Chattanooga Times Free Press

Guard actions in Mexico detention facility fire seen as vital to who lived

- BY MARÍA VERZA

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — When a fire broke out at a Mexican immigratio­n detention facility last month, dramatical­ly different reactions by guards in the men’s and women’s sections appeared to make a difference in who lived and died, according to previously unreported surveillan­ce videos and witness statements viewed by The Associated Press.

Forty male detainees perished in the March 27 blaze, allegedly started by a male migrant in protest of their conditions the facility in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas. All 15 of the female detainees safely escaped from their side of the facility as it began to fill with smoke.

The videos show that in the hours before the fire, the deadliest ever at a migration detention center in the country, private security guards contracted by Mexico’s immigratio­n agency used keys to open the men’s section to allow cleaning personnel to enter and to bring them large jugs of water.

However once the fire started, no one tried to open it again despite the presence of guards nearby. Meanwhile, on the women’s side, a female security guard sprinted through the building with keys she said the immigratio­n official in charge of that wing had given her. That official, Gloria Liliana Ramos, is among those charged with homicide.

A central question for investigat­ors remains: Where were the keys to the men’s section when the fire started?

Seven people — five immigratio­n agents, a private security guard and the migrant who allegedly started the fire — have been charged with homicide and causing injury.

On Friday, an initial hearing for the head of Mexico’s National Immigratio­n Institute was delayed until Tuesday, because his defense team said they had not been given access to the investigat­ive case file. Francisco Garduño is accused of failing in his responsibi­lity to protect migrants. One of his lieutenant­s, Antonio Molina, the agency’s verificati­on director, was back in court to face accusation­s that he did not ensure decent conditions for migrants. A prosecutor noted that on the night of the fire 16 of the 68 male migrants held had not even been registered yet.

Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the contents of the videos and witness statements, which were provided to AP by a lawyer for one of the accused.

On the evening of the fire, they show, male migrants began to press mattresses against the bars to block guards’ view of what was happening inside. They also apparently unplugged surveillan­ce cameras that they were able to access.

One man allegedly set fire to a foam mattress, and within seconds smoke began to fill the area. A previously seen video clip showed guards approach the bars but then walk away without trying to open the gate.

The immigratio­n official who was in charge of the men’s side that evening was Rodolfo Collazo. In his statement to investigat­ors, Collazo said that shortly before the fire erupted he had left to take two minors to another facility, placing the private security supervisor in charge and leaving behind the keys to the men’s section.

Ramos, his counterpar­t on the women’s side, confirmed in her own statement that Collazo had left the private supervisor in charge.

An analysis of surveillan­ce video by forensic investigat­or Luis Fermín Cal y Mayor for one of the defense teams concluded that the keys to the men’s section were in the possession of the private security guards minutes before the fire started. That contradict­s accounts from those guards in statements to government investigat­ors saying that when the blaze began, they were in a bathroom filling jugs with water for the migrants and did not have the keys.

In the women’s section, another private security guard, Angélica Hinojosa, ran out when the blaze began — to get help, she said later. She returned a short time later followed by a member of the National Guard.

Hinojosa is seen on video racing through the building as female migrants begin to cover their noses and mouths amid the increasing­ly dense smoke. She later told investigat­ors that when “it started to smell bad and I saw a lot of smoke,” she asked Ramos for the keys. The women’s section was opened, and everyone escaped, retracing Hinojosa’s steps to the building’s entrance.

Female migrants told government investigat­ors they heard shouts from the men’s side of the facility, including desperate calls for water and questions about where the keys were.

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