Second COVID-19 Death Confirmed by ICE While Cases Continue to Mount
Had Santiago Baten-Oxlaj, who was granted voluntary departure 2 months ago, been quickly released, he might still be alive today.
Had Santiago Baten-Oxlaj, who was granted voluntary departure 2 months ago, been quickly released, he might still be alive today.
FFI's third report on the impact of COVID-19 in detention facilities contains deeply disturbing information about the rapid spread of the virus - and ICE's irresponsible and dangerous responses.
Carlos Ernesto Escobar Mejia, 57, is the first person in ICE custody to die of the COVID-19 virus. His bond request was denied on April 15.
"... a man was placed in isolation for five days without any test. He didn’t get food or a shower or toothpaste. It was cold, and they didn’t give him adequate clothes. No one checked on him. He was neglected and ignored."
Hunger striker: "We could die here. We cannot do social distancing and people are coming in and out every day."
"[ICE] used power and fabricated documents and used fake travel documents to deport me to the same country I fled as a refugee."
COVID-19 cases in detention facilities are hitting new records daily - with hundreds reports of medical neglect, abuse, and retaliation continue to pour into FFI's hotline.
Recent court rulings are starting to recognize the imminent danger faced by immigrants in detention as the pandemic continues to spread.
by Cindy KnoebelThe chorus of calls for help from immigrants trapped inside detention centers keep growing ... and growing. Reports from the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Center in Bakersfield, CA are particularly troubling. On March 25, eighty-five men wrote a petition to ICE; on March 30, the Interfaith Movement for Human