Houston Chronicle

U.S. sees first detained immigrant death in outbreak

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO, Calif. — A 57-yearold man in immigratio­n custody died Wednesday from complicati­ons related to the coronaviru­s, authoritie­s said, marking the first reported death from the virus among about 30,000 people in immigratio­n custody.

The detainee had been held at the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego and hospitaliz­ed since late April, said Craig Sturak, a spokesman for the San Diego County Health & Human Services Agency.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t would neither confirm nor deny the death. CoreCivic Inc., the private company that operates the detention center, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

A family representa­tive identified the deceased as Carlos Ernesto Escobar, a diabetic who left El Salvador with his mother and sisters in 1980 and lived in the Los Angeles area. Alex Guzman of the Otay Mesa Detention Resistance advocacy group said he had been detained at the San Diego facility since January.

Escobar’s sisters told the San Diego Union-Tribune that he received a blood transfusio­n Tuesday but his body had already been too weakened by the virus.

“My brother was a one-of-akind,“Maribel Escobar told the newspaper.

Otay Mesa has been a hotbed for the spread of COVID-19, with nearly one of five detainees who have tested positive nationwide. As of Wednesday, 132 of ICE’s 705 positive cases were at the San Diego facility. Also, 10 of 39 ICE detention employees who have tested positive are at Otay Mesa.

Two guards at an immigratio­n detention center in Monroe, La., died late last month from the coronaviru­s — Carl Lenard, 62, and Stanton Johnson, 51. Until Wednesday, no detainees had been reported dead.

A Justice Department attorney, Samuel Bettwy, said at a hearing on Monday that the San Diego detainee was on a ventilator at a hospital and his prognosis was not good. While the death came as no surprise, advocacy groups that have been pressing ICE to release detainees on bond swiftly criticized the agency.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.

The frequency of testing may have something to do with Otay Mesa’s elevated infection rate. At Monday’s hearing, authoritie­s said 119 of 171, or 70 percent, of detainees tested at Otay Mesa were positive. ICE says only that it has tested 705 detainees nationwide, without breaking testing down by detention center.

The first positive case at Otay Mesa was a guard, whose test result was announced March 31. The facility is designed to hold up to 1,970 ICE detainees and U.S. Marshals Service inmates but has lowered its count in recent weeks.

As of April 26, it held 662 immigratio­n detainees and 325 Marshals Service inmates. Dozens are being released this week under a court order.

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