Al Jazeera America
By Renee Lewis
October 21, 2015
Inspections
of immigrant detention centers overseen by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) are ineffective and often facilitate favorable
ratings at centers
with reported human rights abuses, according to a report released
Wednesday by rights advocacy groups.
Detention
center inspections matter because they generate ratings that determine
whether ICE continues using taxpayer dollars to fund public and private
entities that
detain immigrants, the report said.
“The
failures of the inspection system ... really do make ICE complicit in
obscuring human rights violations in detention facilities,” said Claudia
Valenzuela, the director
of detention at the National Immigrant Justice Center, which published
the report with the Detention Watch Network (DWN).
The
inspections are “laughable,” said Mary Small, the policy director at
the DWN. She said reports contain “barely any relation between
documented deficiencies and overall
ratings a facility gets.” Despite these violations, public and private
contractors continue to profit from these centers without adequate
oversight, the report said.
According
to the report, “Lives in Peril,” in 2014, Florida’s Baker County
Detention Center had 14 deficiencies and received a rating of good from
ICE inspectors, and
the following year, the center registered five deficiencies but its
rating fell to acceptable.
Some
deficiencies were identified as administrative- or security-related
violations, like the opening of immigrants’ mail without the appropriate
protocols, the report
said. But the DWN said it found more worrisome problems, including
denial of visitation rights and exorbitant charges for making phone
calls. It also said it found that certain facilities did not allow
detainees access to fresh air and sunlight.
"We have to ask whether these ratings are based on anything at all," Small said.
The
report focused on five other detention facilities with reported human
rights violations, uncovering instances in which ICE inspections allowed
facilities to obscure
poor conditions.
Given
the alleged violations, the report said, it was expected that the
facilities’ inspection reports would show a failure to meet standards in
medical care, suicide
prevention and sexual assault prevention.
Arizona’s
Eloy Detention Facility has not failed an inspection since 2006, the
report noted. The center, however, has witnessed the most deaths at a
detention facility,
with six reported suicides since 2003. And frequent reports of sexual
assault at Eloy — which ICE often fails to report, according to a 2013
GAO report — prompted Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz., to launch an
investigation in June.
Furthermore,
inspection documents obtained by the report’s authors via a Freedom of
Information Act request reveal ICE’s complicity in covering up Eloy’s
failure to address
its violations, the report said.
“The
ICE inspection system is inadequate and has failed to resolve the
substantial and pervasive human rights violations detained immigrants
face in ICE custody,” the
report concluded.
The
U.S. immigrant detention system has quadrupled in the wake of 9/11,
with at least 400,000 people now passing through ICE custody each year.
At least 83 people died
in ICE facilities from 2003 to 2008, and detainees have launched hunger
strikes over conditions and human rights abuses at the facilities.
“U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement will review this report,” agency
spokeswoman Danielle Bennett told Al Jazeera. “ICE remains committed to
ensuring that all individuals
in our custody are held and treated in a safe, secure and humane manner
and that they have access to legal counsel, visitation, recreation and
quality medical, mental health and dental care.”
She
added that ICE has implemented a “major effort to enhance management
and oversight of detention facilities” in 2009 by creating the Office of
Detention Oversight.
The
report recommends improvements to the inspection process, including
more independent oversight and transparency as well as consequences for
failing to address human
rights violations.
“We have to create real consequences for these failures,” said Small.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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