Asylum Seeking Persons Forced to Wear Monitoring Ankle Bracelets
Under pressure from a United States District Judge in Flores v. Lynch, U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) officials are now exploring ways to release mothers and their children from privately run for-profit immigration detention centers throughout, Texas. However, human rights activists are unhappy that GEO, the same for-profit prison company that locked up the families will now continue to manages their cases after release.
Calling itself “the world leader in private correctional, detention management, and community residential re-entry services,” GEO holds asylum seeking persons at 15 ICE detention centers in six states. ICE calls such privately run facilities “humane family residential centers.” This year alone, the government will pay GEO $56 million to manage ankle monitors for 10,000 immigrants, and to run telephone check-ins for 20,000 immigrants.
Laura Lichter, a Denver immigration attorney volunteering at a GEO Texas detention facility, said that in her 20 years of practice she has never seen ICE add a monitoring device or impose other conditions after an immigration judge has set bond. She said the bracelet monitors were cumbersome, conspicuous and required constant charging and were another tacit attempt at deterrence for further immigration. See the Associated Press
According to NPR, the manager in charge of GEO’s new ankle bracelet program was, notably, a former top official in ICE’s Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations.
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