The Guardian (USA)

Arizona shelter under fire as videos said to show rough handling of migrant kids

- Associated Press

Authoritie­s in Arizona said on Monday they have sent prosecutor­s the results of an investigat­ion into a shelter for immigrant children, now shut down, where videos showed staffers dragging and shoving minors.

The Maricopa county sheriff’s office investigat­ed incidents that took place on three days in September. Prosecutor­s will now decide whether to file charges.

The videos, first obtained by the Arizona Republic newspaper, are blurry but show staffers dragging children on the ground and shoving a boy against a door. In one video, a staffer is seen sitting at a conference room table, fidgeting with her hair, while another staffer drags a child into the room. The treatment continued even after the child falls to the ground.

The shelter, known as Hacienda del Sol, was operated by private contractor Southwest Key and located in the wider Phoenix area before it was closed in October. It held immigrant children who came to the US without a parent or in some cases had been separated from family members.

Southwest Key has been under fire in Arizona after a series of investigat­ions into abuse of children in its care. The Texas-based organizati­on is the largest provider of shelters for immigrant children in the country and agreed this year to give up licenses at two of its biggest Arizona facilities at a time when the US government is holding more children in its care, and for longer periods of time.

Before the investigat­ions, Southwest Key had about 1,600 children in 13 facilities in Arizona. That number was reduced by about half by the end of the year.

Southwest Key was forced to shutter Hacienda del Sol in an agreement with the state health department after an investigat­ion found the organizati­on hadn’t properly done background checks on all of its employees. It also was required to take other steps to ensure the safety of children in its care.

Southwest Key spokesman Jeff Eller said on Monday that staff members who monitored video at Hacienda del Sol immediatel­y notified police and the government agencies about the incidents seen on the videos.

He said the organizati­on cooperated with the investigat­ion and quickly suspended, and later fired, the two employees in the video.

“We wholeheart­edly welcomed the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt’s decision to suspend operations at Hacienda del Sol and are working to thoroughly retrain our staff,” Eller said.

Southwest Key has also arranged an independen­t review of procedures, hiring and training at its Arizona shelters, he said.

The US Department of Health and Human Services, which is in charge of caring for immigrant children, said its focus is on the safety and best interest of each child.

“These are vulnerable children in difficult circumstan­ces,” it said in a statement. “When any allegation­s of abuse or neglect are made they are taken seriously, investigat­ed and swift action is taken.”

Immigratio­n facilities in Arizona have been targeted by numerous allegation­s of sexual abuse, including one by the government of El Salvador, which said it received reports of three children, aged 12 to 17, who were sexually abused at unnamed shelters.

In August, police arrested a 33year-old man on suspicion of sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl at the same Southwest Key shelter where just weeks earlier the first lady, Melania Trump, had taken a tour.

In September, a former youth care worker was convicted of sexually abusing seven teenage boys at a Phoenixare­a shelter for immigrant children.

 ??  ?? The shelter, Hacienda del Sol, was operated by private contractor Southwest Key, which has been under fire in Arizona after a series of investigat­ions into abuse of children in its care. Photograph: Handout/Reuters
The shelter, Hacienda del Sol, was operated by private contractor Southwest Key, which has been under fire in Arizona after a series of investigat­ions into abuse of children in its care. Photograph: Handout/Reuters

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