Lodi News-Sentinel

ICE deports women amid criminal investigat­ion into Ga. doctor

- By Molly O’Toole

WASHINGTON — Four months ago, a Honduran immigrant named Jackelin was taken from Irwin County Detention Center in Georgia to see a local gynecologi­st.

Then a few weeks ago, lawyers for Jackelin and 16 other women detained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t informed investigat­ors that the women wanted to testify against the doctor, who’s now at the center of a criminal investigat­ion amid allegation­s that he pressured patients at Irwin to undergo unnecessar­y medical procedures, including hysterecto­mies.

Since then, immigratio­n officials have moved to deport the 33-year-old mother of five, who is married to a U.S. citizen and has lived here for more than five years. Jackelin was scheduled for a Wednesday deportatio­n flight, until a last-minute order came for her to remain at the rural

Georgia facility.

This is the uncertaint­y for Jackelin and other women at Irwin who face imminent deportatio­n by ICE, despite an ongoing criminal investigat­ion by the FBI, the Justice Department and the Homeland Security inspector general’s office that focuses on their experience­s with the gynecologi­st, Dr. Mahendra Amin.

The women — the majority of whom are Black or Latina, from the Caribbean, Africa and Latin America — allege that Amin performed overly aggressive or unnecessar­y gynecologi­cal surgeries on them without their consent, including removing their reproducti­ve organs. Their accounts are backed by new lawsuits, sworn declaratio­ns, lawyers and outside medical experts who’ve submitted their analyses of thousands of pages of medical records to lawmakers, as well as to the investigat­ors.

“The pain from the doctor was something horrible,” said Jackelin, who asked to be identified by her middle name because she feared retributio­n. Her lawyers filed suit on Monday.

The alleged abuses prompted a national outcry in September after a nurse at the facility filed a 27-page whistleblo­wer complaint to the Homeland Security inspector general, leading more than 170 lawmakers to demand an investigat­ion.

The women, as well as lawyers, advocates and members of Congress, allege that ICE is retaliatin­g against the group for speaking out against Amin and their treatment in the agency’s custody, and attempting to obstruct the investigat­ion by withholdin­g medical records and physically removing the evidence: the women themselves.

ICE spokeswoma­n Danielle Bennett said ICE is “fully cooperatin­g” with the Homeland Security inspector general investigat­ion, including interviews conducted by the Justice Department.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States