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An Irish immigrant’s odyssey

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Feil said that when the children struggled to deal with their mother’s murder, Stout took them to counseling.

“Josephine would take the bus all over creation trying to get those kids into support groups and whatever care they needed,” Feil said.

“She couldn’t afford her medicine sometimes. She has no teeth. She needs cataract surgery. She needs hearing aids. Anybody else would be dead by now. But that’s Josephine. I think she’s only lasted this long out of grit and determination.”

Stout already was getting Medicaid, and in April 1999 she began receiving cash assistance from the Illinois Department of Human Services. She said she went to the department the next October for what was supposed to be a routine six-month evaluation.

“A new lady had my case and she said there’s no proof that you’re a U.S. citizen,” Stout said. “I said, ‘Proof? I’ve been here (in the country) since I was 6 months old? What proof?’ And she kept saying, ‘You need proof or we’ve got to cut you off.’”

Januari Smith Trader, spokeswoman for the state human services department, said federal guidelines require aid applicants to verify their citizenship or legal residency status.

Stout said she told the caseworker that she had paid taxes during years when her income was high enough to qualify. But that wasn’t proof of her legal status, and she said her food stamps and cash assistance were taken away.

“Some of the kids were older, but I still had mouths to feed, so I picked up cans to make money and I worked small jobs,” said Stout.

Balicki said she and Feil accompanied Stout to the public aid office.

“We kept trying to advocate for her, but they wouldn’t budge,” Balicki said. “We had pro bono lawyers who tried getting her birth certificate. For years it seemed to always go to a dead end and we were never able to get her the money she was entitled to. We knew we needed a miracle.”

That came in 2008, when one of Stout’s grandchildren was walking down the street and noticed the line of people waiting outside Casa Catalina, a basic needs center run by Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago. She recommended that Stout stop by the storefront.

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