Wednesday, September 16, 2020

HITLER WOULD BE DELIGHTED! - “I thought this was like an experimental concentration camp” - WHISTLE-BLOWER DAWN WOOTEN EXPOSED FORCED HYSTERECTOMIES PERPETRATED BY ICE AT GEORGIA ICE IMMIGRATION DETENTION CENTER

 

Whistleblower Reveals Hysterectomies Of Immigrant Detainees

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FEATURING PRIYANKA BHATT – A nurse turned whistle-blower named Dawn Wooten is sounding the alarm about serious medical neglect and an unusual number of hysterectomies of detainees at a Georgia ICE immigrant detention center. Wooten worked at the Irwin County Detention Center (ICDC) which is run by a private company called Le Salle Corrections and accused authorities of allowing horrendous living conditions, allowing the spread of Covid-19, depriving people of proper medical care, and conducting an a suspicious number of hysterectomies of Spanish-speaking women who may not have understood the medical procedures they were under-going. 

Priyanka Bhatt, Staff Attorney with Project South


“I thought this was like an experimental concentration camp”

Nurse alleges forced sterilizations, medical malpractice at Georgia immigrant detention center


16 September 2020

A whistleblower complaint filed on behalf of a nurse who worked at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in southern Georgia until July alleges that a number of immigrant women detained there were subjected to sterilization through hysterectomies without their consent.

In the complaint, filed by the legal advocacy group Project South, the former nurse describes conditions at the center as akin to an “experimental concentration camp.”

The complaint also details the refusal of the center’s administrators to carry out COVID-19 testing or implement protective measures, putting detainees and employees throughout the country’s network of detention centers at risk of infection. It alleges that detainees who have spoken out about conditions at the facility have been placed in solitary confinement.

Detention facility in McAllen, Texas, Sunday, June 17, 2018 (Photo US Customs and Border Protection).

The chilling report provides further evidence of the sadistic abuse meted out by the Trump administration in its fascistic war on immigrants. At least 17 people have died so far this year in ICE custody from various causes, including COVID-19. Two guards at a facility in Louisiana died from coronavirus in April.

The target of the of the complaint, the Irwin County Detention Center (ICDC), which is operated by the private prison company LaSalle Corrections, was previously the subject of complaints raised by the American Civil Liberties Union in 2012. The ACLU urged that the facility be closed due to widespread abuse as well as its remote location. A 2017 Project South investigation found that ICDC was guilty of human rights abuses, violations of due process rights and unsanitary living conditions.

The nurse who lodged the latest complaint, Dawn Wooten, explained that detained women were sent to a doctor known as the “uterus collector” and that many did not have a full understanding of what was happening to them or why they were having the procedure. “When I met all these women who had had surgeries, I thought this was like an experimental concentration camp,” Wooten said. “It was like they’re experimenting with our bodies.”

While the extent of the sterilizations is unknown, a detained immigrant told Project South that she knew of five women who had hysterectomies while held at ICDC between October and December 2019.

“Everybody he sees has a hysterectomy—just about everybody,” Wooten said of the doctor who carried out the procedures at ICDC.


Wooten also noted there is often an issue with obtaining consent, as medical staff rely on googling Spanish phrases or getting other detainees to interpret information about the medical procedure. “These immigrant women, I don’t think they really, totally, all the way understand this is what’s going to happen, depending on who explains it to them,” Wooten said.
“He’s even taken out the wrong ovary on a young lady,” Wooten said. “She was supposed to get her left ovary removed because it had a cyst on the left ovary; he took out the right one. She was upset. She had to go back to take out the left and she wound up with a total hysterectomy. She still wanted children, so she has to go back home now and tell her husband that she can’t bear kids... she said she was not all the way out under anesthesia and heard him [the doctor] tell the nurse that he took the wrong ovary.”

One detainee who spoke to Project South reviewed her harrowing experience with a sterilization procedure that was stopped at the hospital only when an antibody test for COVID-19 came back positive and she was sent back to the detention center.

A doctor initially told her that she had to go to the hospital to have an ovarian cyst removed in a non-invasive procedure. However, on the day of the procedure, the officer who was transporting her told her that, in fact, she was about to have her womb removed in a hysterectomy. The procedure was scuttled by her positive coronavirus test.

After she had been sent back to ICDC, a nurse told her that she would need to have the procedure done because of heavy bleeding. The nurse then told her it was to correct a thick womb.

The woman explained that she had never been diagnosed with either, and the doctors had spoken of a totally different procedure. The nurse reportedly became angry and began shouting after the woman explained that she did not want a hysterectomy. Reflecting on her experience, the detainee said that it “felt like they were trying to mess with my body.”

