Disabled Man, 30, Passes Away After His Father and Caregiver Is Taken Into ICE Custody

The family of a disabled Texas man who passed away in intensive care is claiming US immigration authorities contributed to his passing by separating him from his full-time caregiver and refusing to release his detained father, even as he was in critical condition.

Wael Tarabishi, a US citizen with advanced Pompe disease, passed away on Friday at Methodist Mansfield Medical Center, south of Dallas, weeks after his father Maher Tarabishi was taken into ICE custody during a routine immigration check-in.

Maher, 62, had been Wael’s primary caregiver for more than three decades and managed his ventilator, feeding tubes, medications, and daily medical needs.

Since his arrest on October 28, Maher has been held at the Bluebonnet Detention Center in Anson, Texas.

His family says Wael’s health deteriorated rapidly after his father was removed from the home.

I hold ICE responsible,’ Maher’s daughter-in-law Shahd Arnaout told the Fort Worth Star Telegram. ‘Maybe they did not cause harm to Wael with a bullet, but they led to his passing when they took his father away.’

Wael, who could not move or breathe on his own due to his rare genetic disorder that causes progressive muscle failure, was hospitalized twice after Maher’s arrest after his condition worsened.

In November, he was treated for sepsis and pneumonia. In late December, he was admitted again to the ICU after a stomach infection caused his feeding tube to leak.

That second hospitalization lasted 30 days and ended with Wael passing away on Friday afternoon.

‘Wael is a US citizen, and he was asking for his dad to be next to him while he was in his final moments,’ Arnaout explained. ‘His country failed him.’

According to the family, doctors had warned that Wael required highly specialized care and that Maher was the only person who fully understood his complex medical needs.

Wael was diagnosed with Pompe disease at four and was not expected to live past the age of ten, but survived more than 30 years under his father’s care.

In Wael’s final hours, his family signed a ‘do not resuscitate’ order as his condition rapidly worsened.

The family made an emergency plea for Maher’s release so he could be with his son before he passed away. The request was denied.

Maher had to learn of his son’s passing during a phone call from detention.

‘He couldn’t handle it,’ Arnaout said to the Star Telegram.

The family is now asking ICE to release Maher so he can attend Wael’s funeral.

‘ICE has NOT received a formal request from anyone to attend funeral services. Requests for temporary release are considered on a case by case basis,’ the agency said in a statement.

ICE has described Maher as a ‘criminal alien’ and alleged he was affiliated with the Palestine Liberation Organization, a claim his family denies.

Maher Tarabishi is a Jordanian national who entered the US in 1994 and overstayed on a tourist visa. He later applied for asylum.

His family says he has complied with immigration requirements and regularly attended check-ins.

On Friday, Maher’s attorney filed a motion to reopen his asylum case after discovering that his former lawyer had been practicing without a valid license.

Advocates say Maher’s detention may never have occurred if his legal representation had been legitimate.

In December, the family and community activists gathered outside the hospital, pleading directly with President Donald Trump for Maher’s release.

In a prepared statement read by a cousin, Wael himself had said: ‘He is the one who knows my body when it is about to fail. He is the one who keeps me alive when I’m at my weakest.’

Maher’s daughter-in-law said simply: ‘This is not a man who should be in detention. This is a man who should be beside his child, his sick child.’

The case drew widespread attention on Friday after Billie Eilish shared the story on her social media, prompting renewed scrutiny of immigration detention policies.

‘We call on every congressional representative that represents Texas to take action to the fullest extent of their capacity to ensure that Maher gets the opportunity to properly mourn his son and grieve with his family, as is his human right to do,’ a spokesperson for the Tarabishi family said.

Maher Tarabishi remains in ICE custody. The Daily Mail has contacted ICE for comment.