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POLICE of the Night
By Mike Clarey and
KEY WEST, FL-Juan Alonso Gonzalez and Mesa Kasem struggle to see
a future in the same bleak present. "The way things are
going, I cannot even imagine freedom now," Kasem said. Or,
as Alonso put it: "It is torture when you have no hope."
Alonso is here on the fringe of the balmy Caribbean, Kasem at
the edge of the Mojave Desert. One is Cuban, the other Cambodian.
Once welcomed as refugees from communism and given green cards,
they are now U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service prisoners
held in isolated county jails. Both are convicted felons who
have completed their sentences, only to be swept up in lingering
Cold War suspicions and Congress' zeal to detain and deport foreigners
who commit crimes.
In INS parlance, they are "lifers," languishing in indefinite
detention. Their native countries will not take them back, and
the INS will not return them to American society. INS detainees
represent the fastest-growing segment of the nation's exploding
jail population. While the increase in Federal and state inmates
actually slowed in 1997 - to 5.2% from a decade average of 7%
-- the number in INS custody soared by 42% over the previous year.
The Clinton Administration is pushing for congressional extension
of a policy that has given local INS directors some flexibility
to release nonviolent offenders marked for deportation. Without
that discretionary authority, due to expire next month, INS officials
say the detained population could double within the year.
"There's no possible way we can detain all of these people
- nor should we," INS Commissioner Doris Meissner said in
a recent interview. The looming crisis has INS officials scrambling.
The almost $700 million now budgeted annually for detention and
deportation soon will have to be doubled if the population continues
to grow at current rates, officials say. To help alleviate the
pressure, the INS is trying to persuade the U.S. Bureau of Prisons
to take custody of all its "lifer" detainees, now numbering
about 2,800. The vast majority are Cuban and Southeast Asian.
In the meantime, the INS is going further afield, often renting
beds in remote county jails, not easily accessible to attorneys
and far from the detainees' families and cultural communities.
A financial boon for local sheriffs and for-profit prisons, this
far-flung INS detention network is subject to little oversight
and operates with a patchwork of standards and practices, critics
say. They call the system a veritable gulag - "a secret
detention world which is out of the public eye and subject to
little scrutiny by the INS itself," according to a report
by the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center. "This is a real
time-bomb waiting to go off," said Miami attorney Cheryl
Little, the center's executive director.
INS ACCUSED OF VIOLATING INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
In fact, in a report to be released in Washington on Thursday
(Sept. 10, 1998), Human Rights Watch, which monitors developments
in more than 70 countries, charges that holding INS detainees
in local jails wrongfully punishes them and violates international
standards. INS officials concede that tensions in overcrowded
facilities are near the flash point, especially among frustrated
lifers.
"Just from a human standpoint, we're left with very unhappy
detainees who are virtually hopeless and have little motivation
to be well-behaved," noted Kristine Marcy, INS senior counsel
on detention and deportation. "This population, when they
don't think they are going to get out soon, are hard to manage."
Those in direct INS custody typically live in dormitory-style
barracks, where they may spend up to 23 hours a day - often eating
there - with little privacy and an hour for exercise in adjacent
yards. Sometimes tensions erupt. Two disturbances already this
(1998) year have rocked the INS lockup in El Centro, 220 miles
southeast of Los Angeles. Angry prisoners in March barricaded
themselves in their barracks and burned mattresses, resulting
in the indictment of a dozen prisoners from five different nations
for assaulting security officers.
In June, Alonso and 33 other INS detainees were moved to the Key
West jail following allegations that they had been subjected to
racial and ethnic taunts, shackled in spread-eagled positions
to their beds, beaten and shocked with electric riot shields and
batons while held in the Jackson County jail in north Florida.
Their complaints have been forwarded to the U.S. Justice Department.
At the cramped INS jail in San Pedro, a Mexican prisoner was stabbed
last month following days of tension between rival Asian and Latino
gang members. He was treated and sent back to jail, where officials
fear retaliatory strikes. "This is the worst-case scenario,"
said Leonard Kovensky, INS assistant district director in Los
Angeles. "These kinds of tensions are aggravated by both
a lack of detention space and the absence of hope that many will
have any kind of resolution to their case." In 1995, INS
overseers at Florida's Krome detention center orchestrated a cover-up
by hastily releasing or transferring more than 100 detainees to
mask overcrowding before the arrival of a congressional delegation.
A Justice Department inquiry resulted in the disciplining of
12 INS staffers.
The number of people in INS custody now averages more than 15,000
a day, the highest in history. The vast majority are deported
within two months or so, the INS says, their beds quickly occupied
by the next waves. According to agency estimates, about 170,000
prisoners will pass through INS custody during the current fiscal
year - more than double the caseload of four years ago. And that
does not include those arrested along the Southwest border and
quickly expelled back to Mexico, usually within 24 hours. (The
majority of Americans are immigrants, and almost everyone is related
to someone who was detained by the INS. While some detainees
may be actual criminals, who must be incarcerated, the crime the
majority committed was to arrive without proper documentation.
