HomeHaitiDeaths of U.S. Immigration Detainees, ACLU Reports

United States: 126 Deaths of Immigration Detainees

By Staff
Granma

PHOENIX — In the last eight years, 126 undocumented immigrants have died while in detention centers operated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) authorities.

According to ICE data, from October 2003 through October 2011, 126 detainees have died in its custody. The most recent case is that of 54-year-old Mexican immigrant Pablo Gracida-Conte, who died last October 30 after being rushed by ambulance from the Eloy Detention Facility to a hospital in Arizona.

Gracida Conte is the third undocumented immigrant who has died this year in ICE custody.

The second death was that of 43-year-old Salvadoran Mauro Rivera Romero on October 5, in an El Paso, Texas immigration detention center.

Previously, 35-year-old Aníbal Ramírez Ramírez, also from El Salvador, died on October 2 in Charlottesville, Virginia. The official causes of death of the three immigrants is still pending.

Among the citizens of Latin American countries, Cubans occupy first place in the number of undocumented immigrants who have died in ICE custody, with 32 cases reported in the last eight years. Cuba is followed by Mexico with 24 cases, and Guatemala with nine deaths.

The report states that among the causes of immigrants’ deaths in detention centers are heart conditions, high blood pressure, AIDS, renal failure and pneumonia.

In the case of Gracida Conde, the Pima Medical Examiner’s Office has not yet released the autopsy report, but preliminary accounts cite a heart condition. The deceased Mexican, a native of Oaxaca, was arrested on June 4 in Fairfield, California, and on June 9 was handed over to immigration authorities who transferred him to the Eloy Detention Facility pending deportation.

Attorney Victoria López, from the Arizona American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said:

“The death of undocumented immigrants under ICE custody in detention centers is always a source of great concern for us.”

López stated that, through now, the federal government has not been “transparent” in providing detailed information on immigrant deaths.

“In the past, a number of organizations have filed suits against ICE demanding more information. Recently the court ordered this federal agency to report the number of people who have died in its custody”, said López.

She added that they are also concerned about the causes of death, particularly in cases of suicide or when the causes of death are not specific.

“We have seen a pattern which is repeated over and over again with a lack of adequate medical attention in detention centers, not only in Arizona but throughout the entire country,” López emphasized.

ACLU released a report last July under the title In Their Own Words: Enduring Abuse in Arizona Immigration Detention Centers, [download PDF for full report] which exposes the conditions in Arizona detention centers. The report highlights that one of the main complaints is lack of adequate medical attention, ranging from people who have stated that they have not received medical attention when they asked for it, to those who have had to wait a long time to receive the specialized care they need.

In López’ opinion, the government needs to place more emphasis on conditions in detention centers, particularly given annual increases in the number of people being detained and deported.

 

Source: Granma
ACLU Detention Report added by Haiti Chery

 

Many experts have viagra india price encouraged that this particular pill may be taken between 30 minutes and 36 hours prior to anticipated sexual activity. In this way, if you never face a problem with the drug quality or its delivery, you can give a try to how to get free viagra ordination sample.Side Effectsviagra have been divided in two parts. Instead of writing the word beautiful, it show a tropical beach, which I think purchase sildenafil online most of us can agree that scamming people out of their money, steeling identities, and posting child pornography are wrong. Biological Causes of ED Medical conditions have direct effects on the testicles themselves, which are the organs chargeable for online viagra no prescription sperm production.  

Immigration Detention: A Death Sentence for Far Too Many

By Will Matthews
ACLU

 

The Department of Homeland Security assumes that mass detention is the key to immigration enforcement. But in fact, our detention system locks up thousands of immigrants unnecessarily every year, exposing detainees to brutal and inhumane conditions of confinement at massive costs to American taxpayers. Throughout the next two weeks, check back daily for posts about the costs of immigration detention, both human and fiscal, and what needs to be done to ensure fair and humane policy.

Ahmad Tanveer, a Pakistani New Yorker held in immigration detention at the Monmouth County Correctional Institute in Freehold, N.J., died in anonymity in 2005 despite telling officials of severe chest pain and pleading for hours for medical assistance — pleas that were not responded to until it was too late.

Tanveer’s death was buried and kept out of public view until, four years later, New York Times reporter Nina Bernstein, with the aid of the American Civil Liberties Union and documents we obtained from the government through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) litigation, told his story for the very first time. Even as the Times reported that story, government officials had trouble confirming that Tanveer had ever existed, much less had been locked up in immigration detention and had died there.

And as it turned out, Tanveer’s story was not unique.

Nine months later, the Times reported how internal government documents obtained through the ACLU’s FOIA litigation and a separate FOIA request filed by the newspaper showed how top government officials, many held over by the Obama administration, intentionally tried to hide the brutal mistreatment of immigration detainees. This mistreatment contributed to the more than 100 in-custody deaths since late 2003. The documents were obtained from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of the Inspector General. The ACLU filed a FOIA lawsuit in 2008 demanding access to any and all documents and information in the government’s possession related to the deaths of detainees at immigration detention centers — the patchwork system of privately run jails, federal prisons and county facilities the government uses to hold undocumented immigrants while it tries to deport them.

The government documents obtained by the ACLU exposed a number of in-custody detainee deaths that the government had not previously made public — deaths the ACLU worked with the Times to bring to light. The deaths underscore the secrecy and lack of any kind of independent accountability that continue to plague the nation’s immigration detention system today, and which leaves in place a system that is ripe for continued abuse and mistreatment of immigration detainees, one of the most vulnerable populations in the country.

In January 2009, for example, the Times reported the death of Guido R. Newbrough, 48, a construction worker born in Germany but who lived in the United States for the last 42 years of his life while sporting a “Raised American” tattoo on his shoulder. Newbrough died Nov. 27, 2008, in a Virginia hospital after being detained for 11 months at the Piedmont Regional Jail in Farmville, Va. According to the Times, he died of endocarditis, caused by a virulent staph infection that is typically cured by antibiotics. But as Bernstein wrote, his infection went untreated “despite his mounting pleas for medical care in the 10 days before his death.”

And the following August, Bernstein reported on the death of Felix Franklin Rodriguez-Torres, 36, an Ecuadorian construction worker whose death at the Eloy Detention Center in Arizona from a fast-growing but treatable form of testicular cancer that went undiagnosed by government officials was also hidden from public view until exposed by the ACLU.

The ACLU’s FOIA litigation, combined with the Times’ reporting, contributed to a number of major concessions by the Obama administration in 2009. Administration officials announced plans to overhaul the immigration detention system and create “a truly civil detention system,” including the end of family detention at the T. Don Hutto Family Detention Center in Texas which had been the focus of an ACLU lawsuit. The Obama administration was also forced in August to reveal 11 additional deaths in immigration detention that the government had not previously made public.

But as last week’s investigation by Frontline makes clear — an investigation that also was aided by ACLU FOIA documents — there is nothing “civil” about the abuses that continue to go on behind the closed doors of immigration detention facilities across the country.

The immigration detention system remains in desperate need of far greater levels of independent oversight and transparency than that which currently exits. Congress should pass immigration detention reform as part of any comprehensive immigration reform legislation. And our nation as a whole needs to divorce itself from its reliance on detention in the first place. The vast majority of the people the government has forced into detention didn’t ever warrant being detained, but they nonetheless have been victimized by an unyielding commitment to detention and deportation without the kind of individualized determinations that are the essence of due process.

Being needlessly detained should never turn into a death sentence.

 

Source:  ACLU

 


Comments

Deaths of U.S. Immigration Detainees, ACLU Reports — No Comments

Leave a Reply