The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ICE detainee held in South Georgia dies

Man is second detainee to die with COVID-19 symptoms this month.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

A Guatemalan man who was held at Stewart Detention Center in South Georgia has died, according to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, which identified his preliminar­y cause of death as complicati­ons from COVID-19.

Santiago Baten-Oxlaj, 34, was pronounced dead at 5:03 a.m. Sunday at Piedmont Columbus Regional Hospital, where he had been hospitaliz­ed since April 17 with symptoms of the coronaviru­s disease, said ICE. The federal agency did not say where he may have contracted the illness.

Meanwhile, CoreCivic — the Nashville-based correction­s business that operates Stewart through agreements with Stewart County and ICE — confirmed Monday that 51 of its employees who work at the facility have tested positive for the disease. Of those, 38 have recovered and have been medically cleared to return to work.

Located just outside the small town of Lumpkin, Stewart has capacity for 1,900 detainees. It has detained people from more than 140 countries and nearly every continent. Sixteen of its detainees and two ICE employees who work there have tested positive for COVID-19, according to ICE.

Baten-Oxlaj is at least the second ICE detainee to die this month after exhibiting symptoms of the disease. On May 6, Carlos Escobar-Mejia, 57, of El Salvador passed away at a hospital in National City, California, where he was treated for the disease. He had been held at ICE’s Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego.

To inhibit the spread of the disease, the agency is screening new detainees for COVID-19 and segregatin­g those with fevers and respirator­y symptoms.

“ICE is firmly committed to the health and welfare of all those in its custody and is undertakin­g a comprehens­ive agencywide review of this incident, as it does in all such cases,” ICE said in a news release about Baten-Oxlaj’s death.

CoreCivic said it is checking the temperatur­e of all detainees daily, serving meals in their housing units instead of in the dining facility, and distributi­ng masks.

“We’re working closely with our partners at Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to ensure the health and safety of everyone at the Stewart Detention Center,” CoreCivic spokesman Ryan Gustin said in an email.

ICE said it arrested Baten-Oxlaj at a municipal probation office in Marietta on March 2 following his conviction for driving under the influence. On March 26, according to ICE, a federal immigratio­n judge ordered him to return to his country when it would be medically safe for him to do so.

Baten-Oxlaj is the fifth Stewart detainee to die since 2017. Two detainees hanged themselves in their solitary confinemen­t cells in Stewart. A third died in 2018 from pneumonia. Last year, the fourth died from a heart infection and multiple organ failure.

Immigrant rights activists have called on ICE to free vulnerable detainees amid the pandemic. ICE has said it is consulting Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines and reviewing cases of pregnant detainees, those who are 60 years old or older, and others “who may be more vulnerable to COVID-19.”

Marty Rosenbluth, an immigratio­n attorney based in Lumpkin, said his clients at Stewart told him they don’t know of anyone who has been tested for the disease there, even those who have complained of illnesses.

“This was a death that was waiting to happen,” Rosenbluth said. “And the only thing that is surprising is that it hadn’t come sooner.”

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN / AP 2019 ?? The privately operated Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, about 140 miles southwest of Atlanta and near the Georgia-Alabama state line, houses up to 1,900 detainees.
DAVID GOLDMAN / AP 2019 The privately operated Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, about 140 miles southwest of Atlanta and near the Georgia-Alabama state line, houses up to 1,900 detainees.

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