Category: Detention

  • Archive: Texas Media and a New York Blog

    The Abilene Reporter-News updates the Hazahza case on the day when Homeland Security attorneys are scheduled to present their reasons for holding the family at the Rolling Plains prison in Haskell.

    A short documentary by Sean Cunningham about one of the Hutto vigils will air on PBS Austin affiliate KLRU March 9 at 8pm.
    The Texas Observer is also keeping up with Hutto and the ACLU challenge to imprionment of children.

    The Stamford Star has posted a report by correspondent Jim Collins on the “Huddled Masses Yearning to Breathe Free Walk” that passed through town last Friday.

    The Culkin women at Red Peonies Blog find it difficult to think of John Neck as a sidekick. Oh, and they won’t be the last readers to howl at the way credits get skewed in our writeups. But they are better sports than some. Must be something in their upbringing. Check out the Red Peonies Blog.

  • ICE Half-Truths Online

    When Jay Johnson-Castro speaks about “occult” and “secret” immigrant detentions, we present as exhibit A an online list of “Immigration Detention Faciltities” posted at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Website. Not listed are the T. Don Hutto prison in Taylor, Texas or the Rollings Plains prison in Haskell, Texas. How many more detention centers are there, and why doesn’t ICE list them all?

    http://www.ice.gov/pi/dro/facilities.htm

    An archive of the page is preserved here:

    Immigration Detention Facilities

    Strengthening the nation’s capacity to detain and remove criminal
    and other deportable aliens is a key component of the
    comprehensive strategy to deter illegal immigration and protect
    public safety. Detention and removal of illegal aliens
    is a priority of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
    This commitment has been backed by significant resources
    devoted to detention and removal efforts.

    DRO secures bed space in detention facilities, and monitors these
    facilities for compliance with national Detention Standards. The
    standards specify the living conditions appropriate for detainees.
    These standards have been collated and published in the Detention
    Operations Manual (Detention Standards)
    . This manual provides uniform policies and procedures concerning the treatment of individuals detained by ICE.

    For information on services relating to but not under the direct jurisdiction of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, please contact the following:

    The Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) is an agency within the Department of Justice (DOJ). Its primary mission is to preside over immigration cases in an attentive and timely manner. These cases involve detained aliens, criminal aliens, and aliens seeking asylum as a form of relief from removal. EOIR ensures the standards of due process and fair treatment for all parties involved.

    For information about a matter in an Immigration Court administered by EOIR or informaton about each of its offices, visit EOIR’s Web site at http://www.usdoj.gov/eoir/. You may also call its electronic information system at 1 (800) 898-7180.

    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). USCIS is responsible for the administration of immigration and naturalization arbitration functions and establishing immigration services policies and priorities including ruling on immigration visa petitions, naturalization petitions, asylum and refugee applications, cases performed at the service centers and all other mediation.

    You may call U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) toll-free for automated information and live assistance concerning immigration services and benefits at 1 (800) 375-5283. The TTY number is: 1 (800) 767-1833. You may also visit its Web site at http://uscis.gov/graphics/index.htm where you can find out the status of your case, find out how to post a bond for an alien in detention, download forms, learn about detainee rights, learn how to file forms and more.

    For information about a matter before the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) you may contact BIA at (703) 605-1007. Its menu of automated options includes:

    • Appeals and motions;
    • Transcripts and briefs;
    • Board decisions and stays of deportation; and
    • Change of address.

    Alphabetical List of
    Detention Facilities

    Located in
    (State)

    Aguadilla Service
    Processing Center

    Puerto Rico

    Aurora Contract
    Detention Facility

    Colorado

    Buffalo Federal
    Detention Center

    New York

    El Centro Service
    Processing Center

    California

    Elizabeth Contract
    Detention Facility

    New Jersey

    El Paso Service
    Processing Center

    Texas

    Eloy Contract
    Detention Facility

    Arizona

    Florence Service
    Processing Center

    Arizona

    Houston Contract
    Detention Facility

    Texas

    Krome Service
    Processing Center

    Florida

    Laredo Contract
    Detention Facility

    Texas

    Queens Contract
    Detention Facility

    New York

    Port Isabel Service
    Processing Center

    Texas

    San Diego Contract
    Detention Facility

    California

    San Pedro Service
    Processing Center

    California

    Tacoma Contract
    Detention Facility

    Washington

  • Free All the Victims of Immigrant Prison Camps

    Email from Jay Johnson-Castro.

