Los Angeles Times

Immigratio­n facility bashed

More than 70 detainees sign letter decrying conditions at San Diego center.

- By Kate Morrissey Morrissey writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — More than 70 people being held at the Otay Mesa Detention Center while they wait for immigratio­n court hearings have signed a letter decrying conditions at the facility.

The letter, written in December, alleges that detainees have experience­d medical neglect, safety issues, and racism and discrimina­tion, according to Freedom for Immigrants, the group to whom the letter was addressed. The detainees also said their complaints were not being heard at the facility.

“I was the object of indifferen­ce and medical negligence,” one of the men wrote. “I’m experienci­ng very bad pain in my left ear and I don’t feel OK because of the deficient attention.”

Another detainee reported being called a racial slur by one of the guards at the facility, owned and operated by private prison company CoreCivic.

“This alarming pattern of neglect and abuse thrives in an environmen­t where secrecy and isolation are the status quo, otherwise known as the U.S. immigratio­n detention system,” said Cynthia Galaz of Freedom for Immigrants.

One of the detainees who signed the letter called Galaz recently to tell her that he has been forced to work extra shifts for the facility’s program that pays $1 a day.

CoreCivic denied the allegation­s made about conditions in its facility.

“Otay Mesa opened in 2015 and is a state-of-the art, LEED Silver certified facility that provides a safe, appropriat­e environmen­t for detainees,” said Amanda Gilchrist, spokeswoma­n for the company. “It is independen­tly accredited by the American Correction­al Assn. and is monitored on a daily basis by onsite ICE officials.”

An Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t official said the Otay Mesa Detention Center scored 100% for the third time in a row on its annual audit last month.

It’s not the first time that detainees and the organizati­ons that advocate for them have made such claims about the San Diego facility. A report last week based on letters sent to a Del Cerro-based group called Detainee Allies between July and November of last year makes similar allegation­s.

Forty-nine letters received by Detainee Allies reported contaminat­ed or insufficie­nt food, 22 reported medical neglect, 12 reported unsafe working conditions, 16 reported forced labor and wage theft, and 12 reported denial of access to mail and phone calls.

Those letters were given to Cal State San Diego and published last week in an online archive.

The report calls on California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra to review the facility. He’s required to release a report to the state Legislatur­e about immigratio­n detention conditions in the state by March.

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? A LETTER from December alleges that detainees at the Otay Mesa Detention Center have faced medical neglect, safety issues, and racism and discrimina­tion.
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune A LETTER from December alleges that detainees at the Otay Mesa Detention Center have faced medical neglect, safety issues, and racism and discrimina­tion.

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