Death at Eloy immigration center ruled suicide

There have been 14 deaths at the Eloy Detention Center since 2003.

The Eloy Detention Center has not failed an inspection since 2006 despite having the highest number of known deaths at any immigration detention center in the country and frequent reports of sexual assault, a new report by immigration reform advocates says.

โ€œUnder these circumstances, it was expected that the facilityโ€™s inspections reports would reveal a troubling history of failure to meet standards regarding medical care, suicide prevention and sexual assault prevention,โ€ said the report. โ€œInstead, the inspection reports reveal ICEโ€™s complicity in obscuring the facilityโ€™s failure to meaningfully address its violations.โ€

The inspection process that Immigration and Customs Enforcement uses is ineffective and often makes it easier for detention facilities to pass, including those with publicly reported human rights abuses, according to the report by the National Immigrant Justice Center and Detention Watch Network.

The report is based on inspection documents for 105 immigration detention centers from 2007 to 2012, including Eloy, obtained after the groups sued the federal government.

โ€œOur research confirms our suspicion that the Obama administration failed to improve oversight or gain control over the sprawling immigration detention system,โ€ said Claudia Valenzuela, director of detention at the National Immigrant Justice Center, during a telephone news conference Wednesday.

A 2014 mandate from Congress requires ICE to fill 34,000 beds with detainees. The government has spent $2.8 billion on immigrant detention since 2006, when a bed quota was first implemented, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has reported.

ICE officials said they will review the report.

However, they add that the agency โ€œremains committed to ensuring that all individuals in our custody are held and treated in a safe, secure and humane manner, and that they have access to legal counsel, visitation, recreation, and quality medical, mental health and dental care.โ€

Based on the inspection reports, the groups found that:

  • Inspections and oversight processes are not readily available.
  • There is a lack of independent oversight because both entities that conduct inspections are paid or vetted by ICE.
  • ICE inspections donโ€™t adequately assess the conditions of detained immigrants.
  • Inspections are designed to facilitate passing ratings, not identify or address violations.

The inspections are important because they are used to generate the centerโ€™s rating. If a facility fails an inspection two times in a row, ICE is mandated by Congress to stop contracting there. But since the law took effect in 2009, the report said, no facility has failed twice in a row.

Reports from detainees of inadequate medical care, poor food quality and mistreatment at Eloy are not unusual, those who work with immigrant detainees say.

โ€œOne common issue, no matter what your health problem is, they tell you to drink water and give you an aspirin,โ€ said Marjorie King, with St. Michael and All Angels Church, who visits detainees at Eloy.

โ€œOne man was suicidal and they put him in isolation,โ€ she said. โ€œIt helped ICE that the man didnโ€™t commit suicide, but it didnโ€™t help his mental condition.โ€ The quality of food is another issue, she said. She has brought some of these issues up with the centerโ€™s officials, and is hopeful now that there is new management.

Based on reports the National Immigrant Justice Center received, Eloy has not failed an Enforcement and Removal Operations inspection โ€” one of two entities that conduct inspections โ€” in nearly a decade. ICE didnโ€™t provide the 2010 inspection for Eloy, the authors said, and they donโ€™t know if itโ€™s because the facility was not inspected or because the agency failed to comply with the court order.

Since 2012, Eloy has been inspected six times, ICE has said, and has been found in compliance.

โ€œThe fact that it has been inspected six times and found to continue to be in compliance is not very reassuring,โ€ Valenzuela said, โ€œgiven, for example, that the suicide-watch room contains objects that could be used to commit suicide.โ€

Eloy has come under increasing scrutiny regarding its suicide-prevention standards and monitoring of people in suicide watch as the number of people whoโ€™ve killed themselves while in detention has risen, including the latest case of a Mexican national this summer who committed suicide by stuffing one of his knee-high socks down his throat.

The manโ€™s death led to a request for a thorough investigation from U.S. Rep. Raรบl Grijalva.

โ€œItโ€™s no secret that the policies pursued by ICE are detaining innocent immigrants and perpetuating a culture of abuse,โ€ Grijalva said in a written statement.

โ€œI saw this abuse firsthand when I toured detention facilities earlier this year, and this new report only further highlights why so many of us are demanding our government end these unconscionable practices,โ€ he said. โ€œThe federal government must be held responsible for its actions, which is why I called for the Department of Justice to investigate deaths at Eloy Detention Center in Arizona.โ€

In the last several years, ICE has taken steps to address some concerns, agency officials said. Since 2009, it created an oversight office and established an on-site compliance program where monitors provide headquarters with weekly reports documenting problems. It also created a monitoring council to review issues at the centers and worked to standardize detention services contracts.

At Eloy, ICE officers conduct daily housing-unit visits to ensure compliance, the agency has said. An ICE detention services manager and health-services corps medical staff member are assigned to the center.

The report makes three recommendations to ICE: increase transparency and oversight of the inspection process, improve the quality of inspections and prohibit facilities to take an ร  la carte approach to compliance.


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Contact reporter Perla Trevizo at ptrevizo@tucson.com or 573-4213. On Twitter: @Perla_Trevizo