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Detained and Dying: Immigrant deaths in detention raise questions about oversight of private prisons

A coalition of immigrant and civil rights groups held a vigil in front of the Atlanta headquarters of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency last week to mark the three-month anniversary of Roberto Martinez Medina's death in immigrant detention in southwest Georgia.

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Before his death, Medina, a 39-year-old Mexican national, was held on immigration violations at the Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, Ga., a federal ICE facility. For three months the immediate cause of Medina's death remained unclear. The autopsy results were finally released last Thursday by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, noting that Medina died of myocarditis, an inflammatory heart disease. 

Medina's death in March marked the latest in the mounting number of immigrant deaths in ICE detention centers. For the past year, stories of inadequate health care for immigrant detainees and a slew of questionable deaths in immigration custody have been surfacing. Even though Medina died of apparent natural causes, immigrant advocates maintain that these immigrant deaths, as well as the stories detainees continue to tell about abuse and neglect, raise questions about the adequacy of medical practices in the jails and private prisons under contract to hold immigrant detainees, as well as underscore the lack of overall accountability in U.S. immigrant detention. 

Rights advocates have pointed out that many of the reported immigrant deaths could have been prevented through timely and effective access to medical care. But due to the absence of enforceable standards and an independent oversight mechanism, ICE and the corporations that contract with it for the most part escape accountability, advocates say. 

Amnesty International released a report last March criticizing the system of immigrant detention in the United States. The report found that tens of thousands of immigrants have been held without access to due process and many have been left to "languish" in deplorable conditions. In the last few months groups such Human Rights Watch and the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center have also released reports detailing startling levels of immigrant abuse in detention centers and a real lack of adequate medical care

Profiting From Immigrant Detention 

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ICE oversees a network of federal centers, county jails and privately-run, for-profit prisons that detain and process undocumented immigrants; more than 30,000 immigrants are incarcerated in the U.S. on any given day. Many of these facilities are located in the South and Southwest. 

Facing South has reported on the large-scale immigration raids that have swept across the country in the last couple of years. The heightened anti-immigration actions have left federal authorities struggling to cope with rapidly rising numbers of detainees. Arrests have overwhelmed detention systems and local jails. 

In turn, over the past couple of years, immigrant detention has become the nation's fastest-growing form of incarceration. The private prison industry in the United States is making a fortune on the exponential increase in the number of immigrants detainees, and despite the economic downturn, the industry is currently experiencing the largest business demand in its history. 

Many of these private prison corporations are looking to open more detention facilities for immigrants. But human rights advocates point out that many of these for-profit facilities being built to house the overflow are problem-riddled and lacking in oversight. In fact, privately-run detention centers are continually plagued by scandal, lawsuits and controversy surrounding prisoner maltreatment. 

For years, the Florida-based GEO Group, a private corporation that owns and operates correction facilities and is contracted to manage five of ICE facilities, has been at the center of scandal in its private prisons and detention centers in places such as Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Idaho, and Texas. Charged with squalid conditions, prison abuse, ill treatment of prisoners and even prisoner deaths, the corporation has faced several lawsuits by prisoner family members who say the facility did not provide adequate medical care or proper supervision for inmates. 

The Nashville-based Corrections Corporation of America, the nation's largest private prison company, operates six ICE facilities, and has a long, documented history of abuses in its prisons. The CCA runs the same detention center in Lumpkin, Ga., where Medina was held. In 2007, nearly 1,000 immigrant prisoners at the 1,500-bed facility in Lumpkin went on a hunger strike protesting conditions including lack of medical care. 

Georgia Detention Watch, an Atlanta-based coalition of immigrant rights advocates, released a report in April on detention conditions at the CCA-run Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin. Calling the conditions at the CCA-run facility "grossly inadequate," the report found that detainees were denied food and medicine as punishment, there were too few working toilets, detainees were placed in solitary confinement without a disciplinary hearing, the facility lacked necessary medical care, and it served undercooked and expired food.  

Rights groups continue to demand accountability and transparency from ICE in regards to its CCA-run facilities. From October 2003 through Feb. 7, 2009, 18 people died in immigration detention custody in facilities operated by CCA alone, reports the Atlanta Journal Constitution. 

