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Sunday, 10 June 2018 08:01

Yu writes: "One of the country's largest immigration detention centers had no psychiatrist on staff, 'chronic shortages' of almost all medical positions and was described by its own staff as a 'ticking bomb' because noncriminal detainees were mixed with high-security offenders."

A detainee at Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, Ga., leaves the cafeteria after lunch. The all-male federal detention center is operated on contract by CoreCivic, a private corrections company. (photo: AP)
A detainee at Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, Ga., leaves the cafeteria after lunch. The all-male federal detention center is operated on contract by CoreCivic, a private corrections company. (photo: AP)


Staff Describe Georgia Immigrant Detention Center as ‘Ticking Bomb’

By Elly Yu, Reveal

10 June 18

 

ne of the country’s largest immigration detention centers had no psychiatrist on staff, “chronic shortages” of almost all medical positions and was described by its own staff as a “ticking bomb” because noncriminal detainees were mixed with high-security offenders.

Federal records obtained by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting and Atlanta NPR station WABE show the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General found widespread problems at Stewart Detention Center in southwest Georgia, including drug smuggling and staffing shortages that employees said endangered detention officers and detainees.

Illegal drugs were “continuously coming into the facility,” federal inspectors wrote after speaking with the facility’s internal inspector. The inspector said the homeland security inspector general’s office recently arrested multiple employees for smuggling drugs into the facility. That inspector and other officials interviewed as part of the investigation are not named in the records.

Some of those problems were mentioned in a report by the inspector general’s office released in December. The report came after federal investigators looked into conditions at immigrant detention centers across the country, including Stewart.

The report concluded that there were “problems that undermine the protection of detainees’ rights, their humane treatment, and the provision of a safe and healthy environment.”

However, striking details not included in the 19-page report are revealed in the inspection’s work papers. Those work papers – 88 pages of notes from interviews with Stewart staff and detainees and other documentation that went into the production of the report – were released to WABE and Reveal in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.

Two detainees who were being held at Stewart died within the same 12-month period. Jean Jimenez-Joseph, a 27-year-old from Panama, hanged himself with a bedsheet in May 2017 while in solitary confinement. Yulio Castro-Garrido, a 33-year-old from Cuba, died in January after officials diagnosed him with pneumonia.

Staff shortages ‘pose a risk’

Stewart Detention Center is in Lumpkin, Georgia, about 150 miles south of Atlanta. This U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility is operated by the private corrections company CoreCivic, formerly known as Corrections Corporation of America. The detention center can hold nearly 2,000 people and, at the time of the investigation, was near capacity.

Multiple employees at the facility brought up staffing shortages to inspectors. One CoreCivic manager said his biggest concern “is staffing shortages, which pose a risk to the staff’s safety.”

Another CoreCivic employee said the facility has a shortage of detention officers, “which makes it dangerous for the (detention officers) and the detainees,” and “housing units are understaffed for the number of detainees on the units at the time,” the inspectors wrote.

The homeland security inspector general’s office also identified a shortage in medical staff. According to federal records, ICE is responsible for detainees’ medical and mental health care at the facility. According to the inspector, Stewart’s health services administrator noted “chronic shortages of almost all medical staff positions.” As of February 2017, the facility had no psychiatrists and about 1 in 4 registered nurse positions were vacant.

Stewart’s health administrator told inspectors that the facility covers its shortage of mental health professionals by “leaning heavily” on remaining licensed clinical social workers and videoconferencing calls with psychiatrists. He also noted the lack of mental health treatment centers in the area.

An ICE supervisor at the center told inspectors that there weren’t enough ICE deportation officers and that there was high turnover. Records show there were 13 unfilled ICE officer positions, and for three years, there was no detention service manager on-site – the person whose job is to ensure that detention centers are safe and humane.

ICE spokesman Bryan Cox told WABE that the staffing ratios at Stewart were “compliant with agency policy.” However, when asked about the staffing requirements, he said, “The staffing ratio is an internal policy that is not releasable.”

“ ‘Shortages’ is a somewhat editorial term,” Cox said. “Under ICE policy, there are staffing ratios that are required in various aspects, and so the opinion of ‘a short staff’ is a nontechnical term.”

Mistakes ‘a ticking bomb’

The facility also misclassified detainees, inspectors found. It categorizes and houses immigrants based on their criminal record. But a CoreCivic classification supervisor told the inspector general’s office that transfer records don’t always arrive at Stewart Detention Center with the detainee.

Because of these delays, the CoreCivic supervisor said Stewart has housed felons with noncriminal detainees. She said this happened several times a week and called the delays “a ticking bomb.” She also said the facility was “often out of compliance” with processing detainees in a timely manner.

In another example of not receiving paperwork on time, an ICE supervisor told the inspector general’s office that the mailroom at Stewart was so hectic that it caused “delay in receiving some of the consular documents.” He said one Mexican detainee who was “easy to remove” stayed at Stewart for 87 days because some paperwork needed for deportation was lost in the CoreCivic mailroom.

The homeland security inspector general’s office recommended in its 19-page public report that ICE improve its detention oversight procedures. ICE concurred with that recommendation.

CoreCivic spokeswoman Amanda Gilchrist said in an emailed statement: “CoreCivic cares deeply about every person in our care. Our immigration facilities are monitored very closely by the government, and each and every one is required to undergo regular review and audit processes that include ensuring an appropriate standard of living for all detainees.”

“The issues identified by the December report were quickly and effectively remedied,” Gilchrist said.

Meanwhile, immigrant rights advocates say there are ongoing issues at Stewart. In April, civil rights groups, including the Southern Poverty Law Center, filed a lawsuit against CoreCivic, saying the company forces immigrant detainees to work at Stewart for less than $4 a day to pay for necessities such as toilet paper and toothpaste.


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