Letters from an Irwin County Jail
The conditions described in Ana’s account, which was signed by 26 other women, are longstanding. Eight years ago, the ACLU of Georgia published a report on conditions in the state’s immigration detention centers that faulted the Irwin County Detention Center for its “serious and systematic problems”:
Irwin’s remote location inhibits detainees [sic] ability to find representation and be able to communicate and visit with their families; living conditions are substandard; female hygiene is an area of particular concern; and detainees often go untreated or receive inadequate treatment because of understaffed medical and mental health units.
Ana’s account makes clear that ICE’s tactics discourage people at Irwin from seeking the medical care they need:
We want to make known that in Unit [redacted] there are detainees with serious medical conditions, grave illnesses, tachycardia, anemia, gastritis, etc. Knowing that these illnesses are high-risk. On April 20, 2020, a federal suit was won against ICE, so they must review cases of detainees who present these illnesses, but this order is not being respected or attended to by ICE. Some detainees refuse to seek medical attention for fear of being punished as has been done in the cases described above. We are sure they do this to sow fear and not receive Medical Requests.
Ana’s descriptions and suspicions are corroborated by an account from another woman detained at the Irwin detention center, Emilia (also not her real name). Emilia’s account (dated Aug. 12, signed by 32 detained women) is handwritten, too, but in a tighter, more slanted script that suggests it was written urgently, almost as if the text is italicized:
The staff cover up their identification so we don’t report the incidents with their names.
Those in charge of medical care do not report the medical emergencies in order to ensure that there is no evidence.
We are subject to lack of care, mistreatment, and negligence from Immigration.
The detention center says that ICE is responsible and ICE says the detention center is responsible because they pay for each one of us.
We here are nothing to them but a number and money. That’s what interests them.
In a postscript, Ana echoes Emilia’s last point about the Irwin detention center’s profit motive: “Note: We have always understood that this is a For-Profit Detention Center, and for this reason the complaints that we detainees file are not important or listened to.”
Irwin is one of more than 100 ICE detention centers operated by for-profit corporations. Nationwide, an estimated 72% of people held in ICE custody are in some kind of privatized detention facility. A handful of large corporations are fattening their bottom lines by warehousing people who rightfully belong with their families and communities, not in private jails where abuse is the norm.
Read more here.
You can learn more about the SPLC’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative here.
In solidarity,
The Southern Poverty Law Center