WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, today called on Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-SC) to hold an oversight hearing on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), in the wake of “egregious and appalling abuses” revealed in recent news reports.

 

“I am writing to you to request that the Senate Judiciary Committee hold an oversight hearing over U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to provide Committee members an opportunity to question the agency about egregious and appalling abuses detailed in recent news reports,” Booker said in a letter sent today to Chairman Graham. “Among many abuses, these reports outlined the agency’s widespread use of solitary confinement for immigrants in the civil immigration detention system (a form of torture), as well as the grossly unsanitary conditions at detention facilities.”

 

“It’s becoming increasingly clear that ICE has become nothing more than a lethal weapon in the Trump Administration’s war on immigrants and communities of color, and we cannot be silent,” Booker added.

 

Booker blasted the agency for its reported use of solitary confinement without justification and pointed out that the world community considers such punishment a form of torture. Booker was instrumental in effectively ending the practice of juvenile solitary confinement in federal prisons during final negotiations of The First Step Act, which was signed into law last December. That measure was based upon two bills to end juvenile confinement (the MERCY Act and the REDEEM Act) that Booker has introduced each session of Congress since becoming a U.S. Senator.

 

Today’s letter follows a bill Booker introduced earlier this year that would have prevented many of the abuses revealed in recent news reports. His Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act, introduced in late April, would limit the use of immigrant detention; set safe, secure, and sanitary standards for detention facilities (in accordance with the American Bar Association’s detention standards); and improve congressional oversight of such facilities to eliminate abuse.

 

The full text of the letter is available here and below.

 

June 26, 2019

 

The Honorable Lindsey O. Graham

Chairman

Committee on the Judiciary

United States Senate

Washington, DC 20510

 

Dear Mr. Chairman:

 

I am writing to you to request that the Senate Judiciary Committee hold an oversight hearing on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to provide Committee members an opportunity to question the agency about egregious and appalling abuses detailed in recent news reports. Among many abuses, these reports outlined the agency’s widespread use of solitary confinement for immigrants in the civil immigration detention system (a form of torture), as well as the grossly unsanitary conditions at detention facilities.

 

An ICE oversight hearing would also allow Committee members to gather more information about the immigration raids that the President flippantly alluded to in a tweet last week. The administration has already once tried to separate children from their parents; in order to prevent such a policy from being implemented again, it’s imperative that members of the Senate Judiciary Committee be allowed to exercise their oversight authority of ICE. 

 

On May 21, 2019, NBC News and The Intercept reported that between 2012 and 2017, ICE placed thousands of immigrants in its custody in solitary confinement. For many of these individuals they were placed in confinement even though they did not violate any rules. And, alarmingly, nearly one in three immigrants who were placed in solitary confinement had a mental illness. In one instance, ICE placed a Ukrainian man who suffered from a mental illness in solitary confinement for 15 days for putting half a green pepper in his sock. In another instance, a Guatemalan man who had a prosthetic leg spent two months in solitary confinement. The news stories detail numerous examples of individuals placed in confinement without justification, which prompted a whistleblower to come forward to shine a light on these abuses.

 

The scientific research and data on the practice is clear: solitary confinement has serious, adverse, and dangerous health consequences. The world community recognizes this harm as a form of torture. In 2011, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture said, “Considering the severe mental pain or suffering solitary confinement may cause, it can amount to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment when used as a punishment . . . .” He went on to say that the practice should only be used in extraordinary circumstances, and only for a short period of time.

 

ICE’s own policy seems to recognize the dangers of solitary confinement. The policy states that the “[p]lacement of detainees in segregated housing is a serious step that requires careful consideration of alternatives. . . . In particular, placement in administrative segregation due to a special vulnerability should be used only as a last resort and when no other viable housing options exist.” It appears ICE has been consistently violating its own policy on the use of solitary confinement.

 

We are also alarmed that ICE was planning raids aimed at arresting thousands of immigrants living in our communities. On June 17, 2019, President Trump tweeted, “Next week ICE will begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens who have illicitly found their way into the United States.” These raids would undoubtedly result in the separation of children from their parents. Additionally, the reported targets of these raids were not dangerous criminals, but immigrants who escaped extreme violence and poverty in their home countries and who are seeking asylum in the United States. These raids have been rejected by then-Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Kirstjen Nielsen, and then-Acting Director of ICE, Ronald Vitiello. At a time when the Trump Administration is claiming it does not have enough money to deal with the humanitarian crisis at the Southwest border, it is puzzling how DHS has enough resources to conduct large-scale raids all across the United States.

 

We are grateful that you scheduled hearings on oversight of Customs and Border Patrol and the humanitarian crisis at the Southwest border, but in order to fully address the scope of ICE’s serious and egregious violations, the Committee must convene an oversight hearing. It’s becoming increasingly clear that ICE has become nothing more than a lethal weapon in the Trump Administration’s war on immigrants and communities of color, and we cannot be silent.  

 

We appreciate your attention to this critical matter and look forward to your response.

 

Sincerely,

 

Cory A. Booker

United States Senator

 

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