The judicial case of Haitian businessman Dimitri Vorbe has reached a turning point in the United States. After spending several months in a Florida immigration detention center, Vorbe is scheduled to leave the U.S. in the coming days for deportation to the Dominican Republic, following a decision upheld by federal justice. Arrested on September 23, 2025, at his home by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents, Vorbe was held at the Krome North Service Processing Center in Miami on suspicion of maintaining indirect ties to violent networks associated with armed groups in Haiti.
According to his lawyer, Frandely Dénis Julien, Federal Judge Darrin Gayles approved an agreement authorizing the businessman’s departure via commercial flight within less than a week. Under this agreement, Vorbe must drop all legal proceedings against the U.S. administration regarding his detention conditions and the legality of the case against him. This outcome mirrors that of Reginald Boulos, another prominent Haitian private sector figure held at the same facility before being transferred to Colombia. By opting for a third country, U.S. authorities appear to be prioritizing transfers to safer locations as the security situation in Haiti continues to collapse.















