Shawn was 28 when he left
“She told me she wanted me out and I didn’t want to leave,” Shawn says. “One morning I was sleeping and heard someone opening my door. I sprung out of bed, scared, and pushed the door to keep it closed. I heard my landlady scream, ‘Oh my God, my finger.’ Apparently, her finger got squeezed in the door. I apologized and she left.
“Thirty days after this I hear a knock on the door. It was detectives. They took me to the precinct, telling me that my landlady has pressed assault charges against me. They held me from early morning until late at night when I finally saw the judge. The charges against me were eventually dismissed but the next thing I knew, the DA came in and told me I was being detained on an immigration offense.”
Immigrant detainees—the lion’s share from the Caribbean, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Pakistan—are the fastest growing group of prisoners in the U.S. and the only group incarcerated for civil offenses. “There are no accurate figures of how many detainees are under
While hard data may be impossible to obtain, detainee accounts like Shawn’s are readily available. After meeting with the DA, Shawn was held on Rikers Island from November 20 to December 31, and was then transferred to the Passaic County Jail, one of six New Jersey facilities used to house New Yorkers charged with immigration violations—some are public, others private. Regardless of ownership, they cost taxpayers between $70 and $100 per inmate per day.
“I was terrified by the process,” Shawn says. “I was in
Shawn is presently released on bond, but his legal status remains precarious and he is awaiting a final hearing to determine if he can remain in the country. “I have nobody in
Although Shawn does not have a Green Card, having one might not have made a difference. This is because in 1996 Congress passed legislation—the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act—making it easier to remove non-citizens from the U.S., even those with absolutely nothing to do with domestic or international terrorism.
“The law did a few things,” says Legal Aid lawyer Bryan Lonegan. “It changed the definition of aggravated felonies [crimes ranging from rape and murder to altering a passport or possession of stolen mail] and made them crimes subject to mandatory deportation without exception, even in cases of self-defense or where the criminal charge is a misdemeanor. There is another category where you can apply for a Waiver of the Removal Order if the arrest did not occur within seven years of coming to this country. If it did, you’re shit out of luck.”
“Criminal” immigrants, he continues, get nabbed in several ways. “You may be serving a five-day sentence in Rikers for shoplifting. When you’re done you’re referred to Immigration and will be sent to another prison to await removal. Some people are grabbed at the airport when they return from vacation.
“One of my clients got pulled over for talking on his cell phone while driving. He came to the
“This is the wonderful world of George Bush,” quips Lonegan. What’s more, he is outraged by the fact that those facing removal are denied free legal counsel. “If the government wants to take your kids away or try you for stealing, you get a free lawyer. But if you are being deported—a huge thing—there is no such right. It makes no sense.”
Forty-one-year-old Colin, a Jamaican Green Card holder out on bond, agrees with Lonegan, and believes that the government is overtly contemptuous of detainees. “The attitude,” he says, “is why waste money on these guys if we’re going to deport them?”
Like Shawn, Colin is HIV positive but was detained in numerous facilities:
Health care in detention, Colin adds, is abysmal. In Oakdale, he became resistant to several of his HIV medications. “They did not change my regimen,” he says. “They only changed two of the medications, which made me resistant to the other drugs in the cocktail. The neuropathy in my legs is a consequence of this. While I was there my viral load went sky-high and my T cell count went down. Then, when I was transferred to Concordia, they lost my meds for two weeks. When the medicine finally came, they gave the pills to me at the wrong times.”
In
Detained for nearly four years, Colin presently lives in Crown Heights and volunteers as a peer educator and advocate for people with HIV/AIDS. His case will be decided sometime this fall. “When I first got out in May 2005, it was like I was walking in slow motion and everyone else was fast-paced,” he says. “I am still trying to adjust. Sometimes I cry. Sometimes I laugh. Sometimes I am stressed out.”
The Department of Homeland Security’s office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement gives lip service to providing decent care for the people it incarcerates, but when specific concerns are raised, staff either deny the problem or pass the buck. According to Mark Thorn, a New York ICE spokesman: “It is the Public Health Service that provides medical care and dispenses medication at the county jails…Our policy is to protect the privacy of our detainees and the information that is in their personal files. Relative to harassment, any detainee who believes he or she is being harassed or abused for any reason, such as discrimination because of nationality, religion or sexual preference—we want to know. A detainee is also encouraged to contact the Office of the Inspector General. Lastly, medical records are forwarded with the detainee.”
Attorneys Bryan Lonegan and Sarah Sohn, as well as their clients, are frustrated by this response but are doing what they can to publicize conditions facing immigrant detainees. They are pushing for improved hygiene and health care inside jails and for giving immigration judges the authority to make individualized decisions. They further advocate providing counsel to everyone facing removal.
“This country was built by immigrants,” former-detainee Colin thunders. “You kick people out and mothers have to go on welfare and kids become problem children. In the long run this will cost U.S. society.”
NOTE: Detainee names have been changed at their request.