Los Angeles Times
By Cindy Carcamo
August 22, 2014
A
group of Central American women and children detained at an immigration
facility in New Mexico filed a lawsuit Friday against the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security
alleging that it was violating their right to due process as it speeds
up deportations.
A
contingent of attorneys and national immigrant rights groups, including
the National Immigration Law Center and the American Civil Liberties
Union, filed the complaint
in U.S. District Court in Washington on behalf of seven women and three
children held at the Artesia Family Residential Center in Artesia, N.M.
The
lawsuit is the latest criticism against the Artesia facility, which has
been plagued with problems including unsanitary conditions, as federal
officials have stepped
up the pace of processing and deporting thousands of single parents
with children who have illegally entered the U.S. through its southern
border. Many of the immigrants are fleeing violent communities in
Central America.
The
suit claims U.S. immigration officials are restricting communication
between detainees in Artesia and those on the outside, including their
attorneys, coercing women
and children to relinquish their rights and prejudging asylum cases
regardless of individual merits.
The
suit seeks to stop the plaintiffs’ deportations so that they can be
granted an immigration court hearing on their asylum claims, said Karen
Tumlin, managing attorney
with the National Immigration Law Center. In addition, attorneys are
asking immigration officials to return nearly 300 women and children who
have already been deported from the Artesia facility so they can seek
court hearings and have access to attorneys.
“All
of these women and kids are detailing stories of why they fled their
countries,” Tumlin said. “Every single one of them specifically said
they’d received threats
to themselves or members of their family.”
Officials
with the Department of Homeland Security said it is their policy not to
comment on pending litigation, but that the federal government’s
inter-agency response
“to this unprecedented surge has been both humane and lawful.”
The
women and children named in the lawsuit have expressed fear they will
be targeted for violence if deported but have not been given the
safeguards entitled to them,
the suit claims.
A
detainee who fears violence upon deportation is entitled to a hearing
in which a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officer decides
whether the detainee has significant,
credible fear of persecution or torture in their home country and
therefore should not be immediately returned.
A
determination of credible fear is usually easy to achieve, and the case
then goes to an immigration judge who decides whether to grant asylum.
The
lawsuit claims that only about half of the people who would normally be
granted the chance at an asylum hearing are getting one because a
higher standard for establishing
credible fear has been unfairly put in place at the Artesia facility.
“These
women and children are becoming pawns in a political game even though
their lives are at stake. If there is one thing the United States should
never sacrifice,
[it] is due process and fair procedures, yet that is exactly what is
happening despite the life-and-death stakes,” said Lee Gelernt, an ACLU
lawyer who is one of the principal attorneys on the case.
For
instance, some women in the complaint allege that they are granted more
time on the phone if they clean a bathroom while others are told they
can’t talk on the phone
because a child misbehaved, cried or spoke too loudly in their
dormitory unit.
“The
deportation mill set up in Artesia violates our laws. What is going on
in this facility flies in the face of our most basic human rights,” said
Marielena Hincapie,
executive director of the National Immigration Law Center.
The
Department of Homeland Security's inspector general report has cited
problems including inadequate food, inconsistent temperatures and
unsanitary conditions at Artesia
and other holding facilities for women and children.
About 536 women and children remain at the Artesia facility.
In
the last nine months, about 63,000 single parents with at least one
child have been apprehended along the Southwest border, mainly in
southern Texas. At the same time,
about the same number of children traveling without a parent have been
apprehended along the border. Most of the migrants are from Honduras,
Guatemala and El Salvador.
Although
some have tried to move farther into the U.S. after crossing the
border, many have given themselves up to Border Patrol officers upon
entering. A combination
of factors — including escalating gang violence, poverty and rumors
about potential immigration relief — has prompted more people to head
north.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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