The Project South report and Wooten’s testimony reviewed various forms of medical malpractice at the facility, including the withholding of medication for cancer and HIV. Even if inmates were severely ill, the medical unit would only supply them with ibuprofen and send them back to their cells.

Wooten reports that ICDC repeatedly ignored Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines on handling COVID-19 positive patients so as to prevent the spread of the virus.

A video of ICDC inmates pleading for protection which was posted online in April forced the administration to provide them with a single cloth or paper mask, but nothing since. The New York Times reported that detainees resorted to fashioning makeshift masks out of scraps of cloth or broken meal containers in an effort to protect themselves.

ICE reported in August that 41 detainees at the facility had tested positive for the coronavirus, but Wooten said the actual number was certainly higher, since ICDC was not actively testing inmates, denied tests to those who requested them, and was not reporting all its positive cases to ICE or the State Department. She also noted that detainees who were COVID-19 positive were still being transferred to other facilities or deported, and new arrivals were not being properly quarantined, ensuring that the virus would continue to spread. Employees who self-reported coronavirus symptoms were still made to work, and at least 13 officers at the facility have tested positive.

The horrors exposed by Wooten come amidst an escalating assault on the rights of immigrants in the lead-up to the Nov. 3 election, as Trumps works to build up his far-right base. On Monday, a federal appeals court panel approved the Trump administration’s termination of protected status for immigrants from El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan, removing legal status for nearly 400,000 people, many of whom have lived in the US for decades and have children who are citizens. The 2–1 ruling by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit opens the immigrants up to deportation if they do not leave the country voluntarily.

 

ICE deported a key witness in an ongoing sexual assault investigation at a Texas detention center, report says

acollman@businessinsider.com (Ashley Collman)
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement's El Paso processing center seen on April 16, 2020. <p class="copyright"><a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/the-immigration-and-customs-enforcement-el-paso-processing-news-photo/1210114326?adppopup=true" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Paul Ratje / Agence France-Presse/AFP" class="link rapid-noclick-resp">Paul Ratje / Agence France-Presse/AFP</a></p>
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement's El Paso processing center seen on April 16, 2020.
  • The US deported a key witness in an ongoing investigation into sexual abuse at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in El Paso, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune reported Tuesday.

  • The woman said she and others were routinely abused in security camera blind spots, the report said.

  • The Department of Homeland Security's Inspector General had forbidden the woman's deportation, but changed course on Monday, and the woman was sent to Mexico.

  • According to the report, the woman said she came to the US to avoid persecution by a drug cartel, after reporting a high-ranking member to the police for sexual assault.

  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

An immigrant woman who accused several guards of sexually abusing her and other inmates at a Texas detention center has been deported, despite her being a key witness in an investigation into her claim, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica reported.

The outlets first reported on the 35-year-old woman's accusations last month. In a Tuesday report, ProPublica said the alleged victim had been deported from El Paso to Mexico the day before. The outlets did not name the woman.

One of her lawyers, Linda Corchado, told the outlets that the government investigation cannot be taken seriously since authorities "allowed their most powerful witness to be deported."

The woman said that she and other detainees at the detention center — run by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) — were regularly sexually assaulted in areas of the facility that had security camera blind spots, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica reported last month.

The outlets cited a complaint filed with the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) Office of Inspector General.

The woman said several guards had "forcibly" kissed her, and at least one touched her intimate parts, the report said, citing the complaint.

After the woman told her lawyers about the alleged abuse, two other women came forward with similar accusations, the outlets reported, citing the filing.

The DHS Office of Inspector General initially ordered ICE not to deport the woman, the outlets said.

But the office reversed its decision on Monday, saying that the woman could be deported and that further interviews could be done over the phone, the report said.

The woman said she first came to the US to escape persecution by drug cartels in Mexico, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica reported. She said she was threatened by a high-ranking cartel member after she went to police with an allegation of sexual assault her, the report said.

When ProPublica and The Texas Tribune contacted the DHS Office of Inspector General for comment, they were told that the investigation was no longer its responsibility.

They were directed instead to the Justice Department's Inspector General. The DOJ Inspector General did not respond to the outlets' request for comment.

Neither department responded immediately to Business Insider's requests for comment.

Separately, ICE is under scrutiny after a whistleblower accused doctors at a detention center in Irwin County, Georgia, of performing hysterectomies, allegedly without consent, on immigrants who were detained there.

The House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship is investigating the whistleblower complaint.

Lawyers for some of the detained women mentioned in the complaint say they have identified the gynecologist at the center of the allegations.

Read the Texas Tribune/ProPublica report here »

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