Consider This from NPR - NPR Investigation Reveals 'Barbaric' Conditions in ICE Detention Facilities
Episode Date: August 17, 2023The Biden administration is under intense political pressure from Republicans over immigration, who accuse the president of being too lenient toward migrants. Now, the administration is locking up mor...e unauthorized immigrants and asylum-seekers in detention facilities, and NPR has exclusively obtained more than 1,600 pages of confidential inspection reports examining conditions inside those facilities. They describe barbaric practices, negligent medical care, racist abuse and filthy conditions. NPR's Tom Dreisbach reports on the abysmal conditions detainees are forced to endure. In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Were you worried that you could die?
That's Jose telling NPR investigative correspondent Tom Dreisbach about his experience in a detention center run by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.
We're using Jose's first name only because he's concerned about facing retaliation for speaking out.
Back in the late 1980s, he fled civil war in his home country of El Salvador and came to the U.S.,
where he found work as a handyman. He has kids who are U.S. citizens. He did not have legal
authorization to remain in the country, and last year, 2022, Jose was arrested, sent to ICE detention at the Orange
County Jail in New York. Jose has diabetes and heart problems. And when he arrived at the Orange
County Jail, he was taking prescription medications for them. You're holding up all your medicines.
It's like one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine medicines
every day. He says that the Orange County Jail did not provide him with his medications,
and as a result, he had a heart attack. It was like a form of punishment, he says.
He wants ICE to investigate, to make sure they treat people like human beings and not animals.
Jose was taken to a hospital where he had to have a stent put in, then sent back to detention where
again he was not given his meds for days. Jose, as you heard, was scared he would die. Eventually,
his lawyers were able to secure his release because of the problems with his medical care,
but Jose believes his time in jail did permanent damage to his heart. Jose is just one of many
people who have suffered what the government's own experts have called, quote, barbaric and negligent conditions in ICE
detention centers in the U.S. Consider this. NPR has exclusively obtained more than 1,600 pages
of confidential inspection reports inside those facilities. They describe racist abuse and filthy conditions.
From NPR, I'm Mary Louise Kelly.
It's Thursday, August 17th.
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Indiana University performs breakthrough research every year, making discoveries that improve human health, combat climate change, and move society forward. More at iu.edu slash forward. From NPR. NPR's investigative team has spent three years trying to get a look at government
reports about ICE detention centers. When they finally got hold of them, the details they
contained, as NPR's Tom Dreisbach reports, were harrowing. And a warning, this story does include
disturbing details. There's this home video of Kamiar Samimi in the 1990s, playing with his two young daughters on a slide at a little green park in Colorado at dusk.
He was born in Iran, moved to the U.S. to study computer science in the 1970s.
He got a green card, built a family,
and on this video he tells his daughter in Farsi to wave hi to grandma back in Iran.
He loved it here. That's one of his daughters, Netta Samimi Gomez. Netta told me that
growing up, you could always find her dad with a can of Pepsi in his hand, smelling like oil from
his job as a mechanic, watching NASCAR and other American TV. We would sit down in the summers and
watch Law & Order. That was our thing. Like, he wanted me to become a lawyer. Because of Law & Order? Because of Law & Order, yeah. Kamiar Samimi also struggled with
drugs. It started as a kid back in Iran when he was given opium for tooth pain. In the U.S.,
he was prescribed methadone, which he took to manage opioid use disorder for more than two
decades. He and Netta were close, but by the time she was an adult, they didn't see each other all the time. Then came November 2017.
We had been trying to reach him to invite him over for Thanksgiving,
and we weren't able to get a hold of him on his phone at all.
You must have been worried during that time.
And then even more so worried when I found out he was detained by ICE.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement had arrested her dad
and taken him to an ICE detention center in Aurora, Colorado.
Kamyar Samimi was a lawful permanent resident, but back in 2005, he pleaded guilty to possessing less than a gram of cocaine and was sentenced to community service.
Twelve years later, ICE decided that conviction meant they could deport Kamyar.
His family was worried, but thought it was just a paperwork issue.
Then two weeks later, an ICE officer dropped off a business card at Netta's work and said to call.
The officer picked up the phone and said,
we don't know if anyone's been in touch with you,
but we want you to know that your father passed away over the weekend.
ICE had waited two days before contacting the family.
The officer said Kamiar died of cardiac arrest,
and it fell to Netta to break the news to her mom.
I can still hear my mom scream on the phone when I told her.
It's just like always under my skin.
At first, the private corporation that runs the detention center,
GeoGroup, said they acted appropriately.
But Netta didn't buy it.
It just didn't make sense.
She went to the ACLU, and they sued.
They discovered ICE records showing that when Kamiar Samimi was brought to the facility, the staff cut him off from methadone cold turkey.
It was a basic need for him to live.
He didn't get it, and then he couldn't live.
Sweats turned to nausea, turned to vomiting, including vomiting blood clots.
He screamed for help.
The detention center's doctor never examined him.
The staff did use a protocol for a patient going through withdrawal,
but for alcohol, not opioids.
On the day he died, a nurse looked at him and said,
he's dying, and still waited hours before calling 911.
By the time paramedics arrived, Kamiar Samimi had already stopped breathing.
GeoGroup settled Netta's lawsuit confidentially.
They did not admit wrongdoing.
Did you ever get an apology from ICE?
No. No, absolutely not.
But inside the government, in a confidential report,
a medical expert investigating civil rights complaints found a series of astonishing failures in this case.
NPR spent more than three years seeking a copy of this report and others from investigators examining ICE detention for the Department of Homeland Security across the country.
The government under both Trump and Biden fought the release.
