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Graham-Levin Amendment
Protest the Graham-Levin Amendment to the Defense bill.
The right of habeas corpus is acknowledged to be the fundamental building-block of democracy.
Without habeas corpus, any one of us can be “disappeared,” detained without charge at the government's whim, and held forever without hope of release.
We urge everyone to call their Senators and Representatives to demand that they strip this “Graham-Levin amendment” out of the Defense bill.
Read the NJCRDC statement for the details.
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NPR - December 5
NPR NEWS
INVESTIGATES DEATH OF JAMAICAN DETAINEE
IN U.S. DETENTION CENTER DUE TO SUBSTANDARD MEDICAL CARE,
ON ALL THINGS CONSIDERED DECEMBER 5
Year-Long Investigation by Daniel Zwerdling Follows His Award-Winning
2004 Special Report on Abuse of Non-Citizens in American Prisons
Washington, D.C.; December 1, 2005 - NPR News senior correspondent Daniel Zwerdling, whose 2004 investigation into abuse of immigrant detainees in U.S. prisons won top honors for investigative journalism and changed Department of Homeland Security policy, continues his reporting on this subject with a new investigation into the death of a detainee at a federal facility after staff apparently neglected national medical standards of care. Zwerdling also cites three other recent cases in which immigrant detainees died, after detention officials neglected to give them prompt medical care, according to witnesses.
The half-hour investigation will air on the Monday, December 5 edition of All Things Considered, continuing that series' use of long-form reports and documentaries. The report will also be available as streaming audio on www.NPR.org beginning that day at approximately 7PM (ET).
On November 17 and 18, 2004, Zwerdling reported on harsh conditions in two New Jersey prisons experienced by non-citizens detained by the Department of Homeland Security on administrative charges in advance of deportation. Zwerdling revealed that guards were terrorizing these prisoners with attack dogs - in some cases, ordering the dogs to maul them - and beatings on handcuffed detainees while other guards watched. The report was honored with numerous awards including the Edward R. Murrow award for investigative reporting from the Radio-Television News Directors Association, the IRE award from Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. and the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism award for investigative reporting from the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation. Within two days of the broadcasts, the DHS banned the use of dogs around detainees, and officials in Hudson County, NJ announced that 11 guards would be disciplined.
In this new follow-up investigation, Zwerdling examines how Richard Rust, a 34-year-old Jamaican detainee in Louisiana's Oakdale Federal Detention Center, collapsed and died after government employees apparently disregarded national medical standards by neglecting to give him basic emergency care. Prison employees subsequently put dozens of immigrants at Oakdale in near-solitary confinement after they protested what had happened.
Zwerdling reconstructed what happened by tracking down current and former detainees, now scattered across the U.S. and the Caribbean, who say they witnessed all or part of what happened to Richard Rust. They all tell the same story about Rust's final hours and how DHS violated its own policy, posted on its website, that "detention staff will.respond to health-related emergencies within a four-minute response time." No Oakdale, Bureau of Prisons or DHS officials would comment on-air for the investigation and, at most, provided brief e-mail responses to some questions. A former state chief medical officer for prisons, however, comments about legal ramifications of potential deliberate indifference to serious medical needs and other experts discuss widespread evidence that detainees have become sick, and some have died, due to similar neglect.
"The earlier series revealed how harshly Homeland Security's detention system treats some detainees, but even the immigrants who were mauled or beaten didn't die," said Zwerdling. "Richard Rust and three other detainees died within months of each other, in troubling circumstances, yet officials throughout the detention system don't seem to think that they need to be held accountable and explain to the public exactly what happened."
Producer of the investigation is Katherine Davidson; editor is Ellen Weiss.
All Things Considered is NPR's signature afternoon news magazine and reaches nearly 11 million listeners weekly on 625 NPR Member stations across the country. It also can be heard in more than 100 countries through NPR Worldwide.
Read the transcript and hear it.
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NJCRDC MEETING - December 20
General Meeting
Tuesday, December 20, 2005 7:30 PM
At: Christ Church
5 Paterson Street, New Brunswick, NJ
Enter through the garden gate on Paterson Street.
Newcomers Welcome
Easy access via train. Take the NJ Transit Northeast Corrider Line to New Brunswick.
From the North, walk down the steps near the front of the train. Turn left (under the stone bridge) and walk to Albany Street.
B. Turn left on Albany and walk one block to George Street. Turn right on George Street and walk two blocks to Paterson Street. Turn left on Paterson and walk downhill to the church on the left side of the street.
