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Inside Bush's Billion-Dollar Immigration Gulag

By Tom Barry, Americas Policy Program. Posted June 23, 2008.


ICE has created a multi-billion dollar industry for holding immigrants deemed "removable" by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

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The next administration will face an out-of-control immigration enforcement regime that consigns immigrants to a labyrinth of unregulated detention centers, jails, and prisons throughout the country.

While the scope of the detention and imprisonment of immigrants has been greatly expanded by the Bush administration, the problem of unregulated immigrant detention is not new. In the 1990s, increased immigrant detention and federal prison overcrowding led to an outsourcing boom. Instead of being held in federal prisons and detention centers, arrested immigrants increasingly were held in local, state, and privately owned jails and prisons.

But the boom in contracted detention beds for federal detainees produced a series of scandals that alarmed many in Congress. Gross human rights abuses and millions of dollars in overcharges persuaded Congress, prodded by immigrant and prisoner advocates, to create the Office of the Federal Detention Trustee (OFDT) in the Justice Department (DOJ) in 2000. The newly established OFDT, which opened in September 2001, was authorized to coordinate all outsourcing of federal detainees and oversee the implementation of the new detention standards adopted in 2000.

But the onset of the war on terrorism and the creation of the Department of Homeland Security in March 2003 sidelined OFDT's coordination mission. Instead of centralizing detention operations for federal detainees held in non-federal facilities, detention operations have quickly become less coordinated, more diffuse, and riddled with abuse.

More Beds for Immigrants

The Bush administration is fulfilling its promise that there will be sufficient prison beds for all the immigrants caught in the Department of Homeland Security's widening immigrant round-up. In the detention business, bed is a euphemism for jail space.

Supported by generous budget increases for its immigration initiatives, Congress and the Bush administration have approved funding for a major increase in beds for immigrants—as long as they're locked up. Homeland Security has created a national network of bed providers in county, state, and federal facilities. Similarly, the Justice Department has seen major increases in its budget for housing and transporting immigrants through its U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) and OFDT.

While the current focus on immigrants as security threats started in the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, the drive to increase the number of beds for arrested immigrants began in earnest in 2004. At the insistence of immigration restrictionists like Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and the Immigration Reform Caucus, the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 contained an authorization for an additional 40,000 beds to accommodate immigrants held for immigration violations.

Two years later in a major speech on immigration policy on May 15, 2006, President Bush assured the nation that the U.S. government was well on the way to securing the U.S. southern border, noting, "We've expanded the number of beds in our detention facilities, and we will continue to add more."

In an August 2006 visit to the U.S.-Mexico border to promote his immigration policy, President Bush repeated his determination to increase jail space for immigrants. "Step 1," he said, "is to add detention beds."

Today, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the DHS agency responsible for immigrant "detention and removal," has 32,000 beds at its immediate disposition, with another 1,000 scheduled to come on line in 2009. In 2008 ICE is spending $1.7 billion on immigrant detention, in addition to the $700 million for enforcement and removal operations.

DHS says it can guarantee the availability of a bed for any immigrant in its care. At the onset of the immigration crackdown two years ago, ICE dubbed its promise to find a detention center or prison bed for all arrested immigrants "Operation Reservation Guaranteed." That operation has been subsumed into ICE's Detention Operations Coordination Center.

The Justice Department has a similar initiative to ensure that the U.S. Marshals Service has beds available for detainees—about 180,000 a year, of whom more than 30% are held on immigration charges.


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Tom Barry is a senior analyst with the Americas Policy Program (www.americaspolicy.org) of the Center for International Policy.

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It's unreal
Posted by: L.A.Lynn on Jun 23, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They're rounding up immigrants, and putting them in detention centers? My God, what is going on in this country? Oh, wait here on page two of this article it say "illegal" immigrants.

"The steady rise of the illegal immigrant population in the 1990s strained DOJ's capacity to oversee the expanding patchwork quilt of bed providers."

That rise is also severely straining schools, hospitals, and roads here in SoCal. I would imagine its the same in Southern Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.

"Like ICE, the Justice Department's OFDT has developed its own booking system to handle the recent increase in the federal detainee population, spurred mainly by the arrests of immigrants."

In other words, there wouldn't be a problem if ICE just left the illegal population alone. Because this problem of making sure there are enough beds is the fault of the U.S. government, not the huge influx of people coming in with no papers.

It is a wonder that after going through this "Kafka-esque nightmare" so many people turn right around and come back to this horrid country. Maybe we should be providing mental health care too for the detainees.

Seriously I'm all for humane treatment, but if 10 people show up at my house uninvited, somebody is going to have to sleep on the floor.

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It's unreal
Posted by: edweirdness on Jun 23, 2008 12:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to agree with L.A. Lynne. Further, using thrid party or private detention companies just makes sense from a tax payer standpoint. Rather than fund facilities and hire "lifetime" federal workers (anyone familiar with federal hiring and retention policies knows why there are no "massive layoffs" of federal workers, ever!), provide health care and pensions for federal workers (on the tax payer dime) knows why it makes sense to use private contractors. Besides, citizens get a chance to say no everytime a private contractors agreement is renewed, something we can't do with federal facilities and workers. Besides adding stimulus to the private sector isn't such a bad idea.

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Funny
Posted by: edweirdness on Jun 23, 2008 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Funny how alternet uses an ostrich as a logo on this forum, and then deletes most messages that disagree with their agenda or viewpoint.

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Immigration laws must be enforced....
Posted by: Brittanicus on Jun 23, 2008 3:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The deportation of illegal aliens, should have started 3 decades ago when the (1986) Simpson/Mazzoli bill was enacted. Now the majority of the American people are up in arms. Sick and frustrated with our politicians pandering to illegal immigration special interest lobby. Even now they are trying to gut the border fence of funding, including the Federal SAVE ACT (H.R.4088).

In the meantime...!
Backroom discussions continue on whether to de-fund effective efforts that deter illegal immigration

U.S. House leaders continue to gauge whether next Tuesday (June 24) they can escape public wrath if they take funding away from a couple of the most effective enforcement procedures resulting in illegal aliens leaving the country.
No. 1: 287(g) program allowing and equipping local agencies to arrest and detain illegal aliens of all kinds.
No. 2: Arrests of any illegal alien encountered while looking for criminal alien fugitives.

You can continue to phone committee members at 202-224-3121, asking for expanded funding for the 287(g) program for local immigration enforcement.
Anti-Enforcement Ideas Circulating. For additional unsuppressed details NUMBERSUSA.

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Gulags?
Posted by: pfeifer999 on Jun 23, 2008 6:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh please be honest. The Soviets killed tens of millions of people in their Gulags. Our ICE gives out ice cream every night and lets everybody watch Oprah every afternoon.

Grow up, Alternet, and realize that your editorial position on this is out of touch with your readers.

http://www.ukemonde.com/genocide/margolisholocaust.html

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» RE: Gulags? Posted by: edweirdness