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WSWS : News
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America
New York Times exposé on immigrant deaths in
custody
By Naomi Spencer
6 May 2008
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A front-page article in Mondays New York Times
provides some insight into the barbaric treatment of immigrants
held in US custody. After obtaining a government list through
a Freedom of Information Act request, the Times investigated
the circumstances surrounding a number of immigrant deaths that
occurred in detention centers between 2004 and 2007.
Sixty-six immigrants died in custody during those three years,
according to the scantly detailed list, compiled by the federal
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in January under pressure
from Congress to provide an accounting of its treatment of prisoners.
At that time, the House passed a billwhich later stalled
in the Senatethat would have required states receiving specific
federal funds to report deaths of prisoners.
The Times article (Few Details on Immigrants Who
Died in Custody, by Nina Bernstein, May 5, 2008) describes
the immigrant detention system as a patchwork of federal
centers, county jails and privately run prisons that has become
the nations fastest-growing form of incarceration.
The prisons, through which some 330,000 people pass each year
according to ICE, are run with little oversight and little documentation.
Within this system, thousands of immigrants are locked
up for days, months or years while the government decides whether
to deport them, the Times notes. Some have
no valid visa; some are legal residents, but have past criminal
convictions; others are seeking asylum from persecution.
Many who are swept up in ICE raids have committed no crime beyond
simply overstaying their visas, and others are needlessly imprisoned
while their citizenship applications are processed in the government
system.
ICE is part of the Department of Homeland Security, an agency
created by the Bush administration as part of its clampdown on
democratic rights in the name of the so-called war on terror.
With both the Republicans and the Democrats, and particularly
the presidential candidates, pledging to implement still more
repressive immigration laws, the conditions faced by immigrants
are certain to worsen.
Immigrant prisoners and their families are denied many of the
basic legal mechanisms available to citizens, the Times
points out, and no government agency is required to keep track
of deaths or to publicly report them. ICE officials told the paper
that deaths were reviewed internally, and that the agency notified
next of kin and reported deaths to local medical authorities.
However, investigations into some of the 66 deaths revealed that
in some cases family members were not informed of the hospitalizations
or deaths of their loved ones, and the circumstances surrounding
such incidents were obscured.
The list of deaths classifies 13 as suicides and 14 as the
result of heart problems. Others are vaguely cited as unwitnessed
arrest, epilepsy, or simply, undetermined. In
addition, the Times states that it was unable to locate
many families of the deceased because No ones nationality
is given, some places of detention are omitted, and some names
and birth dates seem garbled.
The members of one family the newspaper contacted said they
were rebuffed by the county jail where their relative,
28-year-old Walter Rodriguez-Castro, had been held when they tried
to find out why he stopped calling them in April 2006. Two months
later, the Times reported, his wife went to his scheduled
hearing in San Franciscos immigration court and learned
that he had been dead for many weeks, his body unclaimed in the
county morgue. According to the country coroner, Rodriguez-Castro
had died of undiagnosed and untreated meningitis; on the ICE list,
his cause of death was classified as unresponsive.
As the Times emphasizes, there are no government channels
for prisoners or their relatives to challenge abuse. In the event
of a prisoner death, No independent inquiry is mandated.
And often relatives who try to investigate the treatment of those
who died say they are stymied by fear of immigration authorities,
lack of access to lawyers, or sheer distance.
Among the deaths ICE reported, 38 percent of the detainees
had been housed in local or county-run facilities, and 27 percent
were in those run by the federal government. A third of the deaths
occurred in privately run facilities, although private operations
held only 19 percent of the total immigrant prisoners between
2003 and 2007.
While abuse is ubiquitous in the US prison system, privately
run, for-profit prisons are especially notorious for brutality
and medical neglect of inmates. According to the Times
investigation, 13 of the deaths on the ICE list occurred at the
facilities of one private operator, the Corrections Corporation
of America.
The Times article featured the case of one immigrant,
Guinea-born Boubacar Bah, a 52-year-old tailor working in New
York City. Bah was imprisoned in the Corrections Corporation of
Americas Elizabeth Detention Center in New Jersey after
trying to return from Guinea after a May 2006 visit, during which
time the legal immigration green card he had applied for had been
denied. The denial automatically revoked his permission to re-enter
the US. He was held for nine months while an appeal filed on his
behalf was pending.
On February 1, 2007, after appealing in vain to see a doctor
for several days, Bah reportedly fell in his cell and hit the
back of his head. Afterward, prison records showed, Bah became
incoherent and agitatedsymptoms of a serious brain injury
that were characterized by the prisons medical personnel
as behavior problems.
He was shackled to the floor of the infirmary, where he began
to regurgitate. This was also called disobeying orders,
and according to the Times, Bah was then shackled and put
in solitary confinement. After more than 10 hours of unconsciousness
on the floor of his cell, a guard wrote that Bah began to
breathe heavily and started foaming slightly at the mouth.
Three hours after that, an ambulance was called to take Bah to
a hospital, where he was diagnosed with a fractured skull and
massive hemorrhaging. He lay comatose for four months before dying.
The Times noted that for five days, neither the prison
nor the federal government notified Bahs relatives of his
condition, and did not allow the family to view related prison
records, which Corrections Corporation called proprietary
information.
See Also:
Journalist released from Guantánamo
details abuse
[5 May 2008]
The Sean Bell verdictassuring
that New York Citys police can kill with impunity
[26 April 2008]
US leads world in imprisoning
its people
More than one in 100 adults behind bars
[29 February 2008]
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