A brutal and preventable tragedy in Fort Myers, Florida, is now reigniting national outrage over immigration enforcement failures under the Biden administration, as new revelations emerge about the suspect and how he was allowed to remain in the United States despite a prior deportation order.
On April 3, Nilufa Easmin stepped outside a Chevron gas station in Fort Myers after noticing a man vandalizing her vehicle. She was simply trying to stop the damage. She never made it back inside alive.
Authorities say the attack that followed was swift, violent, and entirely preventable.
According to investigators, the suspect—identified as Rolbert Joachin—had already entered the United States illegally in August 2022. That same year, an immigration judge issued a final order of removal against him, meaning he was legally required to be deported. But that never happened.
Instead, under the administration of President Joe Biden, Joachin was granted Temporary Protected Status (TPS), a designation intended for limited humanitarian use but increasingly criticized for being broadly applied. Even more alarming, officials say he remained in the country long after his legal protections expired in 2024, with no enforcement action taken to remove him.
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