Austin American-Statesman

ACLU: Immigrant kids abused in Obama years

-

Unaccompan­ied minors who crossed the border earlier this decade were abused by federal border agents, says ACLU report.

Unaccompan­ied minors who crossed the U.S.-Mexican border during a historic wave of migration earlier this decade were repeatedly beaten, sexually abused, and deprived of food and medical care by federal border agents, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report released this week.

About 30,000 pages of documents obtained by the ACLU through an open-records lawsuit depict a gantlet of mistreatme­nt for the tens of thousands of children who arrived mainly from Central America between 2009 and 2014, during the Obama administra­tion. Many were seeking asylum in the United States after fleeing death threats and violence in their homelands.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents allegedly used Tasers on the minors for amusement or punishment, kicked them and threatened to either rape or kill them. The ACLU report — which is based on emails, complaint forms and investigat­ive reports — says agents routinely kept minors in detention cells with frigid temperatur­es, forcing them to sleep on concrete floors.

When the complaints were filed to the Department of Homeland Security, they were largely dismissed, the ACLU said, revealing what the advocacy group described as “a culture of impunity” among federal government agents charged with protecting immigrant children in their custody.

“You have no clear sense of how or whether these agents were reprimande­d,” said Astrid Dominguez, director of the ACLU’s Regional Center for Border Rights.

CBP officials called the organizati­on’s conclusion­s “unfounded and baseless,” and said DHS investigat­ors had found that most of the claims cited in the ACLU report had no merit.

The report ignores improvemen­ts in oversight made since 2014, including stricter guidelines on use of force and a zero tolerance policy on sexual abuse, the agency said. It also disregards the fact that the DHS inspector general’s office, responding to previous complaints of abuse, conducted unannounce­d visits to 41 CBP facilities in 2014 and found no impropriet­ies, the agency said.

“CBP takes seriously all allegation­s of misconduct, but without new specifics is unable commence reasonable steps to examine these assertions and address the accusation­s levied,” Dan Hetlage, a CBP spokesman, said in a statement.

The ACLU initially sought the documents used in the report in a public-records request. When that request was denied, the organizati­on filed the lawsuit, eventually gaining access to the records.

Prior to receiving that material, the ACLU had been told about 116 allegation­s of misconduct involving minors between 5 and 17. Given the volume of documents received through the lawsuit, there were likely several hundred more cases between 2009 and 2014, the group says.

Nearly 134,000 unaccompan­ied minors have entered DHS custody since the fall of 2014, according to federal statistics.

Recently, the Trump administra­tion has proposed new regulation­s for how those minors should be treated, including stripping some federal asylum protection­s from them if they reconnect with an adult relative in the United States, which DHS argues would mean they are no longer “unaccompan­ied” minors.

ACLU attorney Mitra Ebadalohi said the records obtained through the lawsuit indicate that DHS investigat­ors often took agents’ word over the children’s, in one case closing an investigat­ion after one group of agents said they couldn’t remember their accuser.

“These are allegation­s that span across multiple years, multiple states, involving children from different background­s,” Ebadalohi said. “The consistenc­y to them, to us, indicates that there’s truth there.”

The report describes a pattern of alleged behavior that ranges from “neglectful” to “sadistic.”

In one case, an agent allegedly pushed his Taser into a boy’s stomach, shocking him, then kneed him twice in the same spot.

In another, a 16-year-old girl being held just outside Phoenix claimed that an agent “forcibly spread her legs and touched her private parts so hard that she screamed.”

One boy was allegedly forced to strip down to his boxers inside one of the cold detention cells, widely known among undocument­ed immigrants as “hieleras,” or “freezers.” Another teen who had swam across the Rio Grande river claimed he was placed in a frigid cell while still wearing wet clothes.

A 16-year-old girl held in a California detention center with the baby she’d brought with her recounted how an agent stood at the cell door and calmly threatened to rape her, and then place her child in foster care.

 ?? ELLIOT SPAGAT / AP 2017 ?? U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents allegedly used Tasers on the minors for amusement or punishment, kicked them and threatened to either rape or kill them, says an ACLU report.
ELLIOT SPAGAT / AP 2017 U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents allegedly used Tasers on the minors for amusement or punishment, kicked them and threatened to either rape or kill them, says an ACLU report.
 ?? MARK WILSON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen walks to a meeting Tuesday.
MARK WILSON / GETTY IMAGES Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen walks to a meeting Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States