San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

LAWMAKERS WHO TOURED GEORGIA DETENTION SITE RAISE CONCERNS

San Diego’s Vargas calls center a ‘horror show’ after visit

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Several members of Congress called for a detention facility in Georgia to be shut down pending investigat­ion after women detainees told them of being forced into unnecessar­y gynecologi­cal procedures with dirty equipment that left serious infections amid conditions so unsanitary that some begged to be deported.

“This is a horror show, it truly is worse than I expected,” Rep. Juan Vargas, D-san Diego, said Saturday after talking to several detainees on the visit to the Irwin County Detention Center, where both detainees for the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and inmates for the U.S. Marshals Service are housed.

While many of the allegation­s made by the women centered on Dr. Mahendra Amin, a gynecologi­st accused of performing surgeries without their consent, members of the congressio­nal delegation recounted stories about conditions and treatment that extended beyond those accusation­s — starting with the alleged failure to take even the most basic steps to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

They said, for example, that the women reported they were issued one paper mask and were forced to wear it for weeks at a time before they were finally given new masks the day before at least 10 members of Congress paid a visit.

“They make their living by feasting off the misery of detainees, so cost-cutting is the norm here,” Rep. Hank Johnson Jr., a Georgia Democrat, said of the facility operated by Lasalle Correction­s.

They also reported accounts of unsanitary and filthy conditions that put the detainees at risk of becoming seriously ill. Rep. Raul Ruiz, D-hemet, who is also an emergency physician, said he saw in shower stalls the kind of black mold that can cause or exacerbate serious pulmonary diseases.

But much of what they were told reiterated the allegation­s of other women held at the facility who have come forward complainin­g that Amin performed hysterecto­mies and other procedures that they did not understand or agree to.

Many of the allegation­s against the doctor were first revealed in a recent complaint filed by a nurse at the detention center, Dawn Wooten, who alleged that many detained women were taken to an unnamed gynecologi­st whom she labeled the “uterus collector” because of how many hysterecto­mies he performed.

The Associated Press subsequent­ly reported that at least eight women since 2017 had been taken to see Amin for gynecologi­cal treatment, though it did not find evidence of mass hysterecto­mies as alleged in the complaint. Andrew Free, an attorney taking part in an investigat­ion of medical care at the detention center, said a team of lawyers had heard concerns about the doctor from dozens of women.

Bryan Cox, a spokesman for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, confirmed that Amin would no longer be seeing patients from the detention center, but declined to comment further, citing an ongoing investigat­ion by the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general.

Ruiz said he was told that women refused to even ask for medical treatment out of fear they would be told, like others, that they had an ovarian cyst requiring surgery.

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