đź§µToday a federal judge is looking into horrific conditions inside ICE holding cells in Chicago, which until January were for stays under 12 hours absent exceptional circumstances.
People are now held for days — and ICE uses the threat of longer stays to get deportation orders.
The excerpts I'm posting are taken from over a dozen sworn declarations submitted in a lawsuit seeking to force ICE to improve conditions. I'll link to the docket at the end of the thread.
One thing comes through clearly in these declarations: the cells are FILTHY.
Multiple immigrants detained at the facility say ICE officer demanded that they sign deportation paperwork, refused to let them talk to lawyers, and threatened them when they wouldn't sign documents in English that they couldn't read.
Here's a representative example.
Cells inside the facility are being operated significantly above capacity, with people so crammed into cells that even extending your legs isn't possible and people have to sleep on the floor crammed in like sardines.
Here's one of many testimonies about the overcrowding.
There is no privacy at all at Broadview, and people are forced to use the bathroom in full view of other people held in detention and ICE officers. Men were able to see into the women's toilets and vice versa.
There was no water, soap, or hand sanitizer, adding to the filth.
Many of the people detained at Broadview report that they were denied access to sufficient food and water.
One man, held for 6 days, says he got a single small Subway sandwich and one bottle of water at each "meal" — except for two days, where there were only two meals all day.
Some people had access to a filthy sink above the toilet. Others didn't even have that, and had to beg for water — which was denied.
One man says that he only got bread with some mayo on it. A man with diabetes got no special food, as even a county jail would provide.
There is also universal agreement that medical care in the facility is terrible, and that people were not being provided access to care they needed.
This excerpt expresses a common theme; people who asked for help were largely ignored or given little treatment.
The declarations keep coming back to the ways in which the awful conditions themselves were used to coerce deportations.
Here, one lawyer describes how his client, who had a work permit, US citizen children, and a strong case for relief, was coerced into giving up his case.
One man who's been in the United States here for 20 years, and whose wife and kids live here, says he was physically threatened into signing his own deportation, with the ICE officer threatening to hurt him if he didn't sign the paper.
In total, there are over 35 sworn declarations from immigrants and US citizens detained at the facility and from lawyers representing people detained here.
24 hours from now, DHS may be forced to change how it operates in Chicago. The facility which it uses to detain people arrested in Operation Midway Blitz is going to be under court order, and the agency will be forced to make improvements.
Rep. Jayapal is correct -- it is not a crime to be undocumented. Here's the Supreme Court saying as much.
Plus, less than 10% of the undocumented population has a removal order, and would only be chargeable if they had willfully disobeyed it, and many don't know they have one.
As for 8 USC 1325, illegal entry applies only to the undocumented population that crossed illegally, meaning visa overstays or people who came via humanitarian parole commit no crime -- and the statute of limitations is 5 years, so most people couldn't even be criminally charged.
Two things can be true at once:
1. It is not a crime to be undocumented, as the Supreme Court itself has noted. 2. A subset of the undocumented population (far less than half) is theoretically criminally chargeable for specific immigration violations.
🚨HUGE moment. ICE leadership is being purged tonight. The old guard, which prioritized targeted enforcement operations aimed at people with criminal records, is being replaced with Border Patrol and Greg Bovino's "Midway Blitz" style.
The first to report on the purge tonight was @Anna_Giaritelli. ICE's leadership is going to be heavily replaced/augmented with Border Patrol leadership.
These are different agencies with different missions and different tactics. It will be chaotic.
@Anna_Giaritelli NBC news reports that the person making all these decisions is not Secretary Noem; it's Corey Lewandowski, who is still a "special government employee" (and by many reports sleeping with Noem and running the agency while she does mostly TV), as well as Gregory Bovino himself.
Hey @DHSGov: if you want me and other nonpartisan experts to trust your numbers, publish the data! The moment you took office you STOPPED publishing monthly data on immigration enforcement.
There hasn't been a single normal ICE arrest data release since inauguration!
I'll also add that if you'd bothered to even read the second post in my thread, I *explicitly acknowledged* that the Trump admin is likely to break records.
That said: do you deny that the 515,000 number includes CBP administrative returns at airports?
🚨This is FALSE. The characterization of this report is MADE UP. The Texas investigation found 2,274 “potential noncitizens” on the voter rolls out of over 18 million (0.01%).
AT NO POINT does the investigation say any of these “potential noncitizens” are “illegal immigrants.”
This MASSIVE ERROR appears to come from Fox News not realizing that “potential noncitizen” is not a synonym “illegal immigrant.”
Here is the ENTIRE press release from the Texas Secretary of State. Note that AT NO POINT does she say that those flagged are “illegal immigrants.”
We know from MANY such audits in the past that people flagged in this situation as “potential noncitizens” usually ARE U.S. citizens, but got flagged b/c of a data error.
For example, last year Alabama claimed to have found 3,251 noncitizens on the voting roll — which was false!
This makes NO SENSE. A 13-year-old was arrested by local police for unknown reasons, and then turned over to ICE, which is detaining him far away from his mother — who is going through immigration court, has an asylum application on file, and is legally authorized to work.
Important context from @TriciaOhio that I'm posting in the interest of fairness. I do not automatically trust it given that she has made multiple inaccurate claims in the past (including even yesterday). IF true, it would at least provide an explanation.
@TriciaOhio To be clear, absolutely none of that information is included in public reporting on this story and the Everett Police Department did not give any statement to the Boston Globe about the initial arrest. Tricia is the the first person to ever give this info.
UPDATE: Judge Perry’s opinion blocking the Texas National Guard deployment in Chicago is out!
She begins with Alexander Hamilton’s rejection of a “preposterous” idea that the Constitution lets a President deploy a State’s militia to a different State for political retribution.
Judge Perry spends four pages going over the history of the debates around the Constitution as to the proper relationship of the President to a state militia, especially after overthrowing the British, who had maintained standing armies in the colonies against their wishes.
The Trump admin says Trump is authorized to deploy the Texas National Guard to Chicago under the specific law below. They say there is:
- (2) a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of US
- (3) the President is “unable with regular forces to execute the laws.”