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The Denver Post
The Denver Post
National
Saja Hindi

Immigrants at Colo. detention center face excessive solitary confinement, advocacy groups allege

DENVER -- Immigration advocacy groups allege abuse of solitary confinement and discrimination against people with disabilities at the Aurora, Colorado, immigration detention center in a complaint submitted Thursday to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s oversight entities.

Immigrant detainees reported solitary confinement being used wrongfully and arbitrarily as punishment, that guards frequently used the threat of solitary to control immigrants, and that those with disabilities were mistreated.

The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, the American Immigration Council and the National Immigration Project for the National Lawyers Guild detailed accusations of eight people who have been pending immigration cases and were or are still detained. They called for the Aurora facility’s immediate closure. Until that happens, they wrote, the federal agencies should launch an investigation into their claims and recommend systemic reforms and corrective actions.

“Despite a clear record of abuse and repeated deaths of people detained at the Aurora facility, the facility and ICE continue to fail to keep people safe,” the letter stated. “Complainants’ experiences highlight the myriad ways in which systemic abuses occur within the facility, with a particular focus on the increased misuse of solitary confinement. The examples provided in this complaint align with broader findings of mistreatment of people in (U.S. Immigrations and Customs) custody across the country.”

The detention center in Aurora is operated by private prison company The Geo Group through a contract with ICE. Immigrants who have been arrested by ICE officers are held there on pending or recently concluded immigration cases or as they await deportation.

The ICE Denver Field Office and The Geo Group did not immediately return requests for comment Thursday morning, following the complaint’s submission. This story will be updated as soon as The Denver Post receives a response.

In the 18-page complaint, the advocacy groups alleged violations of ICE’s own policies and standards and wrote that the complainants’ “health and safety have been jeopardized and the facility has failed to protect complainants fearful of or who have suffered violence,” including by overusing and misusing solitary confinement.

Detainees, identified by pseudonyms in the letter, described situations where they would get locked up in solitary confinement over false accusations or with little evidence of wrongdoing. The Denver Post spoke to one of the women in the report but was not able to independently verify all of the accounts in the complaint.

While in solitary, one man alleged being stuck in a cold, small room, “mostly naked” and shackled, and only being let out once a day for showers. The first time he was placed in solitary, he said it was because he was eating too slowly. He spent time in solitary confinement 10 more times after that.

At one point, he tried to kill himself by jumping from a second-story landing, and fell on his neck, leading to vertebrae fractures and severe swelling to his head and neck, according to the letter. He said he couldn’t talk to his family or lawyer from the hospital and was placed back in solitary upon his return.

“If I spoke too loudly, solitary. If I climbed on top of a table to get a guard’s attention, solitary,” the man, identified as Felix in the complaint, said. “If I had suicidal thoughts, solitary. When the guards would tease me about being deported back to my home country and make airplane sounds at me and gesture like a plane was taking me away, I would become upset and then get solitary for being upset.”

Many of the accounts detailed in the complaint were from women. In one incident, an immigrant reported being placed in solitary after she was wrongly accused of spitting on another woman’s head and telling guards she didn’t do it. After she was let out, she said she was threatened with solitary confinement again and turned to self-harm. A medical provider told her to stop or they would move her to solitary confinement, she said, furthering her mental health problems.

For Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network’s Laura Lunn, the allegations weren’t surprising. But what struck the director of advocacy and litigation is how many women were targeted for what she called punitive segregation for verbal disagreements.

“The way in which they were being sent to segregation felt infantilizing as if they were being treated like children in a way that is different than what typically plays out for the people detained in the male dorms,” she said.

Some of the allegations in the letter are also related to overall mistreatment of detainees, including of those with medical disabilities, and even related to sexual harassment. One immigrant said staff put her in a “suicide unit” for several hours where she reported feeling uncomfortable naked and said that a guard told her “not to worry because she had already watched [her] on camera while [she] was taking a shower.”

Another woman, who is a sexual assault and trafficking survivor and who has medical records showing a PTSD diagnosis, reported that she was placed in a dorm where she felt unsafe and was not provided adequate treatment. She accused officers of retaliation when reporting concerns, ignoring requests for medical care and facing sexual harassment and bullying.

“It’s like living with your own predator,” the woman, identified as Emilia, said in the letter. “It’s a nightmare, a torture.”

Others reported being mocked by psychologists, not getting medically-necessary treatment or being given the wrong medications.

Although the report only shares the stories of eight people, Lunn said that doesn’t mean they’re the only ones experiencing it. Guards have relied more on the use of solitary confinement in Aurora, and even across the country, Lunn said, after they initially began separating people for COVID. But now, she said, it’s focused on controlling behavior.

A detainee in the letter recalled being placed in solitary confinement with others from his dorm who got into a fight even though he wasn’t in the dorm then. Another time, guards threatened to send him to solitary if he didn’t sleep at the top bunk, he said, despite a chronic medical condition that made it hard for him to get down. He stayed there for a whole day.

One man reported that guards placed him in solitary for 15 days after he defended himself in a fight, despite recordings corroborating his story. A woman who has a psychological disability, according to the letter, described being sent to solitary after screaming when guards searched her possessions at midnight for a crochet hook.

These are not the first allegations of mistreatment at the Aurora detention center that the groups submitted. The American Immigration Council and its partners filed complaints against the facility in 2018, 2019 and 2022, alleging inadequate medical and mental health care, and in 2022, alleging racial discrimination and excessive use of force.

The complaint from Thursday stated that “DHS has been on notice of a systemic practice of medical neglect and inadequate care for people held in the Aurora facility,” and that since 2012, “someone has died every five years while detained in the Aurora facility. Each death was avoidable and stemmed from the poor medical care provided by the contract medical provider, GEO.”

Immigration attorneys from the groups noted the 2017 death of Kamyar Samimi (who was held in solitary confinement in his last 10 days of life) and the October 2022 death of Melvin Calero Mendoza, who died while in custody, as examples of this in their letter. An ICE Office of Professional Responsibility review of Samimi’s death found that medical staff did not comply with multiple standards.

“With Aurora, because there is such a documented history of these specific problems around medical neglect, particularly around the abuse of people with mental health conditions, we’re hopeful that we could get a strong finding from these oversight bodies that this facility is significantly out of compliance,” said Rebekah Wolf, senior policy counsel with the American Immigration Council.

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