Immigrants in detention should be released as virus mitigation
As we brace for the brunt of this fast-spreading pandemic, it’s a pressing national security imperative that immigrants held in detention should be released to their families immediately.
The federal government is keeping scores of people cheek by jowl in facilities that have been well-documented to be lacking in proper ventilation, food or even clean, running water. And many of these detainees already have compromised immune systems due to old age, chronic medical conditions or pregnancy.
As if it weren’t bad enough to put immigrants in grave danger of becoming a huge vector of COVID-19 infections, this situation also puts at risk the people who police them, manage their cases, offer them medical care, defend them in court, prepare their food and clean up after them.
Whatever you might imagine when talking about immigrants in detention, the truth is that most either have no criminal record or have already served time for any offenses they’ve committed while in our country. And nearly all unauthorized immigrants who are being held in detention have already been processed and catalogued in multiple Department of Homeland Security, Department of Health and Human Services databases.
“Based on countless reports from advocates, ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] doesn’t even give soap or hot water, they’re giving out moldy food — the day-to-day conditions have led to dozens of deaths. Nine, so far, in this fiscal year,” said Silky
Shah, the executive director of the Detention Watch Network. “To be clear [a major outbreak of coronavirus infections] is imminent if it’s not already happening, and while ICE has not reported any, we also know widespread testing also isn’t happening.”
Shah and a group of leaders from other immigrant-advocacy organizations recently held a briefing in which they called on the Trump administration to suspend ICE raids, postpone deportations and release immigrants from detention.
The experts noted that President Trump is exposing an already vulnerable population to even higher risk by putting policies in place that have the effect of making immigrants likelier to get sick and scared to seek medical care if they suspect they’ve contracted coronavirus. These policies include the public charge rule, which penalizes legal and unauthorized immigrants alike for accessing publicly funded safety-net programs like food assistance.
“We need to understand this moment for what it is — a disaster like Hurricane Katrina,” said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center.
Due to lack of transparency, it’s unclear what protocols or policies are in place for the agencies and facilities that house immigrants to ensure detainees get information and resources to protect themselves against an outbreak.
When reports tell of squalid conditions in which fresh food and drinking water are hard to come by, much less soap or showering facilities, it’s difficult to imagine that immigrants, many of whom don’t speak either English or Spanish, are being informed about — much less protected against — a quickly spreading virus.
There are seeds of hope, however. Earlier this week, New Jersey became the nation’s leader in releasing inmates — 1,000 — in order to curb the possibility of widespread coronavirus contagion. It followed New York state, Cleveland, Ohio, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, in releasing prisoners.
Kentucky is making progress in releasing hundreds of nonviolent inmates, and news reports indicate that Trump is considering issuing an executive order to release older, nonviolent offenders from federal prisons.
Taking the same precautions with immigrant detainees who, overwhelmingly, have committed only the civil violation of residing in the country without authorization, is the smart and logical next step.