Private prison corporations such as the CCA and the GEO Group are seeing an exponential growth in business and stock prices, even though stories of their inadequate facilities continue to stream into the public. In 2008, the GEO Group reported nearly $60 million in profits, and the CCA posted profits of more than $150 million. And the profits continue to soar. 

As the Business of Detention pointed out in 2008: 
[CCA] has partnered with the federal government to detain close to 1 million undocumented people in the past 5 years until they are deported. In the process, Corrections Corporation of America has made record profits. Critics suggest the CCA cuts corners on its detention contracts in order to increase its revenue at expense of humane conditions. Thanks to political connections and lobby spending, it dominates the industry of immigrant detention. CCA now has close to 10,000 new beds under development in anticipation of continued demand.

CCA plans to open a new facility in Gainesville, Ga. similar to its Lumpkin facility. Rights advocates say that the prospect of yet another CCA-run immigrant detention facility should trouble lawmakers. 

Immigrant advocates are also demanding greater transparency and swift and public investigations for deaths in immigration detention. Groups are calling on Congress and the Obama administration to create enforceable standards binding ICE and corporations such as CCA to humane standards of care for the detainees and to ensure an effective and independent oversight mechanism. 
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I feel for the immigrants who are locked in these ICE facilities. But what people need to see is it is ALL the inmates in these private prisons that are suffering, not just the immigrants.

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CCA runs a class operation. If the public realized how good a life and medical care inmates recieve they would be outraged at the expense. Prison and Detention is not ment to be nice. Inmates at CCA prisons get 3 excellent meals a day, special meals for all kinds of foreign holidays, Accredited medical care,all kinds of recreational equipement, multiple cable channels,and in general live better than much of the outside population. These foreigners/illegals are lucky they are locked up here and not the country they came from.

they do not get that "good of food" and they do not get to have med help when they need it. they are beat and I do know all of this because they have my husband. My husband was born in Mex and came to the US when he was 2 days old. His grandfather,mother,all 6 of his brothers and all of his family are citizens. He has his papers but never went to get his citizenship. We didn't know how important it really is. When he was 17 (31 now) he and his friends got a charge for burglery of a building. Now they have him and are trying to deport him. They are taking him away for me and our 5 kids. They have beat him, they give him steal bread, and no help when he is sick from the beatings. We as citizens have NO Idea of what goes on in there!!! YOU think that YOU know but YOU HAVE NO IDEA!!! Please before you pass judgement and say what you think do some reading first! Some are there and yes THEY ARE SUFFERING!! They are torn away from their families for what ever reason they want too. My husband and I have 5 kids and have been together for almost 10 years together. Own a house that is in his name. KNOW WHAT YOU TALK ABOUT IT!!!!!!

I really dont understand why inmates are being gave old bread and not enough food and not being take cared of health wise. yes they are mexican but they are also human beings. They should be treated like a person not like a dog. If they are not tring to escape i think they shouldn't be beaten. If they are fighting they should not be beaten. I think the officers can control the situations in better ways than beaten them which will make the situation worse.

I do'nt believe the DETAINEES are treated badly or beaten. I believe they are being fed and given privilegdes that they have coming to them. Of cause nobody wants to be in these places but unfortunately these places exist.These detainees are there and they get treated with dignity and respect!! they are given hot meals, they watch television, they watch sports and attend church services. The way things are now.. we should know that if we don't have our paper work in order and up to date, WE face the chance of being picked up and and if we commit a crime or get in trouble the chances are that we wil be deported.

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I think who wrote this comment is a red neck who doesn't know or is an ignorant person who disregard and doesn't care about any human been rights or any kind of motives that get those people into these places. Because immigrants are human no matter where they came from, so before you talk about good meals or if they are treated better than their own jails find yourself in their shoes and realize that you are an immigrant but an stupid one.
Sincerely your f__king tax payer and a really American citizen with moral values for human life..............

I agree with you. The average hard working american citizen who loses his job and does not have short or long term disability does not have the type of insurance or medical care these inmates receive. They recieve top notch services, food and medical care. The american publlic should be angry because these criminals who don't belong here and have no right to be in the U.S. are taxing our financial systems, medical system and prison system in ways you cannot imagine. When we start screaming about rights, lets remember those of us who have lived honestly and cannot afford medical care....48 million ameicans. Let's stop screaming about the rights of illegal immigrants and start demanding the same rights for ourselves and our family members.

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