From the South, enter the station after exiting the train and walk down the steps and out the door. Albany Street will be on your left. Follow the directions in 'B' above.
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Equal Rights newsletter
NJCRDC Equal Rights newsletter
The October 2005 newsletter is now available.
- NJCRDC meets with Monmouth Officials, visits Detainees.
- Hunger Strike at Passaic County Jail.
- Office of Inspector General Audits Detention Facilities.
- Massive hunger strike by immigrant detainees at Guantanamo.
You may read it here.
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Coming Events
See events that are coming up.
Click on "Calendar" at the left.
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Statement
Statement from New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee on OIG being expelled from Passaic County Jail,
August 17, 2005
Passaic County Jail has been an ongoing site of civil rights abuses against immigrant detainees. After the national press expose on the use of attack dogs at Passaic County Jail in November 2004, the Office of Inspector General announced an audit of the jail. We are, however, deeply concerned about the OIG's lack of commitment to a thorough and publicly accountable audit at Passaic County Jail. For the last eight months we have been diligently attempting to cooperate with the OIG only to be continually rebuffed. The OIG has not demonstrated a willingness to seriously investigate the abuses at Passaic County Jail. The lack of governmental oversight of the Department of Homeland Security contract at Passaic County Jail is deeply disturbing.
NJCRDC has repeatedly called for a termination of Passaic County's contract with DHS. The lack of government oversight is yet another reason that this contract should be terminated.
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Update on OIG Audit
OIG fails to cooperate with NJCRDC
Auditors from the OIG (Office of Inspector General) for the Department of Homeland Security have been in New Jersey conducting the long awaited audit of Hudson County Correctional Center and Passaic County Jail. Although we have done our best to cooperate with the auditors, NJCRDC has not been allowed to witness any interviews, although many detainees have requested a witness.
Thanks to all of you who volunteered to be witnesses. We regret that we could not use your services.
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Suicide at Passaic County Jail
NJCRDC Statement on Suicide at Passaic County Jail - February 17, 2005
NJCRDC was deeply outraged to hear of the suicide of Mr. Heq Sung Soo at Passaic County Jail on Wednesday, February 16, 2005. But we were not surprised. The negligent treatment by ICE, all the hospitals involved and the Passaic County Jail led to the death of an innocent man who could not speak English and was systematically denied appropriate medical care. The only possible result of holding innocent people as criminals without access to constitutional protection is torture and death.
The death of Heq Sung Soo is nothing less than a war crime. Those who lead ICE and Passaic County Jail must be held legally accountable for this death and all the illegal detentions of immigrants which have effectively shredded the Bill of Rights. We cannot remain silent without being stripped of our humanity.
NJCRDC continues to document horrible conditions at Passaic County Jail. Like Heq Sung Soo, many other detainees there are systematically denied appropriate medical care. They sleep in containers on the floor due to overcrowding. They are physically and mentally abused by jail guards and officials. Although the use of dogs to terrorize and torture has stopped, no one responsible has been prosecuted, and reports of beatings and abuse continue. Only the freeing of all the detainees and the end of the practice of detention without charge will stop the ongoing abuse, torture and death.
We call for an immediate investigation of all parties involved in Mr. Heq Sung Soo’s death. We call for an immediate termination of ICE’s contract with Passaic County Jail. We call for the immediate release of all the detainees. We must stop the torture now before another innocent person dies.
Additional Information
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Press Release
Immigration Authorities End Torture-by-Dogs of Detainees in US Jails
The immigrant rights’ movement won a significant victory when the Dept. Of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement arm directed that all jails in the US holding immigrant detainees cease to use dogs around the detainees. View the December 6 NJCRDC
press release
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NPR Reports
Daniel Zwerdling Reports on Immigrant Detainees at Passaic and Hudson
November 17 and 18 on "All Things Considered", Daniel Zwerdling reports on immigrant detainees at Passaic and Hudson County jails in New Jersey. Featuring interviews with Rosendo Lewis, who was attacked by dogs at Passaic, Hemnauth Mohabir, and other detainees. You can listen to show at Part I (11/17/2004)
Part II (11/18/2004)
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El Diario Reports
Eva Sanchis Reports on Immigrant Abuse
November 18 and 19 in "El Diario/La Prensa", Eva Sanchis reports on immigrant abuse at Passaic and Hudson County jails in New Jersey. Featuring testimoney of Rosendo Lewis, Mark Gary Hough, and Hemnauth Mohabir. Read the reports.
