Silvia Foster-Frau
π€ PersonPodcast Appearances
Do they have a history of violent crime or was their only crime crossing the border?
Do they have a history of violent crime or was their only crime crossing the border?
They're actually being held on the side owned by the Defense Department. That's a military prison.
They're actually being held on the side owned by the Defense Department. That's a military prison.
He said basically it's pretty impossible to detach the military facility from ICE custody because it was completely built to hold suspected terrorists, that it's been completely modeled and configured to suit a group like that and not immigrants.
He said basically it's pretty impossible to detach the military facility from ICE custody because it was completely built to hold suspected terrorists, that it's been completely modeled and configured to suit a group like that and not immigrants.
They have not been able to make contact with these immigrants and make sure that they have legal access. And according to them, because they're coming from the U.S., all due process rights go with them now to where they're being taken in Guantanamo. And really, in general, there's so little that any of us know about who these people are, what their immigration status is.
They have not been able to make contact with these immigrants and make sure that they have legal access. And according to them, because they're coming from the U.S., all due process rights go with them now to where they're being taken in Guantanamo. And really, in general, there's so little that any of us know about who these people are, what their immigration status is.
They said that they were denied calls to lawyers and to loved ones despite repeated pleas. They also described what I think was one of the most traumatic aspects for some of the migrants, really invasive strip searches where every time they left the cell and returned to their cell, whether that was to shower, which happened very rarely, or to go outside, which happened even more rarely.
They said that they were denied calls to lawyers and to loved ones despite repeated pleas. They also described what I think was one of the most traumatic aspects for some of the migrants, really invasive strip searches where every time they left the cell and returned to their cell, whether that was to shower, which happened very rarely, or to go outside, which happened even more rarely.
After every three meals, he would take, in the last kind of blank page of the Bible, he would tear a piece of the page. And by the time he left, that page had 14 tears in it. So he had spent 14 days in Guantanamo.
After every three meals, he would take, in the last kind of blank page of the Bible, he would tear a piece of the page. And by the time he left, that page had 14 tears in it. So he had spent 14 days in Guantanamo.
Some legal aid and human rights groups have sued the administration over them taking migrants there, particularly over the issue of legal access because families weren't notified. They had no idea where their loved one was. And then there was a big concern over the due process rights of these immigrants who still have a series of rights set out in the U.S.
Some legal aid and human rights groups have sued the administration over them taking migrants there, particularly over the issue of legal access because families weren't notified. They had no idea where their loved one was. And then there was a big concern over the due process rights of these immigrants who still have a series of rights set out in the U.S.
about what they are allowed to have access to.
about what they are allowed to have access to.
They said that they were denied calls to lawyers and to loved ones despite repeated pleas. They also described what I think was one of the most traumatic aspects for some of the migrants, really invasive strip searches where every time they left the cell and returned to their cell, whether that was to shower, which happened very rarely, or to go outside, which happened even more rarely.
After every three meals, he would take, in the last kind of blank page of the Bible, he would tear a piece of the page. And by the time he left, that page had 14 tears in it. So he had spent 14 days in Guantanamo.
Some legal aid and human rights groups have sued the administration over them taking migrants there, particularly over the issue of legal access because families weren't notified. They had no idea where their loved one was. And then there was a big concern over the due process rights of these immigrants who still have a series of rights set out in the U.S.
about what they are allowed to have access to.
Do they have a history of violent crime or was their only crime crossing the border?
They're actually being held on the side owned by the Defense Department. That's a military prison.
He said basically it's pretty impossible to detach the military facility from ICE custody because it was completely built to hold suspected terrorists, that it's been completely modeled and configured to suit a group like that and not immigrants.
They have not been able to make contact with these immigrants and make sure that they have legal access. And according to them, because they're coming from the U.S., all due process rights go with them now to where they're being taken in Guantanamo. And really, in general, there's so little that any of us know about who these people are, what their immigration status is.