The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Immigrants sue detention center

3 men say South Ga. facility forces them to work for basic needs.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Three men who have been held in a South Georgia immigratio­n detention center filed a federal class-action lawsuit this week against the private company that operates the facility, alleging it is forcing detainees to cook and clean there foras little as $1a day as part of a profit-making scheme.

Filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court in Columbus, the lawsuit accuses Nashville, Tennessee-based CoreCivic of threatenin­g to put detainees in solitary confinemen­t and deprive them of food, toiletries and contact with loved ones if they don’t work inside the Stewart Detention Center. CoreCivic operates the center through agreements with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and Stewart County.

The plaintiffs are Wilhen Hill Barrientos, a Guatemalan national who is seeking asylum in the United States; Margarito Velazquez Galicia, a Mexican citizen who is seeking a deportatio­n reprieve; and Shoaib Ahmed, a citizen of Bangladesh who unsuccessf­ully sought asylum here. Barrientos and Galicia are still being held at Stewart.

The plaintiffs said they have worked in the detention center kitchen. Their lawsuit says CoreCivic operates a commissary in Stewart and that it is the only place where detainees can buy hygiene products, clothes, food and phone cards.

The Southern Poverty Law Center; Project South; R. Andrew Free, an immigratio­n attorney; and the law firm of Burns Charest are representi­ng the plaintiffs. Similar lawsuits have been filed in California, Colorado, Texas and Washington, according to

the SPLC.

“When I arrived at Stewart I was faced with an impossible choice — either work for a few cents an hour or live without basic things like soap, shampoo, deodorant, and food,” Barrientos said in a statement released through the SPLC. “If I didn’t work, I would never be able to call my family.”

ICE’s standards allow for volunteer work in its detention centers.

“Detainees shall be able to volunteer for work assignment­s but otherwise shall not be required to work, except to do personal housekeepi­ng,” ICE’s 2011 Performanc­e-based National Detention Standards states.

An ICE spokesman referred questions to CoreCivic about its operations at Stewart. CoreCivic released a statement saying all work programs in its ICE detention centers are “completely voluntary and operated in full compliance with ICE standards, including federally mandated statutory reimbursem­ent rates for voluntary work program participan­ts.”

“We have worked in close partnershi­p with ICE for more than 30 years,” CoreCivic spokesman Jonathan Burns said, “and will continue to provide a safe and humane environmen­t.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States