WFI Editor)
POLICE-STATE CRACKDOWN
Behind the rapid growth in the number of INS prisoners are tough
laws passed by Congress in 1996 that expanded the grounds for
expulsion, especially for noncitizens convicted of a range of
crimes. In addition, the laws mandated the holding of asylum-seekers,
ex-convicts and others who could previously be released awaiting
final word on their appeals, which can take years. The legal
bind in which lifers now find themselves results from the confluence
of two strong currents in recent public opinion: anti-terrorism
and anti-immigration. After the 1993 World Trade Center bombing
in New York, in which anti-American fanatics were suspected, lawmakers
came up with the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
as a way of quickly rounding up and deporting foreigners suspected
of plotting terrorist acts or other crimes of violence. When
the federal building in Oklahoma City was blown up in 1995, the
bill was broadened to include acts of domestic terrorism as well.
Several months after President Clinton signed that bill into law,
he also put his pen to the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act - a Republican-sponsored that was backed by
California's two Democratic senators, Barbara Boxer and Dianne
Fienstein, and reflected the anti-immigrant sentiment in the state
and the nation. The law requires asylum-seekers to request a
hearing within a year of entering the U.S., and allows the INS
to more easily deport illegal entrants who do not make asylum
claims.
Under the 1996 statutes, the fact that a legal immigrant may have
been a model immigrant for 20 years after completing his or her
criminal sentence doesn't make a difference. They still face
deportation if their crime qualifies as an "aggravated felony,"
a broad term encompassing everything from simple theft to virtually
any drug-related offense. Immigration agents now regularly comb
jails and prisons nationwide in search of deportable inmates.
The INS even has a 24-hour watch at the L.A. County Jail, one
of the nation's steadiest sources of deportable immigrants. Still
others are picked up more casually, often while returning to the
United States from trips abroad, unaware that their criminal pasts
may expose them to deportation.
That is what happened to the 47-year-old Alonso, who arrived during
the Mariel boat-lift summer of 1980. He found work as a laborer
in Miami, eventually settling down with Josefa Ferreiro. Alonso
became a surrogate father to her grandson, Gustavo, now 16. "Gus
loves him like his own papi," said Ileana Ferreiro,
34, the boy's mother. But Alonso has made mistakes. Police twice
arrested him for possession of an unregistered firearm. For those
offenses he picked up two felony convictions and served a year's
probation. When Alonso heard in 1995 that his father was near
death in Cuba, he sold his truck, got help from the Red Cross
to obtain a humanitarian visa and went back to his hometown of
Ciego de Avila. His father died two weeks after his arrival.
Upon his return to Florida, INS officials at Miami International
Airport ran Alonso's name through standard law-enforcement data-bases.
The gun offenses flashed up on a computer screen. Alonso has
been locked up ever since, most recently here in the C Pod of
the Monroe County jail - where on a recent day most of the men
milling around him were serving time for violent crimes and other
misdeeds, counting down the days until their release.
Lifers, however, have no expectation of release since the U.S.
has no deportation agreements with Cuba, Vietnam, Cambodia and
Laos - where residual Cold War ill-will blocks normal relations.
Stateless Palestinians, former Soviet subjects, Africans, Iranians
and others also can slip into the lifer category. (Imagine, life
imprisonment! WFI Editor) Immigrant advocates say
such indefinite detention violates the constitutional ban on cruel
and unusual punishment, as well as international human rights
accords. (Ironically, the U.S. imposes sanctions on other nations
for failure to abide by international human rights accords, while
it, itself, violates human rights. WFI Editor)
According to the INS, all detainees' histories are reviewed regularly
to see if they qualify for release, typically to relatives, halfway
houses or on bond. And Mariel Cubans are entitled to an annual
review by a panel set up after 1987 riots among marielitos
held in indefinite detention in Atlanta and Oakdale, La. But
there are no guarantees that lifers will get another chance at
freedom. "Sometimes, I give up hope," Kasem, a 21-year-old
native of Cambodia, said recently at L.A. County's Mira Loma Detention
Facility in Lancaster. "I just feel like I'm going crazy."
Kasem, who admittedly ran with gangs in the Stockton area since
his teens, has been in INS custody for almost two years. He is
desperate to be out by October so he can pay tribute to his father
on the 100th day following his death, a Cambodian tradition.
Kasem came here as a refugee at age 3 and landed in California's
prison system as a result of his conviction for shooting a woman
in Stockton. The INS took custody as he completed his state time.
Now, he cannot imagine what life would be like in a country he
doesn't remember. His older sister, Raksan Kasem, has tried to
convince the INS to release her brother. "What are we going
to do? Sit here and wait for my brother to rot?" asked Raksan
Kasem, who regularly makes the five-hour trip from the Central
Valley to visit her brother, her disconsolate mother in tow.
"Sending my brother back to Cambodia is like sending a baby
to the jungle. He'll die there. He has nothing there."
SOURCE: Excerpted from the 9 September, 1998, issue of the Los
Angeles Times, Orange County Edition, entitled, "Sentenced
to a Life in Limbo." Reprinted in the public service of
the national interest of the American people. (WFI EDITOR: American law and justice is founded upon the principle that once a person convicted of a crime has done his time, he is entitled to re-join society. The only exception applies to cases in which the criminal has a pathological, socio-pathic condition, that makes it unsafe to release him back into general circulation. The fact that the INS now holds prisoners for indefinite terms should frighten every American national, because it reveals that the INS is a secret police with vast powers. What will it take for the republic to extend that kind of sentencing to Americans? Unfortunately, not much.) |
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