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US Justice Department admits abuse of immigrant detainees
after September 11
By Peter Daniels
27 December 2003
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The inspector general of the US Department of Justice has documented
the systematic physical and verbal abuse of scores of immigrants
detained in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Hundreds were rounded up in the days following the attacks,
in an atmosphere of panic and anti-immigrant hysteria instigated
by the White House and the Justice Department and directed particularly
against people from the Middle East. Federal authorities eventually
acknowledged that 762 immigrants were detained in the 11 months
after September 11, the vast majority held on routine immigration
violations. Eighty-four of these were taken to the Metropolitan
Detention Center (MDC), a federal prison in Brooklyn, New York.
There was never any evidence of criminal activity against the
vast majority of the immigrants, who were picked up as a means
by which Attorney General John Ashcroft could demonstrate anti-terrorist
toughness and whip up an atmosphere of fear, intimidation and
chauvinism. Nearly all of the detainees were released and deported,
although only after months of cruel and demeaning treatment.
The first detainees arrived at the MDC on September 14, 2001,
and they were immediately subjected to abuse. They were repeatedly
slammed against walls, their arms and hands were painfully twisted
and they were otherwise manhandled, they were unnecessarily strip-searched
for purposes of humiliation and harassment, and they were repeatedly
cursed, mocked and threatened.
Within days, many of the immigrants complained, and one was
able to obtain a hearing before a federal judge on October 4.
Prison officials then announced a policy of videotaping the detainees
movements, using hand-held cameras. Even though most of these
tapes disappeared, the inspector generals office was finally
able to locate more than 300, and they contained numerous examples
of sadistic brutality on the part of prison staff.
The inspector generals report, a 47-page document that
was issued on December 18, more than two years after the original
complaints that initiated the investigation, provides revealing
details of what took place at the MDC. It lists six different
categories of physical abuse: slamming detainees against
walls; bending or twisting detainees arms, hands, wrists,
and fingers; lifting restrained detainees off the ground by their
arms, and pulling their arms and handcuffs; stepping on detainees
leg restraint chains; using restraints improperly; and handling
detainees in an otherwise rough and inappropriate manner.
In addition, the report lists charges that the prison staff
verbally abused the immigrants by referring to them as terrorists
and other offensive names; threatened them; cursed at them; and
made offensive comments during strip searches.
All of these charges were proven in the course of the investigation,
in most cases after videotape evidence contradicted denials of
officers and other staff that any mistreatment had occurred.
A typical example was that of one detainee whom staff slammed
against a wall, warning him that they would break his neck if
he moved. Another detainee was slammed back and forth
against walls all the way to his cell.
A former officer revealed that before the videotaping began
on October 5, 2001, the practice of slamming was almost
universal. So systematic was the abuse that this witness, Lieutenant
1, explained the different categories of physical mistreatment.
...slamming a detainee against the wall was
when officers shoved the detainee into the wall and held him there,
and bouncing a detainee off the wall was when officers
shoved the detainee into the wall and then quickly pulled him
back... pressing a detainee against the wall was when
officers used physical force to keep a detainees chest against
the wall.
The frequency of this form of abuse understandably declined
after the videotaping began, according to the detainees themselves.
One detainee said officers said things like If the camera
wasnt on I would have bashed your face, and The
camera is your best friend. Nevertheless, the videotapes
that were eventually found showed numerous instances of the brutality
described above. In some cases, the officers realized or were
told by others that they were being taped, and immediately stopped
in the middle of the abuse.
Many of the immigrants were slammed into a wall at the bottom
of a ramp where a T-shirt was taped to the wall. The detainees
were forced up against the shirt, containing a picture of the
U.S. flag and the words, These colors dont run.
Verbal abuse accompanied the physical mistreatment. Detainees
reported that officers said things like, Whatever you did
at the World Trade Center, we will do to you, Youre
never going to leave here, Dont ask any questions,
otherwise you will be dead, Put your nose against
the wall or we will break your neck. When detainees prayed,
officers said, Shut the fuck up! Dont pray, Fucking
Muslim. Youre praying bullshit.
The prison authorities apparently attempted to bury the videotape
evidence of this and other abuse. During the course of our
investigation, the report declares, we made several
requests to MDC officials for videotapes. However, the officials
responses to our requests were inconsistent and inadequate. In
response to each of our requests, we obtained additional videotapes
that we previously had been told were destroyed or reused.
Almost two years ago, the inspector generals office requested
tapes covering October and November 2001, and received a total
of 14 tapes in response. Some months later, it obtained another
45 tapes. Over a year later, in June 2003, it got eight more tapes.
Finally, on August 20, representatives of the inspector generals
office visited the MDC and were escorted to a storage room. Upon
entering the room, we immediately observed a significant number
of boxes of videotapes lining much of the wall. The boxes were
clearly marked in large handwriting, Tapes with dates
beginning on October 5, 2001, and continuing to February 2002.
These tapes, 308 in all, were the only ones omitted from an inventory
that had been handed over to the inspector general in August.
Although staff denied all the accusations, the videotape evidence
showed otherwise. The report states, with obvious understatement,
that the videotapes also led us to conclude that several
officers lacked credibility in their interviews... In our interviews,
most staff members, particularly ones still employed by the BOP
[Bureau of Prisons] denied all detainees allegations of
physical and verbal abuse... Because of the delay in the MDCs
providing us the videotapes, for almost all interviews of MDC
staff members, we did not have the benefit of the MDC videotapes.
Upon viewing them after the interviews, we saw that some staff
members engaged in the very conduct they specifically denied in
their interviews. This finding caused us to question the credibility
of these staff members and their denials in other areas for which
we did not have videotape evidence.
In other words, the officers lied when they thought they could
get away with it, and the prison officials apparently sought to
assist them by stalling or denying the existence of the videotape
evidence.
It is by no means certain whether those guilty of the sadistic
abuse against the immigrants will receive anything but mild punishment.
The inspector general recommended unspecified disciplinary action
against 10 current employees of the Bureau of Prisons. A Justice
Department spokesman issued a brief statement saying the Bureau
of Prisons had been directed to review the report and take appropriate
action.
It should come as no surprise that Attorney General Ashcroft,
who held numerous press conferences trumpeting the arrests of
terrorist suspects on the flimsiest of charges, is silent on the
exposure of abuse and brutality carried out by his department.
The sadism displayed on the videotapes was in fact inspired by
the policies and public statements of Ashcroft and Bush. The inspector
generals report, set in motion by the anger and determination
of the immigrants to defend their rights, is one more piece of
evidence demonstrating the gigantic lie at the heart of the governments
so-called war on terrorism.
See Also:
US considers use of
torture in interrogation of terrorism suspects
[17 November 2001]
US considers use of
torture in interrogation of terrorism suspects
[24 October 2001]
Nearly 600 detained:
Widespread violations of civil liberties in US dragnet
[6 October 2001]
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