“I’m hungry here at Clint all the time”: Lawyers use kids’ testimonies to seek access to Border Patrol facilities
Days after lawyers uncovered conditions in a Border Patrol facility that one doctor said “could be compared to torture,” an emergency motion was filed on Wednesday seeking immediate access and inspections of 20 similar sites in Texas. The lawyers claimed Border Patrol officials had told children to take care of strangers’ babies, and that the children lacked access to basic hygiene and nutrition.
The motion follows the legal team’s revelation on June 21 that 350 children had been warehoused in a severely overcrowded adult Border Patrol facility in Clint, Texas. “Children are held for weeks in deplorable conditions, without access to soap, clean water, showers, clean clothing, toilets, toothbrushes, adequate nutrition or adequate sleep,” the attorneys wrote in the filing. “The children, including infants and expectant mothers, are dirty, cold, hungry and sleep-deprived. Because the facilities deny basic hygiene to the children, the flu is spreading among detained class members, who also are not receiving essential medical assessments or prompt medical treatment.”
The lawyers are seeking immediate inspections of all U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities in Texas’ Rio Grande and El Paso sectors, access to the facilities by independent medical professionals, an “intensive case management team” to expedite processing of the children and an order finding the government in contempt of court for violations of a decades-old legal agreement governing the care of unaccompanied migrant children.Peter Schey, the team’s lead attorney, said in a statement to CBS News that interviews with children and parents reveal a “health crisis” in the Border Patrol stations.”The declarations of class members we have gathered over the past two weeks also disclose that they are detained in what they call ‘hieleras,’ or ‘iceboxes,’ or in cages, under appalling, overcrowded, and unsanitary conditions,” Schey said. The filing includes a declaration from a pediatrician who the lawyers say was so concerned about the infants he examined that five were ultimately brought to a local hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit.”The conditions within which [children] are held could be compared to torture facilities. That is, extreme cold temperatures, lights on 24 hours a day, no adequate access to medical care, basic sanitation, water, or adequate food,” wrote the doctor, Dolly Lucio Sevier.The filing also includes testimonials from children and parents who were interviewed at the Clint facility. “I’m hungry here at Clint all the time,” a 12-year-old boy said, according to the lawyers. “I’m so hungry that I have woken up in the middle of the night with hunger….I’m too scared to ask the officials here for any more food.”