'Grotesque and Dehumanizing' Conditions of Border Facilities Detailed in Photos and New Report by Inspector General

September 14, 2020 0 By JohnValbyNation

A scathing new report from the Office of the Inspector General on Tuesday says that the number of detainees held in U.S. detention centers is at crisis levels and represents an “immediate risk” to the health and safety of everyone in the facilities. 

Overcrowding at Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) facilities is due to the fact that the agency is unable to transfer detainees to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and/or Health and Human Services (HHS) custody, the report (pdf) says.

The conditions were observed by the Inspector General’s office on the week of June 10 during visits to five CBP facilities and two ports of entry.

“Currently, because both ICE and HHS are operating at or above capacity,” the report explains, “CBP has experienced increasing instances of prolonged detention in its facilities.”

The “serious overcrowding” at the centers and the holding of detainees for days and weeks longer than they should, the Inspector General’s office says, has led to conditions for children that are reaching critical levels and are in violation of CBP’s Transport, Escort, Detention and Search (TEDS) standards.

Those conditions are detailed in a particularly chilling excerpt from the report:

Conditions for adults are no better. In captions to photos showing the overcrowded conditions in the cells, the report says that the Inspector General’s office on June 12 observed “[51] adult females held in a cell designated for male juveniles with a capacity for 40, and 71 adult males held in a cell designated for adult females with a capacity for 41,” and “[88] adult males held in a cell with a maximum capacity of 41.”

Many of these adults had not showered for the extent of their detention—in some cases up to a month—while CBP agents were handing out sanitary wipes as a substitute for bathing.

The food was reported as no better.

“Further, although TEDS standards require agents to remain cognizant of detainees’ religious and other dietary restrictions, many single adults had been receiving only bologna sandwiches,” the report says. “Some detainees on this diet were becoming constipated and required medical attention.”

“Two of the facilities obtained a contract for hot meals the week of our site visit,” the report acknowledges in a footnote to that point, “but others continued to serve sandwiches.”

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