The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Immigrant detentions soar despite president’s campaign promises

-

WINNFIELD, La. — Alexander Martinez says he fled from homophobia, government persecutio­n and the notorious MS-13 gang in El Salvador only to run into abuse and harassment in America’s immigratio­n detention system.

Since crossing the border illegally in April, the 28-yearold has bounced between six different facilities in three states. He said he contracted COVID-19, faced racist taunts and abuse from guards and was harassed by fellow detainees for being gay.

“I find myself emotionall­y unstable because I have suffered a lot in detention,” Martinez said last week at Winn Correction­al Center in Louisiana. “I never imagined or expected to receive this inhumane treatment.“

He’s among a growing number of people in immigratio­n detention centers nationwide, many of whom, like Martinez, have cleared their initial screening to seek asylum in the U.S.

The number of detainees has more than doubled since the end of February, to nearly 27,000 as of July 22, according to the most recent data from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. That’s above the roughly 22,000 detained last July under thenPresid­ent Donald Trump, though it’s nowhere close to the record in August 2019, when the number of detainees exceeded 55,000, ICE data shows.

The rising detentions is a sore point for President Joe Biden’s pro-immigratio­n allies, who hoped he would reverse his predecesso­r’s hardline approach. Biden campaigned on ending “prolonged” detention and use of private prisons for immigratio­n detention, which house the majority of those in ICE custody.

In May, the Biden administra­tion terminated contracts with two controvers­ial ICE detention centers — one in Georgia and another in Massachuse­tts — getting praise from advocates who hoped it would be the start of a broader rollback.

But no other facilities have lost their ICE contracts, and Biden has proposed funding for 32,500 immigrant detention beds in his budget, a modest decrease from 34,000 funded by Trump.

A White House spokesman said Biden’s budget reduces the number of ICE detention beds and shifts some of their use to processing immigrants for parole and other alternativ­es.

The number of detainees who have passed their initial asylum screening has leapt from around 1,700 in April to 3,400 in late July, making up about 13 percent of all detainees, according to the most recent ICE data.

“By ICE’s own policy, these are people that shouldn’t be in detention any longer,” Altman said, citing ICE’s process for paroling asylum-seekers until a judge decides their case.

ICE officials declined to comment.

 ?? Steven Senne / Associated Press ?? Allison Cullen, of Brockton, Mass., looks at a wall covered with family photos while speaking with reporters on July 22 at her home in Brockton. Cullen’s husband Flavio Andrade Prado, a Brazilian national, is being held by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t at the Plymouth County House of Correction­s. Cullen, a mother of two, says she and her children haven’t been able to visit her husband since before the pandemic.
Steven Senne / Associated Press Allison Cullen, of Brockton, Mass., looks at a wall covered with family photos while speaking with reporters on July 22 at her home in Brockton. Cullen’s husband Flavio Andrade Prado, a Brazilian national, is being held by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t at the Plymouth County House of Correction­s. Cullen, a mother of two, says she and her children haven’t been able to visit her husband since before the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States