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Category Archives: T. Don Hutto detention center

What Would You Ask Speaker Pelosi?

Next week, I will have the opportunity to travel to Austin, Texas to attend the Netroots Nation conference, thanks to a scholarship from Democracy for America.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi will be attending and doing an “Ask the Speaker” session with participants. I just submitted the following question for consideration by the moderators:

Madame Speaker:

Thirty miles to the north of Austin, in Taylor, Texas, is the T. Don Hutto prison facility that is serving as one of many holding tanks for migrant worker families in the U.S., including children. Is Congress preparing any action that would immediately halt the violation of human rights of the children and other prisoners at these sites, such as blocking of habeas corpus protections, access to medical care, and family unification? Will the Democrats on a national-party level be endorsing the recently passed resolution by the Texas Democratic Party, calling on the end to family detentions at sites like T. Don Hutto?

The text of the resolution is listed below:

RESOLUTION FOR ALTERNATIVES TO DETENTION OF IMMIGRANT AND ASYLUM-SEEKING CHILDREN

WHEREAS border protection is important to the security of the nation as a whole;

WHEREAS immigration affects the economic and social well-being of both the United States and Mexico;

WHEREAS a private firm re-opened the T. Don Hutto Residential Facility in Taylor, Texas, for the purpose of detaining immigrant and asylum-seeking families who are awaiting immigration proceedings,

WHEREAS it is not appropriate to convert a medium-security prison and rename it as a family detention center where children are detained with their families and some children are separated from their families;

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Texas Democratic Party add to its platform that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security should consider all alternatives to the detention of immigrant and asylum-seeking families with children, and must reunite children with their families; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a child who is brought into this country by a family member shall not be subject to criminal sanctions, and the child’s presence in the U.S. shall not be defined as unlawful.

linkage to vote for the topic

What would you ask the Speaker of the House if you had the opportunity?

 

Book Profiles Italian Immigrants to Boston

Author Stephen Puleo is beginning a round of community talks in the Boston area regarding his recently published book The Boston Italians. It tells a story that is all too familiar to those of us that have studied the various periods of migration to the United States over the past couple of centuries.

Early decades of Italian immigrants traveled by steamship to work in America, sent money home, and returned to Italy when work was slow. Puleo quotes a well-known account of an Italian laborer who made $1.25 a day – and lived on 26 cents a day. Immigrants sought the intimacy of village life by replicating it in such places as, for example, Boston’s North End – “the enclave within the enclave,” Puleo said.

Italians faced early prejudice on two fronts: from those who doubted their commitment to America, and from detractors who said the “dark” southern Italian “race” was volatile, crime-prone, and untrustworthy. In World War II, Italian Americans who had not become citizens had to register as “enemy aliens.”

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I’m interested in reading the book as my great grandfather on my dad’s maternal side came from Italy in 1922 and was later rounded up with others from his home country in response to FDR’s issuance of the War Relocation Authority and related Executive Orders during World War II.

February 14, 1942: The U. S. Army’s Western Defense Command sends a memorandum to the Secretary of War recommending the evacuation of “Japanese and other subversive persons” from the Pacific Coast area. February 19, 1942: President Franklin D. Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9066, which empowers the Secretary of War or any military commander authorized by him to designate “military areas” and exclude “any and all persons” from them. Shortly before signing the Executive Order, the President received a memorandum from his advisers which said, “In time of national peril, any reasonable doubt must be resolved in favor of action to preserve the national safety, not for the purpose of punishing those whose liberty may be temporarily affected by such action, but for the purpose of protecting the freedom of the nation, which may be long impaired, if not permanently lost, by nonaction.”

[snip]

March 18, 1942: President Franklin D. Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9102, which establishes the War Relocation Authority (WRA) within the Department for Emergency Management. The WRA is empowered “to provide for the removal from designated areas of persons whose removal is necessary in the interests of national security….” The WRA is further empowered to provide for evacuees’ relocation and their needs, to supervise their activities, and to provide for their useful employment. Milton S. Eisenhower is named director of the WRA.

March 21, 1942:President Roosevelt signs Public Law 77-503, which makes it a federal crime for a person ordered to leave a military area to refuse to do so.

March 22, 1942: The first removal of people of Japanese descent from the designated Pacific Coast area occurs. The people are from the Los Angeles area; they are sent to the Manzanar relocation center in northeastern California. The center comprises a 6000 acre site, enclosed by barbed wire fencing, and within that site a 560 acre residential site with guard towers, search lights, and machine gun installations. During the next eighteen months, about 120,000 people of Japanese descent are removed from the Pacific Coast area to ten relocation centers in California, Arizona, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Arkansas.

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While these acts were mostly aimed at Japanese migrants and their families, others who hailed from sympathetic countries were ensnared in a xenophobic fervor that echoes what we are seeing today. It just goes to show that despicable government actions in the name of Homeland Security are nothing new to the United States.

Viewed as potential threats to national security, men and women, children, the elderly and the infirmed, primarily from the West Coast, were given just a few days to put their affairs in order, gather only the personal belongings they could carry, and report to assembly centers at local racetracks, horse pavilions and fairgrounds. There they remained for four to six months while ten internment camps were constructed to house them in remote parts of California, Arkansas, Arizona, Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, and Colorado. The internees were imprisoned behind barbed wire, in inhumane conditions, guarded by armed soldiers.

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That reminds me of something.

Decades from now, perhaps longer, will we see apologies or retributions offered to the families and workers unfairly and unjustly targeted?

Only if we keep fighting for human rights.

