Texarkana Gazette

Advocates want #MeToo debate to include immigrant detention

- By Nomaan Merchant

HOUSTON—While she waits at a detention center in Texas to find out if she can stay in the United States, Laura Monterrosa fears that she put herself in danger by coming forward about sexual abuse.

Months after accusing a female guard at the facility of groping her and suggesting they have sex, Monterrosa says she still sees the guard in the dining hall and other parts of the facility. She recalled in a recent interview what the guard had said to her.

“I told her that I was going to tell the supervisor what was happening,” Monterrosa said in a recent phone interview from the facility. “She sarcastica­lly said, ‘Do you think they’ll believe you or me?’”

As the national discussion of sexual misconduct grows, advocates for immigrants say they hope the conversati­on will include immigrant detention facilities. They point to the FBI announcing in December that it had opened a civil rights investigat­ion into Monterrosa’s case as a positive sign.

“Our immigrant prison system thrives on secrecy,” said Christina Fialho, co-executive director of Community Initiative­s for Visiting Immigrants in Confinemen­t, or CIVIC. “If more people knew what was truly happening behind locked doors, I think there would be an outcry against the immigrant detention system.”

Fialho’s organizati­on sent a complaint to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in April that listed 27 allegation­s of sexual abuse in immigratio­n detention over the last three years. The complaint also says that another 1,016 people reported sexual abuse in detention to the Department of Homeland Security between May 2014 and July 2016.

Fialho said many more cases go uncounted because victims are afraid to come forward or, when they do, their cases aren’t fully investigat­ed.

Based on CIVIC’s analysis of federal data released through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request, DHS investigat­ed less than 3 percent of the sexual abuse complaints it received during that same time period.

Like many of the roughly 35,000 adults in immigratio­n detention, Monterrosa, 23, has requested asylum. She arrived at the southern U.S. border in May after fleeing El Salvador, where she says she was forced into prostituti­on by her family and that an uncle raped her. The uncle was a policeman, she said.

If her asylum claim is denied, she could be deported. She is currently appealing a denial of her claim in October.

The Associated Press typically does not name victims in sexual assault investigat­ions, but Monterrosa has come forward to encourage other women to report their stories.

The advocacy group Grassroots Leadership, which publicized Monterrosa’s case, says two other women in the same facility have since written letters describing sexual harassment.

“Women are forced to do what they say or stay silent out of fear,” Monterrosa said.

Bethany Carson, an immigratio­n researcher at Grassroots Leadership, called on authoritie­s to release Monterrosa so “she can live in peace and recover from this new trauma she experience­d at the hands of those responsibl­e for ensuring her safety.”

Monterrosa is being held at the T. Don Hutto Residentia­l Center in Taylor, Texas, a rural town outside of Austin. Hutto has been the target of lawsuits and criminal investigat­ions since shortly after it opened in 2006, having been converted from a medium-security prison.

Hutto was a facility for women and children until 2009, when the U.S. government transferre­d families elsewhere and settled a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union over how children were being confined. It’s now a 512-bed facility holding only women.

In 2011, a guard was accused of groping multiple women while he was supposed to be taking them to the airport or bus station. He pleaded guilty to federal civil rights charges and received 10 months in prison.

Advocates say problems inside immigrant detention have persisted despite years of calling attention to the topic, in part because the facilities themselves can be impenetrab­le to the public.

Hutto is operated by the private prison company CoreCivic, formerly known as the Correction­s Corporatio­n of America, which runs detention centers across the country under contracts with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. ICE said it received four reports of sexual abuse at Hutto during the past government fiscal year, which ended in September.

Under policies posted on CoreCivic’s website, any detainee who reports sexual violence should have “no contact with the alleged perpetrato­r.” Both ICE and CoreCivic prohibit retaliatio­n against a detainee who files a report.

But CoreCivic declined to answer questions about Monterrosa’s report that she had seen the guard in the dining hall and referred comment to ICE, as it’s required to do under its federal contract, which stipulates that private prison operators must consult with ICE before speaking to the media.

ICE previously issued a statement saying that it concluded Monterrosa’s allegation­s “could not be corroborat­ed and the case lacked evidence to pursue any further action.” The agency says it is now referring to the FBI’s statement that it had opened an investigat­ion.

In a statement, ICE said it has implemente­d “strong protection­s” against sexual assault in its detention facilities.

“It is ICE policy to provide effective safeguards against sexual abuse and assault of all individual­s in ICE custody, including with respect to screening, staff training, detainee education, response and interventi­on, medical and mental health care, reporting, investigat­ion, and monitoring and oversight,” the statement said.

ICE has not posted sexual abuse data for all of its detention facilities, despite the commitment it made in 2014 to publish that informatio­n online at least once a year, as part of its compliance with a federal law on prison rapes. ICE said that it was “currently working on finalizing such informatio­n.”

The agency also committed to third-party audits of its detention centers. While it has released the audits of more than 20 facilities this year, Hutto has not yet been examined, though an audit is scheduled for next year.

Seventy-one members of Congress sent a letter to federal officials last month calling on the Department of Homeland Security to “be held accountabl­e for rampant complaints of sexual assault, abuse and harassment within their immigrant detention facilities.”

“Immigrants are among the most vulnerable people—many of whom are children away from their families,” said Rep. Judy Chu, a California Democrat who signed the letter. “And being detained puts them completely at the mercy of others.”

 ??  ?? above A dorm area of the T. Don Hutto Residentia­l Center is shown April 22, 2008, in Taylor, Texas. Laura Monterrosa, a detainee waiting to find out if she’ll be allowed to stay in the United States, has accused a guard at the facility of groping her...
above A dorm area of the T. Don Hutto Residentia­l Center is shown April 22, 2008, in Taylor, Texas. Laura Monterrosa, a detainee waiting to find out if she’ll be allowed to stay in the United States, has accused a guard at the facility of groping her...
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