Since the spring of 2018 there have been reports of neglect and abuse of immigrant children separated from their parents and detained as a result of the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy. Children are held in 71 detainment centers run by private companies that receive funds from the federal government to house and supervise the more than 2000 children separated from their parents at the border. Children at one of these facilities, the Shiloh Treatment Center, south of Houston, TX, described being held down and injected with what they were told were vitamins, but which, in many cases, proved to be anti-psychotic drugs, as well as a Parkinson’s medication, seizure medications and antidepressants. Side effects of the medications made some children feel even more desperate, leading to use of even more powerful medications. There were also reports of use of physical restraints and violence at Shiloh. A district court judge has ruled that the children must be transferred from Shiloh, unless a licensed psychologist or psychiatrist determines that they are a threat to themselves or others.
In early August, 2018 a child died after being released from the South Texas Residential Center in Dilley, TX. That case is still under investigation and the cause of death has not been published. Dr. Peter Hotez, a Baylor College professor of pediatrics, molecular virology and microbiology has spoken of the danger of viral respiratory infections and other viral infections, including some that lead to meningitis, in facilities where the children are kept in crowded conditions and under emotional stress.
In Phoenix, AZ, MVM, Inc., a defense contractor, is the primary transportation contractor for the federal government’s efforts to reunify families. They have been holding children aged 5 to 17 overnight in two empty office buildings in Phoenix. Press reports indicate that the buildings have no kitchens and limited bathroom facilities (including no showers). MVM, which is based in Virginia, has received contracts worth up to $248 million to transport children since 2014. The company has no child care center licenses in Arizona.
The New York Times published a lengthy exposé on the Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center in Virginia, which houses both American and immigrant youth who have behavioral, emotional and psychological issues. The article reports teenagers as young as 14 being stripped of their clothing and strapped to a chair with their feet, arms and waist restrained by cushioned leather straps. One teenager reported being in the chair two and a half days. Sometimes they were required to wear a mesh mask over their faces. One detainee in the facility reported that he was locked in a small room alone for 23 hours every day. Other detainees at the Virginia facility described being beaten while handcuffed, slammed against walls, stabbed with pens and subjected to anti-Latino and other racist comments.
Meanwhile thousands of detained minors still have not been returned to their parents, although the July 26 deadline imposed by the court has passed.
Sources for more information:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-news-virginia-abuse-062118-story.html
https://www.revealnews.org/blog/immigrant-children-forcibly-injected-with-drugs-lawsuit-claims/
Jess Bidgood, Manny Fernandez & Richard Fausset, “The ‘Devil’s Chair’ & Abuse Claims by Migrant Teenagers,” the New York Times, Sunday, August 5, 2018.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk