliance with international human rights standards, explained by telephone that “there is no similar precedent” to the case of Randall Gamboa in international law. “This case is complicated because the United States has the peculiarity of not having ratified many international human rights treaties,” the expert notes.

“The United States has not accepted the jurisdiction of the IACHR, nor has it accepted several United Nations treaties, so it is virtually impossible to denounce the United States before international human rights bodies or tribunals,” explains Rodríguez. According to the lawyer, one of the few options available are the IACHR mechanisms known as “thematic hearings.” These, however, are not contentious and do not take place before a court; rather, their purpose is to “raise awareness of the issue.”

Another alternative, he added, would be to bring a case against Costa Rica, if the family believes that the Costa Rican consulate in the United States was aware of what was happening to Randall and “did not act diligently in this regard.” In its official statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs noted that “during the time Mr. Gamboa remained in the custody of Customs and Immigration, the Consulate General of Costa Rica in Houston followed up on his case, taking all possible actions within the framework of international law and applicable local regulations.”

Randall’s sister says she understands that taking on the United States “sparks fear” since it is “a great power,” but that the family is convinced they must continue with the case out of their “deep love” for Randall. “We are going to act with both our strength and our hearts and explore every avenue,” she says.

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Costa Rica

From The White Iberian Lynx In Spain To The Howler Monkeys Of Costa Rica: Why Do Animals Change Color?

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Chameleons, octopuses, cuttlefish, and snowshoe hares change color naturally, but the appearance of a white Iberian lynx in the mountains of the Spanish province of Jaén is surprising, even unbelievable. The animal, a female known as Satureja, has lost her natural coloring — the brown and orange tones so characteristic of the species. She has, however, retained the black spots unique to each lynx: a kind of natural ID that lynxes keep for life and that allows researchers to distinguish one individual from another.

No one knows the reason for this striking change in coat color, which had already been observed in another lynx previously. Javier Salcedo, coordinator of the Iberian lynx reintroduction program in the Spanish region of Andalusia, suggests it could be a temporary depigmentation due to external factors — environmental or stress — rather than a genetic mutation leading to albinism or leucism.

Lince ibérico blanco

Researchers point to the case of another female lynx — possibly related to this one — that experienced the same loss of pigmentation and eventually regained her natural tones. The Andalusian government’s Ministry of Sustainability and Environment, however, has referred the matter to the ongoing investigation.

“When an animal doesn’t normally change color, and it does so suddenly, an environmental factor cannot be ruled out,” explains Ismael Galván, a senior scientist at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) at the National Museum of Natural Sciences (MNCN) and a specialist in pigmentation. The problem is that, currently, researchers “don’t fully understand the external agents that could cause these changes, and it’s possible that environmental pollution could be affecting the coloration,” he says. That’s why it’s so important, he argues, to investigate the origin of these types of anomalies.

Galván cites as an example the anomalous changes being observed in the pigmentation of mantled howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in Costa Rica, with whom he has worked. For about 10 years, these primates have been undergoing a dramatic color change. “It’s very striking, because they go from being completely black to individuals with orange and yellow patches,” he says. At first, only a few were affected, and the transformation only affected their limbs, legs, or tails, “but there has been an increase both in the number of affected individuals and in the extent of the altered body areas, and now there are entirely orange howler monkeys.”

What’s behind this? “There’s a lack of research [to reach a conclusion], and it’s not just monkeys; these anomalies have also been detected in porcupines and toucans,” he says. Melanins are responsible for the black, brown, reddish, and yellowish tones of skin, hair, fur, and feathers. In the case of howler monkeys, they are losing the melanin responsible for black tones in favor of orange, while in the Iberian lynx that has appeared in Jaén, the process is the opposite: the orange pigments are fading, and the black ones remain.

The pigmentation changes in the monkeys may be linked to exposure to agrochemicals used on nearby plantations. “But it’s a hypothesis we haven’t yet been able to investigate in detail,” Galván explains.

The most common cause of animals being born with a different pigmentation than their natural one is a genetic mutation. Natural selection usually ensures that such animals don’t survive. One such alteration is albinism, which occurs randomly and results in a complete absence of melanin. In the case of Satureja, albinism has been ruled out, as in that case she should be completely white, without any black markings. The gorilla Snowflake was one of the most famous cases of albinism in the world. He was captured as a baby in Guinea in 1966 and lived in the Barcelona Zoo until his death in 2003 at the age of 40.

Another genetic anomaly is leucism, in which the animal produces melanin but it fails to reach certain areas of the body, which appear white or very pale. This doesn’t appear to be the case either, since Satureja doesn’t display that pattern.

Furthermore, both conditions (albinism and leucism) are present at birth, and these two lynxes, according to the coordinator of the lynx reintroduction program, were born with their normal coloration. The depigmentation appeared later.

The role of 700 genes

Lluis Montoliu, a researcher at the Spanish National Research Council and the Center for Biomedical Research in Rare Diseases at the National Center for Biotechnology, explains that “there are almost 700 genes that, in one way or another, directly or indirectly, control pigmentation in animals (and in us), out of the approximately 20,000 genes that both the lynx and we humans possess, given that we are both mammals.” Of those, only 22 are known to cause albinism when mutated, and a few others can lead to leucism.

But there are many more that “can alter pigmentation in multiple ways,” he adds. For example, some gradually switch off, as happens with silver horses, which are born with normal coloration but lose pigment over time until they turn white. “Little Uncle, the horse from [the children’s series] Pippi Longstocking, was one of these horses, and before each scene, they would paint on the black circular spots that we all remember,” he recalls.

This horse is a model of vitiligo, “possibly one of the explanations for why this lynx may have lost pigmentation on its body.” This skin condition has both genetic and environmental causes (there are at least 40 genes whose alteration predisposes individuals to vitiligo), and external factors: friction or exposure to chemicals can also trigger pigment loss by destroying or depleting melanocytes, the cells responsible for producing melanin.

But to know for sure what might have happened to this lynx, “we would first have to sequence its genome and see if it carries mutations in any of its 700 genes.” It would also be necessary to perform “a histological analysis [tissue study] of its skin” and check if it lacks pigment because its melanocytes aren’t producing it or because those cells have disappeared. “The latter would suggest that the cause of this pigment loss could be related to vitiligo,” Montoliú explains.

To obtain Satureja’s genome, it would be enough to collect a few hairs, droppings, or saliva samples. A histological analysis, however, would require taking a skin biopsy — something far more complicated, since she was born in the wild and does not have a GPS tracking device.

For now, she appears to be in good health. She has successfully raised several litters and shows no signs of difficulty hunting or feeding despite her white coat. Technicians from the Iberian lynx recovery program capture a few individuals each year to monitor the population’s overall condition, but they do not target specific animals.

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