News: Inside a former Texas prison where children—even infants—are held with their families on immigration chargesInmate Faten Ibrahim was unlikely to escape. She lived at a compound built as a prison for Texas' worst criminals, within a perimeter of razor wire. Her eight-by-eight-foot cell offered only a thin sliver of window, her toilet in an open corner left no cover for stashing break-out tools, and, at any rate, cracking the cell's thick steel door at night would have tripped an alarm. She certainly wasn't going to try bolting, especially since Faten, who lived in the cell with her mother for three months, is five years old.
Despite the minor threat that children such as Faten Ibrahim pose on their own, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency has nonetheless begun detaining them along with their parents on illegal immigration charges. The move is a response to the agency’s decision in August to end its controversial practice of "catch and release," in which migrants with children detained on U.S. soil were typically set free and told to show up later in court, but often disappeared instead. The agency will now detain families until their asylum and deportation cases are resolved, a strategy that is intended to prevent undocumented immigrants from going on the lam while also keeping their family units together.
Of the two all-ages detention facilities operated by the government, the T. Don Hutto Family Residential Center, which opened in May, is the newest and largest, and holds roughly 200 minors and their relatives who have been arrested or detained across the border. It is the only detention center housed in a former prison, and agency officials say it has been extensively renovated into "a modern, state-of-the-art facility."
Yet lawyers and human rights advocates question the ethics and legality of imprisoning children and say T. Don Hutto is, regardless, a bad place to start. "It's clearly not a setting that is appropriate for families," says Michelle Brané, an investigator with the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children who toured the facility late last year. She says a typical prison routine still exists there: all children who are big enough must wear scrubs akin to prison uniforms, and there's little to occupy their time besides lounging in the "pod," the communal space walled off by prison cells. When not hanging out there, children receive a single hour of physical recreation each day and, at the time Brané visited, a single hour of schooling in the form of an all-ages English class (The classes were upped to four hours recently, and are expanding to the seven hours required in Texas public schools). Brané was not impressed by efforts to brighten the pod with carpet and a mural depicting an ocean scene: "It's definitely a penal environment."
http://www.motherjones.com/news/update/2007/02/detention_center.htmlWarning:This will make you very upset