Showing posts with label immigration detention centers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label immigration detention centers. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

Schwarzenegger's Idea for Budget Cuts - Send Prisoners to Mexico?




Just when I was beginning to think the governator wasn't so bad, he comes up with this very offensive and dangerous idea. He probably hasn't seen the inside of the Mexican prison.

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Schwarzenegger: Send prisoners to Mexico

January 25, 2010 | 2:50 pm by
Shane Goldmacher in Sacramento

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger floated a different approach to trimming down California’s bloated prison budget on Monday: pay Mexico to build new prisons and ship off California’s incarcerated illegal immigrants south of the border.

The Republican governor has pushed to house California inmates out-of-state before -- but never in a different country.

“We can do so much better in the prison system alone if we can go and take inmates, for instance the 20,000 inmates that are illegal immigrants that are here, and get them to Mexico,” Schwarzenegger said during a question-and answer session at the Sacramento Press Club. “Think about it.”

It’s cheaper to build prisons in Mexico, Schwarzenegger reasoned, and it’s cheaper to staff them there to boot...link to complete LAT article

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Death and Secrets: Immigration Policy under Obama Hasn't Changed Much

Felix Franklin Rodriguez


The death of Felix Franklin Rodriguez was in the news back in 2007. That same year, Senator Richard Durbin tried to pass the DREAM Act.

When Obama was elected, I was relieved. I thought, oh yes, the DREAM Act will pass, immigration will get straightened out. People won't die in detention camps anymore. I'll never be harassed at the airport again.

None of this has happened. The DREAMers are still languishing. Hundreds of thousands of undocumented workers are still being detained.

The airports haven't changed much. I flew to Buenos Aires a few days ago. They have a new security device that looks like an MRI that stands up. My daughter and I were told to stand in the middle while it photographed us. I've seen articles about this thing. The workers can see your naked body very very well. At first I thought that everyone was being expected to be X-Rayed. But then I saw a few middled aged white guys coming through the other "free" lane...

When I came out of the machine the worker asked me to stretch out my arms.... of course she didn't find anything sinister.

Maybe I was delusional thinking the Obama Administration could really do something. But I conveniently forgot that its the Congress that makes the rules, and puts pressure on the agencies to change... Having the person at the top be a nice guy isn't enough. Its our whole society that has to re-invent itself.

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August 21, 2009

Immigrant’s Death Shows Hard Path to Detention Reform

In the fall of 2006, a man’s death brought a team of government investigators to the large privately run immigration jail in Eloy, Ariz., in the desert between Phoenix and Tucson. Medical care was so poor, the team later warned federal immigration officials, that “detainee welfare is in jeopardy.”

Another death there soon spurred another inquiry, and another scathing report was issued about the care provided by the private company, the Corrections Corporation of America.

But the government scrutiny did not add up to much for Felix Franklin Rodriguez-Torres, 36, an Ecuadorean construction worker who wound up in Eloy that fall as an unauthorized immigrant after being jailed for petit larceny in New York City. By mid-December, a fellow detainee told the man’s relatives, Mr. Rodriguez lay pleading for medical help on the floor of his cell, unable to move.

He died weeks later of testicular cancer, a typically fast-growing but treatable disease, which had gone undiagnosed and untreated during his two months at Eloy, which holds more than 1,500 detainees. And despite a high-level discussion of his case among federal immigration officials while he was dying — captured in e-mail messages between Washington and Arizona — his death on Jan. 18, 2007, was not even listed on the roster of detention fatalities that the agency produced under pressure last year and updated in April....link to complete article