Austin American-Statesman

‘People’s tribunal’ to review abuses at detention center

County officials, ICE have no plans to attend mock trial.

- By Claire Osborn cosborn@statesman.com

An advocacy group that helped an asylum seeker gain her release from an immigrant detention center in Taylor plans to put officials “on trial” Saturday, when alleged abuses at the facility will be aired during an unofficial hearing outside the center.

Williamson County Sheriff Robert Chody and the Williamson County Commission­ers were invited to the hearing “for their role in the abuse through maintenanc­e of the T. Don Hutto contract and oversight for the facility and crimes committed by CoreCivic employees and ICE officials,” according to a news release from Grassroots Leadership, a local advocacy group.

None of the Williamson County officials who received a “people’s subpoena” to the event at the T. Don Hutto Residentia­l Center plans to attend.

”I have no intention of going,” said Chody. “I believe it’s an opportunit­y for them to try to publicly shame me for something I don’t have a lot of control over. I am willing to meet with them privately.”

The event from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, called a “people’s tribunal,” will involve people released from immigrant detention centers acting as “judges” and women formerly detained at the detention center delivering a verdict. It is part of a series of tribunals the Detention Watch Network has been holding nationwide about alleged abuses at detention centers.

“If they want change, they have to go after federal policy,” said Williamson County Commission­er Terry Cook.

Other county commission­ers had no comment about the unofficial hearing or said they couldn’t attend because of other commitment­s. Officials from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t will not be on hand either, said Adelina Pruneda, an ICE spokeswoma­n.

If no local officials attend the tribunal Saturday, someone will stand in to represent them, said Bethany Carson, a researcher for Grassroots Leadership.

The two-hour event comes after representa­tives from GrassRoots Leadership and other community members asked Williamson County Commission­ers at meetings this spring to address issues at the detention center. The county commission­ers never put the item on their agenda, the Grassroots Leadership news release said.

The group has previously asked Chody to investigat­e sexual assault allegation­s at the facility, which houses female asylum seekers. Chody has said he referred the issue to the FBI.

In March, GrassRoots Leadership helped Laura Monterrosa — an asylum seeker from El Salvador who has alleged a female guard at the facility sexually assaulted her — gain her release from the center.

Monterrosa’s release came after U.S. Reps. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, and Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, wrote to ICE officials in February, asking them to “direct an investigat­ion of ICE’s handling of sexual assault cases in Texas immigratio­n detention facilities.”

Forty-four other members of Congress co-signed the letter, which said five detainees reported being sexually assaulted at the T. Don Hutto center between 2007 and 2011, according to Doggett’s office.

CoreCivic, which owns and operates the facility, pays the county about $8,000 per month for the costs associated with employing a county representa­tive to serve as a liaison between Williamson County, ICE and CoreCivic.

The county can’t close the independen­tly owned facility, but it can cancel the contract with CoreCivic and ICE, Williamson County spokeswoma­n Connie Odom has said.

 ??  ?? Williamson County Sheriff Robert Chody
Williamson County Sheriff Robert Chody

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