A Venezuelan man who was arrested by immigration authorities last month before he was able to become an organ donor to help his ailing brother is being released from detention, according to the Chicago-based nonprofit representing the family.
José Gregorio González, who is being held in the Clay County Detention Center in Indiana, could be released as early as Friday, an advocate and a spokesperson for The Resurrection Project confirmed to NBC News on Thursday.
The nonprofit had been rallying community members in the Chicago area in support of the brothers, organizing a vigil Monday evening to demand González’s release on humanitarian parole.
“This marks a victory for humanity and compassion,” Eréndira Rendón, chief program officer for The Resurrection Project, said in a statement. “ICE will temporarily release José Gregorio González, allowing him to save his brother’s life through kidney donation.”
Rendón applauded the decision, saying it “recognizes that our fundamental human rights transcend immigration status.”
“We are grateful to everyone who stood with the Gonzalez family,” she added.
NBC News has reached out to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for comment.
González, 43, arrived in the United States from Venezuela last year to reunite with his brother, who was diagnosed with end-stage renal disease, or kidney failure, in December 2023. Since then, González had been caring for his sick younger brother, José Alfredo Pacheco. They share the same mother.
“My brother is a good man, not a criminal in Venezuela or here,” Pacheco said during Monday’s vigil. “He came only with the hope of donating his kidney to me.”
A father to 9-year-old twins and a 17-year-old, Pacheco said, “I want to live to see them grow up.”