W hen Laura Sandoval said goodbye to her husband, Eduardo, in August, she thought he'd return home to Mexico in three months. She trusted that the fruit farm that hired him — Washington Fruit and Produce — would protect Eduardo from COVID-19. Instead, he got a case of COVID that will cripple him for life. And when Laura flew to Spokane to care for her husband, she thought the company would — at the very least — provide the workers compensation that Eduardo legally was entitled to for catching COVID-19 on the job. But to this day, she hasn't seen a penny. "I don't know how they can sleep at night, knowing the situation we're in," Laura tells the