    Mornin’ y’all…

    It was indeed a privilege to visit day before yesterday with Reza, the fiancé of Suzi Hazahza. We have much to learn and much more to do…to fully expose the reality of Hutto and Haskell…and any prison camp that unjustly and inhumanely victimizes sincere fellow humans that are seeking the American dream. Hutto is about to be gutted. Haskell is soon to be fully exposed…then gutted.
    We need to coordinate open records requests. We need to get the details of who is being victimized on the inside of these prison camps. The information is too occult…secret…for an open society. Too much money is involved. Those responsible sadistically care more about money than they do about humanity. That’s where we the grass roots come in.

    At the same time…we cannot just be working within the system. We must make the system work. Hundreds of children and innocent people fall victim every day…while we only to get a few out every month. We need to bring to a halt such atrocities in our country and indict those who would commit such atrocities.

    While it would be a victory to get another Ibrahim or Hazahza family out…we need to get them all out. We need to free all those who for whom we do not have names or faces. If beautiful Suzi and Mirvat are being treated the way they are…how many hundreds of others are there for whom we do not yet have a story? That’s my personal quest. I have no funding. I’m not an attorney. All I have is my heart and mind…with the passion and conviction to bring an end to this perversion and corruption of a free land…and free the victims. ALL of them.

    Once one family is released…will the work to free all the others that they do not know…just as we tried to free them that we did not know? Hopefully so. Once that happens…we will have much more rapid success. We need to learn from all those that we now know…about what’s going on inside these prison camps.

    We need to collect names, countries, numbers, experiences. How many men vs. women…etc. How long have they been detained. We need a story for every one who is imprisoned unjustly. We need to get beyond the political spin jargon and start using grass roots language. We must personalize the situation of each victim in order to expose these crimes against humanity. Once accomplished…the grassroots of Haskell County and the City of Haskell will respond as did the citizens of Taylor and Williamson County . With outrage…and demand…and with protest.

    We must expose the plot to make money off of a warped and fraudulent “homeland security” scam. We must get the contracts between ICE and Haskell County and with Emerald. Let’s look at the money…and see who benefits and who has the most to loose as we expose this un-American and immoral scheme.

    That’s my personal goal. That’s what has not been done yet…and what needs to be done most urgently.

    Jay

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    The Border Ambassador

    Connecting.the.dots…making.a.difference…

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Sr.

    Del Rio, Texas, USA
    Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila , Mexico

  • Archive: Two Faces of Immigration Reform

    For hard-working English-language coverage of border issues, Steve Taylor’s Rio Grande Guardian is your essential one-stop shop. On Tuesday Taylor emailed an advisory with two headlines that touch two poles of border reform. One headline reports the ACLU challenge to immigrant detention policies, another headline announces that Brownsville city authorities are out to remake their border city. We see hope in the combination, and so we archive these stories below–gm

    ACLU challenges detention of immigrant children in Texas facility

    AUSTIN – The American Civil Liberties Uni*n filed lawsuits Tuesday on behalf of ten immigrant children, challenging their detention at the T. Don Hutto facility in Taylor , Texas .

    The lawsuits charge that the children are being imprisoned under inhumane conditions while their parents await immigration decisions.

    The lawsuits have been filed against Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, as well as six officials ICE.

    “There is simply no justification for imprisoning innocent children who pose no threat to anyone,” said Vanita Gupta, a staff attorney with the ACLU’s Racial Justice Program.

    “This is an affront to our core values as a nation. We need practical, realistic immigration policy, not draconian methods that are harming vulnerable kids.”