Spanish
More
English
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DETAINEE NEWSLETTER
NEW! Issue 2
Read and Distribute the Detainee Newsletter
Issue 2
Issue 1
This newsletter is a way to spread the word, by encouraging detainees to speak out and by making their stories available to a wider public.
We ask all our members and friends to help with the distribution of this newsletter. Please feel free to download a copy, e-mail it to friends and other organizations, print it, place it in public places, mail it, read it at local gatherings. Only with your help can we stop these injustices.
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STATEMENT ON TORTURE AND THE DETENTIONS
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PLEASE HELP
WE NEED SPANISH SPEAKERS for our Emergency Response hotline.
If you can help please contact NJ Civil Rights Defense Committee at
info@nj-civilrights.org
Organizing gets results... but it takes a lot of work. We have done a lot of work but there is still a lot of work to do. We need your help! Come to a meeting, join a committee, get involved.
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In The NewsDec. 5, 2005 The Death of Richard Rust National Public Radio (All Things Considered) Story
Oct. 30, 2005 In City Jails a Question of Force The New York Times Story
Oct. 19, 2005 Jail ends kosher and halal meals Herald News Story
Oct. 1, 2005 Showdown at Sheriff's Plaza Counterpunch Story
Aug. 26, 2005 Speziale may allow review of jail conditions to resume Herald News Story
Aug. 26, 2005 Sheriff considers lifting ban on federal auditors at jail Herald News Story
Aug. 26, 2005 Detainee Justice Bergen County Record Op-Ed
Aug. 24, 2005 2 men say Passiac Jail denied them AIDS drugs Herald News Story
Aug. 17, 2005 Speziale boots feds probing alleged abuse of detainees Herald News Story
Jul. 20, 2005 Judge Dread Counterpunch Story
Jun. 29, 2005 Jail officials deny beating of immigration detainee Herald News Story
Jun. 3, 2005 Federal detainees, county headaches The Star-Ledger (NJ.com) Story
Apr. 26, 2005 Nowhere to go Herald News Story
Mar. 16, 2005 Immigrant detainee breaks fast in Passaic Herald News Story
Mar. 15, 2005 Jailed immigrant on hunger strike Herald News Story
Mar. 12, 2005 Judge rules businessman must leave Home News Tribune Story
Mar. 11, 2005 Deporting Lin would be unjust Home News Tribune Op-Ed
Mar. 11, 2005 Deportation case focuses on definition of torture New York Times Story
Feb. 25, 2005 Carcel de Passaic en la mira El Diario Story
Feb. 20, 2005 Brooklyn's Abu Graib New York Daily News Story
Feb. 16, 2005 Recently released from prison, Cuban refugees who came to the United States in the 1980 Mariel boatlift are left to fend for themselves The Times-Picayune Story
Feb. 15, 2005 12 Cuban detainees released in Newark following court ruling Star-Ledger Story
Feb. 12, 2005 Testimony danger is cited Home News Tribune Story
Jan. 25, 2005 Immigrant may get Feb. ruling Home News Tribune Story
Jan. 25, 2005 Expert: If deported, man faces torture The Star Ledger Story
Jan. 24, 2005 A Cry for Mercy The Star Ledger Story
Jan. 23, 2005 Tiananmen organizer faces U.S. expulsion The Star Ledger Story
Jan. 15, 2005 Detainee records request is denied Herald News Story
Jan. 12, 2005 Supreme Court Limits Detention of Immigrants The Boston Globe Story
Dec. 17, 2004 Borough backs store owner in deportation fight Home News Tribune Story
Dec. 7, 2004 Detainee rights battle The Bergen Herald Story
Dec. 7, 2004 Jails must stop using dogs near immigration detainees News Day (Associated Press Article) Story
Dec. 6, 2004 Celebran triunfo de inmigrantes El Diario/La Prenza Story
Nov. 18, 2004 Perros para torturar a detenidos El Diario/La Prensa Story
Jun. 29, 2004 Journalist Deported Home News Tribune Story
May. 23, 2004 Journalist from Sierra Leone fears Deportation and Reprisals Home News Tribune Story
Mar. 23, 2004 Detainee Newsletter NJCRDC Article
Mar. 14, 2004 Inside Guantanamo The Observer Story
Mar. 14, 2004 Inside Guantanamo The Observer Story
Feb. 16, 2004 Detainees in, out of county jail The Herald News Article
Feb. 3, 2004 Professors take aim at Patriot Act The Morning Call Article
Feb. 1, 2004 AFTER THE WAR Herald News Story
Dec. 8, 2003 Southern Discomfort: Local Deportees Sent Out of State City Limits WEEKLY Story
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