Albanian mother suffers heart attack because American authorities are expected to expel her from America

Her story is repeated after five years, receiving renewed attention from the American media. It's about Cile Precetaj, an Albanian mother who for 18 years lives in Michigan, U.S.A., but American authorities have put her in the face of the deportation decision. Albanian Cile Precetaj, mother of three, has ended up in [...]
Her story is repeated after five years, receiving renewed attention from the American media. It's about Cile Precetaj, an Albanian mother who for 18 years lives in Michigan, U.S.A., but American authorities have put her in the face of the deportation decision.
Albanian Cile Precetaj, a mother of three, has ended up in the hospital because of the anxiety and stress she is causing her demand for expulsion.
After treatment at the hospital with a heart attack, the woman was sent to prison waiting to execute her decision to expel her from the United States.
She is married to Albanian Peter Jocaj, who has three children of American citizenship, son and two girls, who are also experiencing a terror situation and have erupted in crying, Telegrafi conveys.
Peter Jocej, on Thursday morning she discovered that she is facing an expulsion case because of lack of documents and was just sent to the hospital in a state of anxiety.
Meanwhile, Cile Precetaj has faced the expulsion in 2013 but was allowed to stay after a second decision. The family, but the lawyer also shows that she has made efforts to become an American citizen.
If we collect all the money we've spent with the lawyer, it's a quarter of a million, and everyone promises me they'll solve it. I'm here with three crying children and a crying mother. Authorities say she violated the law. She came here illegally and exceeded her stay in the country. Okay, but I think a major law is being violated by dividing a family”, the Albanian husband said.
Cile Precetaj went to Michigan for a better life after some serious problems he had in Albania.
Because of this situation, she sought to gain political asylum status, which was rejected in 2007.
Her family says Precetaj has been trying to become a legal citizen since coming to the US. Her family and her lawyer say she hasn't committed a crime since she came to the U.S. state without documents.












