|
ACLU
Reacts to DHS OIG Report on ICE Detainee Deaths and Medical Care
Calls report
inadequate for addressing 2 out of 69 immigrant detainee deaths
and asks Congress and courts to fix deplorable standards
governing Immigrant Detention
Washington, DC,
July 1, 2008: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) reacts
to the release of the Department of Homeland Security Inspector
General’s report, “ICE Policies Related to Detainee Deaths and
the Oversight of Immigration Detention Facilities.” The report
examines two of the 33 detainee deaths reported between January
1, 2005 and May 31, 2007 and DHS’s Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) standards related to detainee deaths and the
medical treatment of immigration
detainees.
“After compelling
reports of deficient medical care on TV and in the newspapers
and after detailed testimony before Congress, it comes as no
surprise that the Inspector General would find failures in the
system of the medical care provided immigrants held by ICE,”
said Michael Macleod-Ball, ACLU Chief Legislative and Policy
Counsel. Unfortunately, the OIG report does not go far enough
to rectify a deplorable situation – it failed to examine 31 of
33 reported deaths and none of the instances of grossly
deficient medical care that resulted in harm short of death.
“This report
proves that the system cannot be fully cured without
comprehensive legislative reform, such as the Detainee Medical
Care Act, which is designed to provide thorough and professional
medical care to those held by federal immigration authorities. A
legislative fix is needed now more than ever to make sure
detainees receive a thorough screening upon arrival, priority
consideration for serious medical conditions, prompt treatment
by qualified medical professionals, and an appropriate appeal
mechanism.”
Gouri Bhat, ACLU
National Prison Project’s Senior Staff Counsel, reviewed the OIG
report and said, “While the ACLU welcomes the investigation of
any custodial deaths, 69 immigration detainees have died in
custody since 2004, according to ICE’s own figures, and almost
no information has been made available about the vast majority
of these deaths.”
“After repeatedly
requesting critical information about dozens of detainee deaths,
the ACLU filed a federal lawsuit last week seeking a court order
requiring DHS to expedite and comply with the request for
information about deaths in ICE custody. While incomplete, the
OIG report also makes some effort to analyze medical detention
standards and make recommendations regarding the lack of
appropriate oversight of medical care at detention
facilities. Deficient medical care is a leading cause of deaths
in immigration detention, and is the subject of an ACLU lawsuit
on behalf of immigration detainees at the San Diego Correctional
Facility, an ICE facility run by Corrections Corporations of
America, Inc.”
For more
information, go to: http://www.aclu.org/immigrants/detention/index.html
|