    The lawsuits charge that by operating the Hutto facility, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement violates its duty to meet the minimum standards and conditions for the housing and release of all minors in federal immigration custody set forth in a 1997 settlement agreement in the case of Flores v. Meese.

    There are approximately 400 immigrants currently detained at the Hutto facility, and half of them are children. Many of the immigrants are refugee families who came to the United States to seek asylum.

    The 512-bed former state prison is operated by Corrections Corporation of America under a contract with Williamson County.

    According to 16-year-old Egle Baubonyte, a Lithuanian girl being held at Hutto with her mother and sister, “Conditions for little kids or even babies are really bad. There’s no pediatrician. Nurses don’t care about if babies are sick. They treat us like we’re nothing.”

    Anthony Romero, executive director of the ACLU, said that what ICE calls a “Family Residential Facility” is in fact a converted medium-security prison that is still functionally and structurally a prison.

    Children are required to wear prison garb, receive only one hour of recreation a day, Monday through Friday, and some children did not go outdoors in the fresh air the whole month of December, 2006, according to legal papers filed Tuesday.

    They are detained in small cells for 11-12 hours each day where they cannot keep food and toys and they have no privacy, even when using the toilet.

    Despite their urgent needs, many children lack access to adequate medical, dental, and mental health treatment, and are denied meaningful educational opportunities, Romero said.

    Guards frequently discipline children by threatening to separate them permanently from their parents, and children are prohibited from having contact visits with non-detained family members.

    “While keeping families together is a laudable goal, there is nothing about Hutto that one can call non-penal or homelike. ICE claims that it opened Hutto to keep families together, but imprisoning families this way cannot be what Congress had in mind,” Romero said.

    The families represented in the lawsuits come from countries including Lithuania , Canada , Haiti , Honduras , Somalia , and Guyana , and many have fled dangerous situations and are seeking asylum in the United States .

    Barbara Hines, clinical professor of law with the University of Texas School of Law Immigration Clinic, said that regardless of where minors are housed, they ought to be guaranteed basic educational, health, and social benefits and rights.

    “ICE fails miserably to meet the required standards by placing children at Hutto,” Hines said. “These children, who can safely be released with their families under reasonable supervision, are basically imprisoned under conditions that do not meet generally accepted child welfare and juvenile justice standards. It is truly a disgrace.”

    The ACLU is bringing the lawsuits along with the ACLU of Texas, the University of Texas School of Law Immigration Clinic and the international law firm of LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP.

    “The choice is not between enforcement of immigration laws and humane treatment of immigrant families. There are various alternatives under which both can exist,” said Lisa Graybill, Legal Director of the ACLU of Texas.

    The public started becoming aware of the Hutto facility last December following a vigil organized by the ACLU and Grassroots Leadership, a group that monitors the private prisons industry.

    Among the participants in the vigil and a walk from Austin to Taylor was Jay Johnson Castro, Jr., who became known as the Border Wall-ker when he walked from Laredo to Brownsville last October in protest at federal plans to build an extra 700 miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Johnson Castro said detaining OTMs was “good business” for privatized prison systems.

    “They receive about $95 a day of our tax money per inmate. There are kick-backs to the counties that host these facilities, with counties getting $1 per inmate per day. That translates to hundreds of thousands of dollars to the county coffers per year,” he said.

    Johnson Castro has since walked from Abilene to Haskell in protest at a detention center in Haskell.

    ICE officials have repeatedly denied that the detainees are treated inhumanely.

    ********************

    Treviño launches new ten-year plan for Brownsville

    BROWNSVILLE – With a new logo, Imagine Brownsville! It’s our Future, Imagine Brownsville! Es Nuestro Futuro, Brownsville Mayor Eddie Treviño, Jr., on Tuesday announced a ten-year plan for his fast growing city.

    Treviño said the plan would establish a common vision, based on quality of life and economic development objectives. He said it would also include a strategic blueprint to achieve long term success through leveraging the City’s institutional, natural, human and infrastructure resources.

