This has to change, my friends. We must all work to change this. Let's get this president out of office as his policies and practices are killing these children, our children. And let's start by turning up the temperature in their otherwise freezing cells that are making them sick.
-Angela Valenzuela
16-year-old migrant boy died alone, next to border facility toilet, autopsy report reveals
Sixteen-year-old Carlos
Gregorio Hernández Vásquez died next to a toilet, alone, in an immigration
detention cell. In video reviewed as part of his autopsy, Texas Monthlyreports, the
boy “is seen lying on the floor, vomiting on the floor, and walks over to
the commode, where he sits and later lies back and expires.” His May death
makes him the fifth child to die after
being taken into U.S. custody since December.
Carlos
crossed the border on May 13 and had been detained at the Rio Grande Valley
Sector's Central Processing Center for nearly a week—in violation of the
72-hour limit imposed by law—when he began to feel sick. ”That day, a
nurse practitioner found that he had a 103-degree fever, and he tested positive
for the flu. He was prescribed Tamiflu and transferred to the Border Patrol
station at Weslaco. Hernandez died the next morning,” when he was found by
officers.
His
autopsy concluded that he “succumbed to the flu, complicated by pneumonia and
sepsis, on or near the toilet of his South Texas Border Patrol cell.” Texas
Monthly notes that Border Patrol apparently never made an effort
to hospitalize the boy when he became sick, in fact moving him
to Weslaco even though a bed had reportedly been designated for him by the
Office of Refugee Resettlement, where kids are supposed to be transferred from
Border Patrol custody.
The
deaths of migrant children after being taken into U.S. custody have been
unprecedented, because “before December, no child had died in Border Patrol
custody in a decade.” Seven-year-old Jakelin Ameí Rosmery Caal
Maquin’s autopsy found that
she died of streptococcal sepsis in December. That same month, 8-year-old Felipe
Gómez Alonzo died of the flu and “a rapid, progressive infection that led
to organ failure,” his autopsy report said.
In
May, Wilmer Josue Ramirez Vasquez had been held in Border Patrol custody for
several days but became so sick he had to be hospitalized, Daily Kos’ Laura Clawson wrote at the
time, eventually dying in the hospital from “multiple
intestinal and respiratory infectious diseases.” According to an El Paso County
medical examiner’s office report, Wilmer had influenza, parasites, and E.
coli bacteria. He was just two and a half years old.
But
migrant children have also died outside of Border Patrol custody. In
April, 16-year-old Juan de León Gutiérrez became sick while in ORR custody after
crossing to the U.S. alone. He “was treated for several days at a Corpus
Christi hospital before he died,” Texas Monthly said. “The
Nueces County medical examiner said no autopsy was performed because Gutierrez
was not in custody at the time of his death and died of natural causes.”
Ten-year-old
Darlyn Cristabel Cordova-Valle died while in ORR custody, with
an official from the Department of Health and Human Services, which
oversees the ORR, claiming “that the girl had a history of congenital
heart defects,” and that, "following a surgical procedure,
complications left the child in a comatose state.” But the Trump
administration failed to publicly disclose her death for eight months,
reporting her Sept. 29 death only after Carlos and Wilmer’s deaths.
Children
have also died after going into Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.
Last May, nearly 2-year-old Mariee Juárez died in a hospital, several
weeks after becoming sick in the agency’s custody at the South Texas
Family Residential Center, a migrant family jail in Texas. In testimony to Congress this month, her
mom Yazmin said she watched Mariee become “limp and hot,” with ICE
releasing them only after the child’s condition had deteriorated.
“A veteran
forensic pathologist who reviewed Hernandez’s autopsy,” Texas Monthly continued, “as
well as the three other autopsies available for migrant children who died in
custody, said she was alarmed at the conditions the children were kept
in.” Dr. Judy Melinek said, “In my opinion, there needs to be a
public health audit of the policies and conditions in these migrant camps and a
forensic review of all migrant deaths.”
These children came to the U.S. for safety
and new lives—some coming here all by themselves—and our nation failed to
provide them safety, dignity, or compassion. The conditions in places
similar to where they were jailed have not improved, with kids saying they’re
still going hungry, still being abused by officers, and still shivering in
freezing cells, meaning that more kids may lose their lives.
Remember Carlos. Remember Jakelin. Remember Felipe. Remember Wilmer.
Remember Juan. Remember Darlyn. Remember Mariee.
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