Show caption Delmer Joel Ramírez Palma survived the crash but sustained serious injuries. His lawyers said he was ignored when he reported safety concerns. Photograph: Chris Granger/AP US immigration Worker who raised alarm before deadly New Orleans hotel collapse to be deported Honduran Delmer Joel Ramírez Palma, who has lived in New Orleans for 18 years, warned supervisors of safety concerns Lauren Zanolli @LaurenZanolli Fri 22 Nov 2019 18.09 GMT Share on Facebook

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A construction worker who attempted to warn managers about building dangers and was seriously injured in last month’s deadly Hard Rock Hotel collapse in New Orleans, will be deported on Monday, his lawyers said this week.

Delmer Joel Ramírez Palma, a Honduran citizen, was working inside the 18-storey building when it dramatically crumbled on to a busy downtown intersection on 12 October, killing three and injuring dozens. He survived a fall from the ninth floor to the sixth by swinging from a rope.

Ramírez Palma was hospitalized with serious injuries, including head trauma and internal inflammation, and still requires surgery for an acute eye injury, according to his wife and two lawyers working on separate immigration and civil injury cases.

Immediately after the accident, he was interviewed by a Spanish-language media outlet. Two days later, he was arrested by immigration authorities while fishing with his family in a national wildlife refuge.

He has lived in New Orleans for 18 years.

According to his lawyers and his wife, Ramírez Palma had reported safety concerns – including asymmetrical building measurements and uncured concrete too weak to support weight – to his supervisors at King Company, a New Orleans construction firm, before the deadly collapse.

Construction managers allegedly told him to ignore the issues, according to Mary Yanik, senior staff attorney at the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, an advocacy group.

A vigil in New Orleans for those who died in New Orleans. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP

The Guardian has contacted King Company for comment.

The US government’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Osha) and the New Orleans police department are currently investigating the cause of the collapse. The bodies of two victims remain inside the building, which will be imploded in January.

Ramírez Palma’s arrest highlights the unique risks undocumented immigrants face on job sites, advocates said.

“The timing is highly suspicious … and the circumstances of the arrest are extraordinarily suspicious,” said Yanik, noting she had no direct evidence tying his arrest to his employer.

Tania Bueso, Ramírez Palma’s wife, said the encounter with a US Fish and Wildlife Service ranger that led to her husband’s arrest was unusual, but can’t be certain it was targeted. She claims the officer “seemed to actually be looking for him” as he was resting in the shade. The ranger asked for a valid fishing license, which he had, and then for a driver’s license, which he did not.

The family fishes regularly. Bueso said they had been through license checks before, but have never been asked for personal identification before the October encounter.

The Honduran man’s treatment has sent a further chill through the undocumented community, already on high alert under Donald Trump’s aggressive enforcement policies.

“There’s already extraordinary fear in this environment from any worker to report labor violations,” said Yanick.

Ramírez Palma’s lawyers say his case illustrates how a crackdown on undocumented workers could also hamper investigations into the cause of the accident.

“There’s really crucial information here that the public needs to get to the bottom of what happened at Hard Rock,” she said.

In 2016 a judge ordered Ramírez Palma to be deported. Since then, he had been regularly reporting to the agency and filed for a stay of deportation earlier this year, his lawyers said.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) and Osha did not respond to requests for comment.

Bueso and her husband’s lawyers said they were concerned for his health and could not determine if he had received recent medical treatment for his injuries.

Daryl Gray, who is representing Ramírez Palma and four other Hard Rock workers in a civil suit against building developers, said he had spoken to “numerous” undocumented workers too afraid to talk about the accident.

He called federal authorities’ treatment of Ramírez Palma “unfair at its core”.

“And it is contrary to seeking justice,” he added. “One agency is investigating this tragic collapse and then another government agency is moving material witnesses out of the country.”

For Bueso, who is also Honduran and has lived in New Orleans for 14 years, the fallout from the tragedy has brought on immediate fears for her whole family, along with a more lasting impact.

While she said she was afraid speaking publicly could attract retribution, she was doing so in the “hope this doesn’t happen to other families”.