 

Raped Without Consequences in Texas

The local paper in Taylor, Texas gives us the latest account of human rights abuses occurring at the T. Don Hutto Immigrant Concentration Camp. This case, however, is being swept under the rug because ICE agents were exempt from prosecution of sexual assault of prisoners at the time.

The female detainee was examined by an emergency nurse at a Williamson County hospital, who reported to the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office that the woman sustained trauma to her vaginal area.

The female detainee and her son were taken to a hotel before being transported to an “alternative facility,” according to ICE spokeswoman Nina Pruneda. The victim was later deported.

Officially, ICE continued investigating the case under a possible charge of official oppression.

Crime avoided both state and federal jurisdiction

On Monday, May 21, the Williamson County District Attorney’s Office declined to prosecute the case, according to the ICE report.

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The spotlight remains fixed on that inhumane facility over at the T. Don Hutto Blog

 
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Posted by on January 23, 2008 in T. Don Hutto detention center

 

Hutto: America’s Family Prison

Powerful video, courtesy of the T. Don Hutto Blog

 
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Posted by on December 8, 2007 in T. Don Hutto detention center

 

Toy Drive For Children Imprisoned in Texas

Please bookmark the T. Don Hutto Blog that is making sure the stories of families, especially the children, imprisoned in the Texas concentration camp are told. They have organized media campaigns, marches, vigils and other events to raise the flag of outrage against this blatant violation of human rights.

One of their current campaigns is a toy drive for the children within the prison walls. Please help:

“How the ICE Stole Christmas” Toy Drive Reception

Toy Drive for the kids at Hutto Detention Center
December 6th. 6-9pm.

1401 E 34th Street (on the corner of Lafayette and 34th)

Come as you are and bring an unwrapped toy, book, art supply (everything in its original packaging) or a $5-$10 cash donation. There will be adult beverages and sodas, and some yummy snacks. ALL proceeds from this party will be used to buy toys, books, and art supplies for the children imprisoned in the Hutto facility.

Questions should be directed to Bren at 512.296.0147 or cynthia.bren[at]gmail.com

**If you are unable to attend the toy drive reception, but want to contribute any dollar amount to the toy/book/art supply fund (one dollar is not too small), please give any donations to ProCo’s donation collectors: Laura Martin, Maritza Kelley, Caroline O’Connor, or Bren Gorman when you see them in class or in the halls. Also, you can leave donations in a marked envelope in Box 235. All cash donations will go to purchase additional items, and fill in the holes from what we don’t collect at the toy drive. We will use the money to purchase educational toys, books, and art supplies to be given to the kids at Hutto for Christmas.

Thank you in advance for your generosity and Happy Holidays!

 
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Posted by on December 6, 2007 in T. Don Hutto detention center

 

Eight Year Old Separated From Her Mother

The ICE agents at the Hutto Concentration Camp are violating human rights. Again.

DALLAS – An 8-year-old girl was separated from her pregnant mother and left behind for four days at a detention center established to keep immigrant families together while their cases are processed.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say they had to transfer the Honduran woman Oct. 18 because she was potentially disruptive, having twice resisted attempts to deport her.

ICE spokesman Carl Rusnok said guards and ICE staff watched over the child after her mother was removed from the T. Don Hutto Family Residential Facility, a former Central Texas prison where immigrant families with no criminal records are held while their cases are processed.

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Posted by on November 16, 2007 in T. Don Hutto detention center

 

The Power of Creating a Meme

Good news – Virginia has decided not to construct a stand-alone detention center for undocumented migrants. While they are looking for other ways to implement a 2007 version of Operation Wetback, I thought this was an important thing to highlight in the article.

Asked why he [State Senator Ken Stolle] had abandoned his idea of creating a centralized facility, Mr. Stolle said that countless people had told him the idea sounded too much like “a concentration camp” for immigrants.

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Not to toot the horns of pro-migrant blogs too hard, but we have been unapologetic about calling facilities like the proposed one in Virginia and the T. Don Hutto prison in Taylor, TX by their rightful names: concentration camps. It causes an immediate, visceral reaction because imagery of torture and other horrific actions are summoned to the conscience. I’m looking for the link, but I had an argument once with someone online who took exception to my “casual” usage of such a term.

Luckily, I had an online dictionary at my fingertips.

Main Entry: concentration camp
Function: noun
Date: 1901
: a camp where persons (as prisoners of war, political prisoners, or refugees) are detained or confined
It’s an inconvenient truth for the hardliners that they are just the latest example of xenophobic legions that have spanned U.S. history. They’re always devising new ways of disappearing unwanted people in their midst. The Japanese, Chinese, German and Italians know all about the special concoction of justice brewed up by the halls of Washington, D.C. that is only reserved for Others.

Through the perseverant efforts of community members and activists all across the commonwealth and world, we were able to flip some type of switch in the head of Virginia lawmakers this week to stop their inhumane actions by constructing a modern-day concentration camp. We must keep up the fight for justice and human rights that will finally bring millions of people out of the shadows and into full communion with U.S. civil society.

 

Regarding Rainbows

The ACLU is working with local activists to stop the Concentration Camp conditions at the T. Don Hutto detention center in Taylor, Texas. If only the people who wield the official power around this country would do the same…

hat tip to Marisa

[Note: there will be very light posting over the next couple of weeks. I have a lot going on in the offline world; will be back in the saddle around September 10th. Meanwhile, check out the blogroll for your blog fix. Paz]

 
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Posted by on August 27, 2007 in T. Don Hutto detention center