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City of Immigrants Fills Jail Cells With Its Own (Central Falls)

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The Straight Story Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-03-10 02:05 PM
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City of Immigrants Fills Jail Cells With Its Own (Central Falls)
December 27, 2008
City of Immigrants Fills Jail Cells With Its Own
By NINA BERNSTEIN

CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. — Few in this threadbare little mill town gave much thought to the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility, the maximum-security jail beside the public ball fields at the edge of town. Even when it expanded and added barbed wire, Wyatt was just the backdrop for Little League games, its name stitched on the caps of the team it sponsored.

Then people began to disappear: the leader of a prayer group at St. Matthew’s Roman Catholic Church; the father of a second grader at the public charter school; a woman who mopped floors in a Providence courthouse.

After days of searching, their families found them locked up inside Wyatt — only blocks from home, but in a separate world.

In this mostly Latino city, hardly anyone had realized that in addition to detaining the accused drug dealers and mobsters everyone heard about, the jail held hundreds of people charged with no crime — people caught in the nation’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Fewer still knew that Wyatt was a portal into an expanding network of other jails, bigger and more remote, all propelling detainees toward deportation with little chance to protest.

If anything, the people of Central Falls saw Wyatt as the economic engine that city fathers had promised, a steady source of jobs and federal money to pay for services like police and fire protection. Even that, it turns out, was an illusion.

Wyatt offers a rare look into the fastest-growing, least-examined type of incarceration in America, an industry that detains half a million people a year, up from a few thousand just 15 years ago. The system operates without the rules that protect criminal suspects, and has grown up with little oversight, often in the backyards of communities desperate for any source of money and work.

Last spring, The New York Times set out to examine this small city of 19,000 and its big detention center as a microcosm of the nation’s new relationship with immigration detention, which is now sweeping up not just recent border-jumpers and convicted felons but foreign-born residents with strong ties to places like Central Falls. Wyatt, nationally accredited, clean and modern, seemed like one of the better jails in the system, a patchwork of county lockups, private prisons and federal detention centers where government investigations and the news media have recently documented substandard, sometimes lethal, conditions.

But last summer, a detainee died in Wyatt’s custody. Immigration authorities investigating the death removed all immigration detainees this month — along with the $101.76 a day the federal government paid the jail for each one. In Central Falls, where many families have members without papers, a state campaign against illegal immigrants spread fear that also took a toll: People went into hiding and businesses lost Latino customers in droves. Slowly, the city awoke to its role in the detention system, and to the pitfalls of the bargain it had struck.

In a sinking economy, immigration detention is a rare growth industry. Congress has doubled annual spending on it in the last four years, to $2.4 billion approved in October as part of $5.9 billion allotted for immigration enforcement through next September — even more than the Bush administration had requested.

Seeking a slice of that bounty, communities like Farmville, Va., and Pahrump, Nev., are signing up with developers of new detention centers. Jails from New England to New Mexico have already made the crackdown pay off — for the private companies that dominate the industry, for some investors and, at least in theory, for places like Central Falls, a city so strapped that the state pays for its schools.

http://www.ice.gov/doclib/secure_communities/press_release/pdf/081227centralfalls.pdf
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-03-10 02:14 PM
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1. Picture. Central Falls RI immigrants disappearing. Families find them in high security detention.
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DFab420 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-03-10 02:20 PM
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2. Sad, strange, somewhat off to one side
By the way when the author describes the people being held there have "done no crime"

I thought being in the country illegally was a crime?

Now before everyone cals for my head..I'm all about immigration, hell I really don't care whose legal or who isn't.

But if you get snatched by ICE or INS or whomever...should you really be placed in jail? No obviously not, and it's tragic that someone died in there. HOWEVER, you take that risk coming into this country illegally and get caught, honestly I know it's AWFUL to be deported.. but it shouldn't be a surprise..

"campaign against illegal immigrants spread fear that also took a toll: People went into hiding and businesses lost Latino customers in droves. Slowly, the city awoke to its role in the detention system, and to the pitfalls of the bargain it had struck."

For some reason I fell like this is a silly paragraph to make appoint about the evils of this program. I don't know why it just seems so, tiny, in comparison of the larger issues at hand, like how we handle our ill eal immigrants.
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SoCalDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-03-10 02:26 PM
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3. $101.76 a day = $12.72 per hr, if if were for a job
Edited on Wed Mar-03-10 02:26 PM by SoCalDem
Why not hire these folks and let them contribute tax money. instead of jailing them?

Reminds me of an article I read years ago, about a study done in CA.. At the time, poor families were averaging $42K per family in "costs " for the administration of the aid...but if the family had $42K in INCOME, they might not have NEEDED aid..

The whole poverty-thing is a scheme to keep some people in jobs, administering to the poor, without actually ever eliminating the poverty ... :eyes:
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