    “The City of Brownsville has experienced tremendous growth in the last few years. While this growth has created tremendous opportunities, it has also presented a number challenges to the community,” Treviño said.

    He acknowledged the City and the region are in the midst of increasing global competition for new jobs and investment. Competition will be strong and fierce, he predicted, with some regions winning and some losing.

    “We will not be one of the losing regions and to improve our chances for winning, I believe that a single comprehensive plan that defines a common vision over the next 10 years will help ensure that we improve our City’s chances for economic success.”

    Treviño launched Imagine Brownsville! at a press conference in Commissioner’s Court. More than 100 people attended, including four city commissioners, and Cameron County Commissioners Sofia Benavides and John Wood.

    The fact-finding part of the plan would cost around $800,000, Treviño told reporters

    Treviño said he wanted all the citizens of Brownsville, along with key community institutions, to help the City develop and implement the new plan. He said he also wanted neighbors like Los Fresnos CSD and the City of Matamoros to play their part.

    Treviño said the new logo refle
    cts
    “both the rich heritage of our bilingual community as well as the realization that we cannot be successful in this effort without the help of our entire community and our institutional partners working together.”

    He said intensive public participation and community involvement would take place in the next few months to help define shared objectives and vision – “how we want to live, learn, work and play in the future,” he said. This will include four public meetings and interviews with over 40 community leaders and stakeholders.

    Ben Medina, director of planning and community development for the City, said a new Web site, http://www.imaginebrownsville.com, has been created and will be launched Wednesday.

    “It will provide details of meeting locations and times. It will be bilingual and contain updated information related to the plan’s phases and its progress. It will allow anyone to submit input throughout the process and will have the ability to download all presentations made at public meetings,” Medina said.

    Treviño said another key component of the plan was establishing an Imagine Brownsville! Task Force.

    “The purpose of the Task Force is to provide leadership and guidance from the plan’s development through its implementation,” Treviño said. “The task force will be composed of local leaders working together with subcommittee work groups that represent each of the master plan elements.”

    A consulting team of planners, engineers, architects, economists and public involvement specialists will provide technical support for the project and the task force, Treviño said.

    Treviño said Fred Rusteberg, president and CEO of International Bank of Commerce in Brownsville, will chair the Imagine Brownsville! Task Force.

    “We are fortunate to have Mr. Rusteberg at the helm of this important project. He has spent the last 25 years participating in Brownsville’s progress and development and to his credit much of our success is due to his vision,” Treviño said.

    Rusteberg was founding chairman of “Brownsville First,” a grassroots effort to pass a half-cent sales tax for economic development.

    A past chairman and one of the founders of the Brownsville Economic Development Foundation, Rusteberg helped create the Brownsville Economic Development Council, of which he is past chairman. He was recently named Brownsville’s Outstanding Citizen of the Year by the Historic Brownsville Museum.

    Rusteberg said he was honored to have been asked to lead the initiative.

    “Brownsville is a unique community,” he said. “We are at the epicenter of a tremendous wave of economic opportunity. Our City forefathers have provided Brownsville with tremendous institutional and infrastructure assets and we owe it to them and future generations that we develop a strategic plan that catapults Brownsville as the premier business center of the southern U.S. border.”

    Rusteberg said the Imagine Brownsville! Task Force would spend the next two weeks calling upon individuals to join the task force.

    “I am going to ask everyone involved to roll up their sleeves and work together and with extensive community input hopefully we’ll create a road map for Brownsville to succeed over the next 10 years and beyond,” he said.

  • Hutto Prison Protest March 7

    Immigrant family detention has been made infamous at the Hutto detention center, a private prison operated by Corrections Corporation of America which incarcerates 130 children from birth to age 17 along with their parents.

    To commemorate International Women’s Day, Grassroots Leadership and other groups from Texas will join the University of Houston Students for a Democratic Society to take a stand against incarcerating families at Hutto.

    Join the “Vigil to Free the Families” at the T. Don Hutto detention center this Saturday, March 7th, 2009, from 11am-1pm.

    Source: email from Bob Libal, GrassRoots Leadership.