So we sued. Eventually, a federal judge found that the government
violated the Freedom of Information Act
and ordered them to send us the documents.
These documents are written by experts in medicine,
mental health care, and use of force,
and they write unflinchingly.
It was actually this report that first led me to call Netta.
I assume you've never seen this probably.
I don't think that I have. The report says, quote, the complete lack of medical leadership, supervision, and care
that this detainee was exposed to is simply astonishing and stands out as one of the most
egregious failures to provide optimal care in my experience. It truly appears that this system
failed at every aspect of care possible. It says it right here.
At every step of the way, my dad was failed.
This was not the only problem this inspector found at the Aurora Ice Processing Center.
In another case, the inspector found that a detainee was diagnosed with HIV but was never told.
The inspector wrote that these problems could force a normal health system to close.
But this facility is still open and holds around 700 immigrants in detention.
And the problems there are not unique.
The 1,600 pages of government inspection reports we obtained date from 2017 to 2019
and cover more than two dozen different ICE detention facilities across 16 states.
They found grimy medical instruments, a cockroach on a medical exam
table, negligent mental health care, inappropriate strip searches, and pepper spraying of mentally
ill detainees, and racist abuse. These reports are incredibly damning. Eunice Cho is with the ACLU,
and she has spent years visiting clients in ICE detention and seeing conditions firsthand.
These facilities lock up asylum seekers,
unauthorized immigrants, as well as permanent residents the government deems deportable.
Legally, ICE detention is not like prison. It cannot serve as punishment. The goal is to make
sure immigrants show up for their court dates. But Cho says the reports NPR obtained show how
punishing the conditions are. They really show how the government's own inspectors
can see the abuses
and the level of abuses that are happening in ICE detention.
Do you think the problems identified in these inspection reports, are they outliers?
Unfortunately, this is not an outlier.
I think this is the tip of the iceberg.
And if anything, conditions have probably gotten worse.
A White House spokesperson noted that these reports relate to conditions in the prior administration.
But immigration attorneys told me that the COVID-19 pandemic helped make those conditions worse.
I talked with several immigrants who have been locked up at different facilities.
One man told me he was denied his heart medication by jail staff and suffered a heart attack.
A woman told me how she
was separated from her family, taken off her meds for bipolar disorder, and she said detention was
hell on earth and she has PTSD. Under Biden, 11 people have died in ICE detention so far,
including one at the same facility where Kamiar Samimi died.
Last October, staff at the Aurora ICE Processing Center called 911. We obtained the
audio, and it reveals confusion, gaps in communication, and wasted time with someone's
life on the line. First, the detention officer gets the facility's address, where he worked, wrong.
It takes more than a full minute to confirm the location.
And then the detention officer does not know the patient's medical issue.
So we don't know what this person's symptoms are at all, is that correct?
No, I don't know. I'm in control, so I can't read you.
Okay. They just have to call an ambulance?
Yes.
Experts in emergency medicine told me that information is critical for paramedics to effectively respond.
On the call, the officer also can't answer other basic questions, like the patient's age.
Can we guess about how old this person is?
The officer places 911 on hold.
Takes more than a minute and a half before he says,
Hey, I'm in my late 20 says, He said late 20s.
That was wrong.
Melvin Ariel Calero Mendoza was 39 years old and from Nicaragua.
ICE records say he had been complaining of pain and swelling in his leg for weeks before this emergency.
When paramedics arrived, he was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead.
A later autopsy revealed he died of a pulmonary embolism.
It's unclear if delays on the 911 call contributed to his death,
but his family's lawyer told me,
the depth of indifference displayed on the call was shocking
at a moment where every second counts.
GeoGroup sent us a statement offering their condolences
to Calero-Mendoza's family, as well as Kamiar Samimi's.
They said they strive to
treat detainees with dignity and respect, though they could not comment on specific cases.
Regardless, Eunice Cho of the ACLU says that the government is ultimately responsible for
what happens in ICE detention. What is in these reports really should be a wake-up call for
everyone, especially the Biden administration. When Joe Biden ran for president and early in his
administration, he promised to end contracts with the private companies that operate most of the ICE
detention centers. Private detention centers, they should not exist. A spokesperson for the Department
of Homeland Security noted that the administration has closed a few of the most notorious facilities
and some local jails separately ended their contracts with ICE. But Biden has not kept that campaign promise. More than 90% of immigrant
detainees are currently in private facilities. And overall, there are about 30,000 people in
ICE detention, around twice as many as when Biden took office. For weeks, we asked both ICE and the
White House for an interview to ask about their policies.
They declined.
So NPR's Asma Khalid asked White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre about the Biden campaign promise at a press briefing.
You know, I think the president is still committed to what he laid out during his campaign.
Just don't have anything here to share beyond that,
beyond his commitment that he is certainly going to continue to stay focused on.
The White House also sent us a statement saying they are committed to moving away from for-profit ICE detention
and noted that they have increased the use of alternatives to detention, like GPS monitoring.
The statement from ICE said that they take their commitment to promoting safe, secure, humane environments
for those in their custody very seriously.
Meanwhile, critics of Biden's border policy, mostly Republicans, argue the president has
been too lenient and believe more people should be sent to ICE detention.
Netta Samimi Gomez has been watching this debate play out, and the reports of another
death at the same facility where her dad died hit her hard.
More than anything, I just don't want anybody else to deal with what
I've been dealing with for the last five years. Nobody should have to feel this way. Now she says
what worries her most is forgetting the sound of her father's voice. That's NPR investigative
correspondent Tom Dreisbach reporting. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Mary Louise Kelly.