Chattanooga Times Free Press

Immigrant detainees’ forced labor case ends in settlement

- BY LAUTARO GRINSPAN

A group of former detainees said Georgia’s largest immigrant jail broke federal antislaver­y laws by forcing them to work against their will. Their 2018 lawsuit against CoreCivic, the private prison company that operates South Georgia’s Stewart Detention Center, ended with a settlement this week.

Plaintiffs had alleged that threats of punishment — and a need to earn money to buy food to supplement the center’s spartan diet — led them to take prison jobs that paid between $1 and $4 per day.

Their lawyers argued that Stewart administra­tors had abused the prison’s work program because the facility was understaff­ed and had an “utter dependence on detained workers” to keep it operationa­l. Jobs included kitchen and maintenanc­e tasks, among others.

The settlement requires CoreCivic to provide every detained migrant who chooses to participat­e in the program with a document outlining their rights, including their ability to refuse to work at any time. The settlement also provides additional, confidenti­al benefits to individual plaintiffs.

“The declaratio­n of rights is a call to action to those in immigratio­n jails to keep fighting for justice, and it makes clear that they should not face the abuses that I suffered at Stewart,” said plaintiff Wilhen Hill Barrientos.

Barrientos, a Guatemalan asylum seeker, was detained at Stewart intermitte­ntly from July 2015 to June 2018. In a declaratio­n submitted to the court, he said he was not asked whether he wanted to work upon arriving at Stewart but was instead told that failure to do so would result in solitary confinemen­t. He said he worked in the kitchen, regularly putting in eight- to nine-hour shifts, seven days a week — a workload in excess of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t guidelines under its Voluntary Work Program.

In a statement, CoreCivic spokespers­on Brian Todd said that plaintiffs’ accusation­s “are baseless and remain unproven.”

“Throughout these proceeding­s, CoreCivic has repeatedly demonstrat­ed that our voluntary work program is appropriat­ely designed and administra­ted, and we admitted no fault or wrongdoing as part of the settlement.”

Todd noted that the stipulatio­ns of the settlement are not new, but simply restate practices already in place at Stewart and other CoreCivic detention facilities.

Last year, plaintiffs had sought class certificat­ion on behalf of more than 30,000 detained migrants who allegedly were also forced to work under threat of punishment. That effort failed, with a federal judge in Georgia denying that request earlier this year, noting in his decision that most Stewart detainees do not participat­e in the work program.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, there are other forced labor complaints against ICE private prison operators across the country.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY JEREMY REDMON/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS ?? A group of former immigrant detainees settled their forced labor case against CoreCivic, the operator of the Stewart Detention Center, in Lumpkin, Ga.
FILE PHOTO BY JEREMY REDMON/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS A group of former immigrant detainees settled their forced labor case against CoreCivic, the operator of the Stewart Detention Center, in Lumpkin, Ga.

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