(SPOKANE) A Nicaraguan man in Spokane is days from deportation after the Board of Immigration Appeals denied his motion to reopen on August 4, 2025, and lifted a protective stay. Despite accounts of repression in Nicaragua—where his uncle was shot and he witnessed a child killed during a 2019 protest—his pleas for asylum were rejected because his filing was late, not because officers or judges doubted what happened. As of August 14, 2025, his advocates say only a legal miracle could stop removal from the United States.
Federal shifts are squeezing Nicaraguan families across Spokane. Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Nicaragua had been extended to July 5, 2025, but the Department of Homeland Security later announced termination effective September 8, 2025. In a limited reprieve, a federal judge automatically extended TPS work permits through November 18, 2025. That extension helps some people stay employed for a few more months, yet it does not promise long‑term status or protection from deportation once the clock runs out.

According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the shifting TPS timeline has left many Nicaraguans unsure which deadlines apply to them and when they will lose work authorization.
Legal setbacks and a shrinking safety net
The Spokane resident’s case illustrates how procedural mistakes can become life‑changing. He missed the one‑year asylum filing deadline; late applications are often denied unless a person proves “extraordinary circumstances.” He reported credible fear based on the 2018–2019 crackdown in Nicaragua, but the procedural bar kept judges from granting protection.
After removal proceedings, he asked the Board of Immigration Appeals to reopen his case. On August 4, 2025, the BIA denied that request and ended the stay of removal, clearing the way for deportation.
This outcome comes as other protections weaken. In May 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the federal government to end parole status that had let about 500,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela live and work here for a time. Community leaders in Spokane say that decision fueled fear across mixed‑status families.
Mayor Lisa Brown has asked city staff to support nonprofits aiding migrants. Rev. Luc Jasmin Jr. of Jasmin Ministries described the loss of parole protections as “genocide.” He added, “This is life or death.”
What limited options remain
For the Spokane man—and others in similar situations—the path forward is narrow and time‑sensitive. Lawyers outline a few steps that may apply, depending on individual facts:
- Asylum or related protection
- People generally must file within one year of entering the country.
- Some exceptions exist for “changed” or “extraordinary” circumstances, but these are hard to prove.
- The application is Form I-589, available at https://www.uscis.gov/i-589.
- Late filings face steep odds unless the exception is well‑documented.
- TPS renewals while the designation remains in effect
- Federal orders have shifted the TPS end date multiple times.
- The latest court action extends work permits tied to TPS through November 18, 2025.
- TPS application: Form I-821 at https://www.uscis.gov/i-821.
- Work permits: Form I-765 at https://www.uscis.gov/i-765.
- Government updates: https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/temporary-protected-status.
- Motions to reopen or reconsider
- A person can ask the immigration judge or the BIA to take a second look if new evidence emerges or if there was a legal error.
- Strict deadlines apply; recent denials show how difficult this route can be without new facts.
- Other humanitarian or family paths
- Some may qualify for a U visa (crime victim), family petitions, or other narrow protections.
- Each option depends on the facts of the case and often takes years.
Advocates emphasize the risks of paperwork errors, bad advice, and missed dates. People who can afford it should work with licensed attorneys. Those who cannot may seek help from accredited representatives at trusted nonprofits, such as the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, which serves Eastern Washington.
Important: Timing is often the decisive factor. Missing filing deadlines or losing temporary protections can immediately expose people to removal.
How this affects the Spokane community
For this Spokane resident, timing is the harshest barrier. With the BIA’s stay lifted, removal could happen without another hearing. If he ever had TPS, the termination schedule means that protection is ending soon unless further court orders arrive. If he never had TPS, the recent extension of EADs to November 18, 2025 would not apply to him. Either way, the denial on August 4 cut off the strongest pending shield he had.
The broader Nicaraguan community feels the same squeeze:
- TPS allowed parents to work and children to enroll in school.
- Those routines are now at risk.
- Spokane employers fear losing trained staff if permits lapse.
Officials in Washington, D.C., are divided. Supporters of winding down TPS argue conditions in Nicaragua have improved enough to resume regular visa and deportation processes. Refugee groups counter that dissent remains dangerous, pointing to arrests and past shootings as evidence that return could mean harm.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem has defended the federal approach. Local leaders in Spokane call for more time so families can search for lawful options instead of facing sudden deportation.
What comes next
What happens next depends on litigation and politics that few families control. Ongoing developments include:
- Court challenges to TPS termination and parole changes.
- The judge’s extension of TPS documents to November 18, 2025, which provides some time to plan and seek legal help.
- No comprehensive congressional fixes yet; broader immigration bills remain stalled.
Practical next steps for affected individuals:
- Review eligibility and deadlines for forms (I-589, I-821, I-765).
- Gather and document new or previously missing evidence carefully.
- Seek legal counsel from licensed attorneys or accredited nonprofit representatives.
- Monitor court rulings and government updates closely.
For now, the man at the center of Spokane’s latest deportation scare waits. He checks in with his lawyer, keeps a go‑bag near the front door, and prays an appeal or policy shift arrives in time. His story shows how a late filing—an error that might be forgiven in other areas of law—can trigger years of consequences in immigration court. It also demonstrates how changing national rules intersect with everyday lives in one city: hopes narrow, deadlines loom, and the Board of Immigration Appeals can have the last word unless a higher court or Congress intervenes.
This Article in a Nutshell
A Spokane Nicaraguan faces imminent deportation after the BIA denied reopening on August 4, 2025. TPS termination and shifting deadlines strain families. Lawyers warn missed one-year asylum windows and procedural errors often block protection. Limited remedies include narrow exceptions, motions to reopen, TPS filings while active, and urgent legal representation before November 18, 2025.