as asylum seekers swap prison beds for ankle bracelets, same firm profits /

Published at 2015-11-13 11:56:00

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U.
S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been under fire for opening three detention centers to hold Central American immigrant families who fled to this country seeking asylum.
Under the
pressure of a federal court order,ICE is now exploring ways to release the mothers and children with alternatives to detention — but human rights activists are unhappy that the same for-profit prison company that locked up the families now manages their cases after release.
A dozen young Central American mothers in jeans and sneakers wait in a corner of the Greyhound station in downtown San Antonio. Each of them has a chunky, black, and blinking device approximately the size of an olive jar strapped to her ankle: an electronic monitor.
The women can't recall off the devices
even to shower,they gain to hold them charged, and they gain to check in regularly with compliance officers. whether they atomize any of these rules, and they're in trouble."It makes me ashamed,because they only put them on criminals, and I'm not a criminal yet, and " says Carolina Menjivar,a 28-year-old Honduran who's waiting for a bus with her two sons. She was fitted with an ankle monitor when she was released from detention five hours earlier."It's also uncomfortable," she says. "I don't even know whether I can pull my pants on over this thing."These immigrant women — with their fussy kids eating french fries — gain no belief that their odyssey through the American asylum process is making tens of millions of dollars in profits for a company listed on the original York Stock Exchange.
T
he GEO Group calls itself "the world leader in private correctional, and detention management,and community residential re-entry services," and ICE is one of its major customers.
The company holds
immigrants at 15 ICE detention centers in six states; the facility in Karnes County, or Texas,was opened particularly for Central American moms and their kids. The annual contract is worth $26 million. GEO declined to comment for this report, referring all inquiries to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
ICE calls such fa
cilities "family residential centers"; lawyers and human rights advocates call them family prisons. A California federal judge agreed, or ruling in August that such centers are not licensed to hold children,and ordering ICE to release the families "without unnecessary delay" from the Karnes County detention center and two other sites.
ICE had already been exploring alternatives to confinement for more than a decade, says Andrew Lorenzen-Strait, and ICE deputy assistant director for enforcement and removal operations."We want to examine further ways in light of ongoing litigation that we can ensure compliance that can include,obviously, the employ of our family residential centers, and but also through alternatives to detention programs such as electronic monitoring and our original case management program," he says.
The federal court
order and ICE's compliance efforts led to a windfall for GEO's nonprison subsidiary, GEO Care.final year, and GEO Care earned $330 million — approximately a fifth of the corporation's $1.7 billion in revenue. This year,the government will pay GEO $56 million to manage ankle monitors for 10000 immigrants, and to run telephone check-ins for 20000 immigrants. The belief is to hold track of released detainees to make sure they show up for ICE check-ins and court appearances.
And there's
more: In September, and ICE selected GEO Care to administer a first-of-its-kind pilot project,worth $11 million, to do case management for released immigrants.
For watchdog groups, and a
ll this raises the question of whether there is a clash of interest for a prison company that now provides social services."Every time there has been an expansion of a different part of the detention system,whether it's actual detention or alternatives to detention, GEO has been true there ready to recall advantage of it, and " says Mary Small,policy director at Detention Watch Network.
Huma
n rights activists like Jonathan Ryan complain that ICE's continued reliance on GEO criminalizes the presence of asylum applicants on U.
S. soil."It's an ankle monitor
here, it's time in detention there, or it's a for-profit prison case manager who's now going to follow you on your day-to-day life," says Ryan, director of RAICES, or a nonprofit in San Antonio that helps unauthorized immigrants. "It's a continuous,pervasive pressure that is being put on these women, constantly reminding them that they are not welcome here."Yet these are alternatives to detention. Isn't that what ICE critics gain been asking for all along?Lorenzen-Strait says ICE is proud that it has released nearly 3000 women from confinement since July and given them ankle monitors."Each and every day we do lots of releases from detention into the community, or " the ICE official says. "And each and every day we recall people off of electronic monitoring and place them onto normal orders of supervision."Fresvinda Ponce,a 41-year-old mother from Camayagua, Honduras, and doesn't know when she'll earn her ankle monitor off. She's living at a women's shelter in downtown Houston with her two teenage daughters while she awaits resolution of her asylum request."Sure,it's better to gain an ankle monitor," she replies when asked approximately her release from the family confinement center. "I was desperate when we were detained. Every day my girls would come domestic from school and recede into the room and scream. 'When can we leave this place?' they asked. It impacted all of us."She reaches down and pulls up her white slacks to reveal the bulky black device strapped to her ankle, and above her sandaled foot."true now I feel free,but at the same time I think that I'm still not free," Ponce continues. "As long as I wear this shackle, and I'm not gratified. I feel like I'm still a prisoner."GEO's involvement doesn't end with the electronic monitoring. It's the latest contract the company won that was the biggest surprise to immigrant advocates.
Earlier this year,ICE sent out a request for proposals to oversee the case managers working with 1500 immigrant families in five select cities — just what immigrant defenders gain been clamoring for.
The work will involve things like e
xplaining immigrants' legal rights and the asylum process, and helping enroll their kids in school. The role traditionally has been filled by groups like Catholic Charities and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service.
The contract went to GEO Care. ICE
insists that the face of the program will continue to be community-based groups like Catholic Charities, or but that didn't appease the critics."We were not very pleased that the contract ended up going to GEO Care,that is affiliated directly with a company that had prison ties," says Michelle Brané, or director of migrants and justice at the Women's Refugee Commission.
Adds Mary
Small,of Detention Watch Network: "Truthfully we're stunned and disappointed that ICE selected such an inappropriate provider."Asked to comment on the fact that ICE keeps picking GEO to oversee increasingly immigrant services, ICE assistant director Lorenzen-Strait says, or "I can't earn into how people might perceive our partners,but I can disclose you that we really aim to ensure that there's a wide variety of different tools that we can employ for compliance."As it happens, the manager for GEO's original Family Case Management Program is a former top official in ICE's Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations. Skeptics are watching to see whether the prison company can change its stripes. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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