News Action Alert

Detainee report “too damning” to release?

By August 16, 2006October 25th, 2018No Comments

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By Samantha Henry

HERALD NEWS

Nearly eight months after the Department of Homeland Security said it would issue

the first official report on the treatment of immigrants in federal detention,

immigrant-rights advocates are wondering what’s taking so long.

“I don’t think they intend to release it — it’s too damning,” said Jeannette

Gabriel, an organizer with the New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee. “If the audit is

released, even the haphazard audit that was conducted, we believe that it would show

such systematic abuse, that ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) would be

forced to make systemic changes.”

The report, conducted by auditors from Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector

General, examined the treatment of federal immigration detainees at several facilities

nationwide ? including the Passaic County Jail and the Hudson County Correctional

Center — and how well the jails were complying with federal detention standards.

Homeland Security spokeswoman Tamara Faulkner said via e-mail Monday that the

audit’s delay was due to “a complex project that involved accumulating and analyzing

information gleaned from myriad sources and many facilities.”

Faulkner said the Inspector General had launched the investigation in 2005 in

response to complaints of abuse and poor treatment at different facilities used by the

federal government to house immigrant detainees. Nearly 60 percent of the estimated

21,000 federal immigration detainees are currently held at county jails and privately

run detention facilities. The Passaic County Jail garnered nationwide attention for

its treatment of immigration detainees when allegations of physical abuse, including

the use of attack dogs and poor healthcare, were exposed in the national media.

Faulkner said in addition to investigating the specific allegations of detainee

mistreatment at different facilities, the audit would examine ICE’s processes for

tracking detainees.

She said the audit was now scheduled for release “in late summer,” but declined to

specify a date.

Auditors visited the Passaic County Jail over the course of several weeks last

summer, where, according to Warden Charles Meyers, they reviewed everything from

complaints of under-cooked chicken to the jail’s bookkeeping records. They also interviewed

a number of immigrant detainees.

In July, Passaic County Sheriff Jerry Speziale threw the auditors out of the county

jail for what Meyers said was their unprofessional conduct. After Speziale and

Meyers traveled to Washington to meet with DHS officials in August, the auditors were

allowed back to finish their work.

In December, Speziale announced he was suspending the inter-governmental service

agreement with federal immigration authorities; Meyers insisted the timing was

coincidental.

“The audit wasn’t related to the suspension (of the DHS contract),” he said. “It was

all the unfair press we received and we realized we could make up the money with

other federal detainees without the headache.”

Meyers referred to the fact that the jail now houses an increased number of U.S.

Marshall prisoners to compensate for the loss of moneys DHS paid the jail to house the

immigrant detainees, which at one time netted the $12 million in yearly revenue.

Officials transferred out the last of the jail’s immigration detainees in April.

Sherriff’s Department spokesman Bill Maer said Monday the department did not expect

the audit would find fault with the way the jail handled immigration detainees.

“We have no fear. We’re not nervous. We hope it’s done fairly,” he said. “We hope

the personal agendas of the auditors are not in play.”

Maer said the Sheriff’s Department felt that the auditors listened only to detainee

advocates.

Gabriel, the immigration detainee advocate, said auditors were “incredibly hostile

to community activists and attorneys throughout the process.”

Federal guidelines covering the detention of people held on immigration violations

— which are currently civil, not criminal offenses– do not hold the weight of law.

Such standards were drafted after heavy lobbying by the legal community, and the

National Lawyers Guild is preparing to petition the government to give the guidelines

legal weight.

But until then, detainee advocates said, there is little oversight of the treatment

of immigrants taken into custody.

Falah Ajaj, a Palestinian who was held at the Passaic County Jail on an immigration

violation for four months in 2005, was one of those interviewed by government

auditors. He said he hoped the audit would expose the way detainees are treated and lead

to changes.

“I’d like them to close this jail; don’t put any inmates in the jail,” he said. “If

you stay one hour there, you can get sick for 10 years. This is not for human

beings, this jail.”