Immigration advocates in California are deeply alarmed over the legality of a newly announced $19 million contract between Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and GEO Group, Inc. to continue the operations of the Mesa Verde Detention Facility in Bakersfield, California. Following the City of McFarland’s decision to end its contract with ICE, which had made the city an intermediary between ICE and GEO, the facility faced closure because California’s Dignity Not Detention Act prohibits any new state or local government contracts for ICE detention.
ICE did not provide any information in advance of the sudden announcement that a direct contract had already been entered into by ICE and GEO, despite numerous inquiries from stakeholders. Critically, the direct contract was entered into without the competitive bidding process required by federal law. ICE cited “unusual and compelling urgency” as the basis for circumventing the usual and mandatory bidding requirements and executing the one-year contract.
In response to the complete lack of transparency that has taken place with regard to the fate of the Mesa Verde facility and ICE’s execution of a direct, multimillion-dollar contract with the notorious GEO Group, a coalition of advocates issued the following statement:
Mesa Verde Detention Facility is yet another example of ICE and private prison companies keeping the public in the dark in order to continue profiting off of the mass incarceration of immigrants. Following months of inquiries by congressional offices, community advocates and the media regarding the future of the facility, ICE has shown it is incapable of transparency and accountability. The recent unilateral contract executed by ICE and GEO Group raises serious state and federal legal questions that warrant immediate inquiry and action. The one year, $19,377,500 agreement was based on dubious legal authority and seems to be solely focused on continuing the operation of this facility, regardless of legal restrictions, procedures, or the well-being of detained individuals.
In attempting to justify the contract, ICE claimed: “Delaying award of a sole-source contract would require ICE to relocate almost 400 detainees to other facilities, some with serious medical conditions, only to be relocated once the new contract is awarded. This would result in serious injury to the detainees as well as incur an unnecessary serious financial burden to cover the cost of relocating such a large population.”
ICE’s statement misleadingly suggests that there are no alternatives to detention for the nearly 400 individuals at Mesa Verde and that the only solution is to reward a corporation set up to profit from civil detention. The for-profit detention of immigrants is reprehensible and dehumanizing, and our federal government should be held accountable for its underhanded award of millions, in circumvention of federal law, to a corporation that recorded revenues of $2.33 billion in 2018, while being sued for forcing immigrants to work for $1 a day in their facilities.
The fact that ICE used the medical conditions of detained individuals as part of the legal basis to bypass the public bidding process is bitterly ironic, as ICE has the power to free those with serious medical needs from detention, and yet refuses to do so. In addition, the California Attorney General’s office released a report on detention conditions this month, which noted that the most recent inspection of Mesa Verde by ICE’s own Office of Detention Oversight found the facility deficient with regard to medical care.
ICE should not be allowed to outsource the dirty work of immigration detention to third parties outside the bounds of federal law and without transparency. We demand that ICE take full responsibility for the detention apparatus and deportation machine that it has created. If it is unwilling to do so then it must accept freedom as the only alternative to the dehumanization and detention of immigrants.
Media contacts:
Jose Servin
Social Media & Communications Coordinator
California Immigrant Youth Justice Alliance
(714) 728-2520
Liz Martinez
Director of Advocacy & Strategic Communications Freedom for Immigrants
(956) 572-4349
Hamid Yazdan Panah
Regional Director, Northern California Rapid Response and Immigrant Defense Network
(415) 782-8912
Signatories:
- Freedom For Immigrants
- California Immigrant Youth Justice Alliance: Home – CIYJA
- Northern California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice (NCCIJ)
- A. L. Costa Community Development. Ctr.
- Action Team for Immigrants’ Rights UUC Ventura
- African Advocacy Network
- Alianza Americas
- Alianza Sacramento
- Arab Resource & Organizing Center
- Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Los Angeles
- Asian Law Caucus: Asian Americans Advancing Justice
- Central Valley Immigrant Integration Collaborative (CVIIC
- Asian Pacific Islander Legal Outreach
- Bend the Arc: Jewish Action of Southern California
- Buen Vecino
- California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation
- Carecen of Northern CA
- Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County
- Catholic Worker Movement
- Center for Gender & Refugee Studies – California
- Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice
- Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto
- Council on American-Islamic Relations-Central California
- Dolores Street Community Services
- Education and Leadership Foundation
- Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin
- Faith in the Valley
- Fiesta Familiar de la Costa Central
- Friends of Broward Detainees
- Houston DSA EcoSocialists
- Humboldt Rapid Response Network
- Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC)
- Coastside Immigration Action Group
- Immigration Committee of National Lawyers Guild SF Chapter
- Immigration Task Force of Monterey County
- Indivisible San Fernando Valley
- Innovation Law Lab
- Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice
- Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity
- Justice & Diversity Center of The Bar Association of San Francisco
- Kehilla Community Synagogue
- Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA)
- Kern Welcoming and Extending Solidarity to Immigrants
- La Raza Centro Legal, San Francisco
- Los Angeles Raids Rapid Response Network
- La Raza Community Resource Center
- LAGAI — Queer Insurrection
- Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area
- Legal Services for Children
- Ministers of Claremont United Church of Christ
- Mujeres Unidas y Activas: MUA
- NorCal Resist
- North Bay Organizing Project
- North Bay Rapid Response Network: Napa, Solano and Sonoma Counties
- Northern California Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association
- University of San Francisco immigration and deportation defense clinic
- Northern California Rapid Response and Immigrant Defense Network (NCRRIDN)
- Immigrant Center for Women and Children (ICWC)
- Oakland Community Organizations
- Oakland Law Collaborative
- Orange County Rapid Response Network
- Pacifica Social Justice
- Pajaro Valley Rapid Response Network
- Pangea Legal Services
- Queers Undermining Israeli Terrorism (QUIT!)
- Rapid Response Network in Santa Clara County
- Rapid Response Network of Monterey County
- Refugee Support Network
- Resilience OC
- San Diego Rapid Response Network
- SFV Indivisible – Immigration
- California Raid’s Response Steering Committee
- Social Justice Collaborative
- Southern Central Coast Rapid Response Network
- Step Up! Sacramento
- The Multicultural Center of Marin
- UFW Foundation
- United Now for Immigrant Rights
- Watsonville Law Center
- WE Rise SF/ Labor Center for Immigrant Justice
###
The Justice & Diversity Center (JDC) advances fairness and equality by providing pro bono legal services to low-income people and educational programs that foster diversity in the legal profession. JDC is the largest legal services providers in San Francisco. JDC’s primary purpose is the delivery of free legal services to low-income San Franciscans, as well as the non-profits that serve them. JDC delivers free legal services through its Legal Services Programs division, which consists of the Pro Bono Legal Services Program, Homeless Advocacy Project, and the Immigration Program. JDC provides enrichment programs to diverse youth and young adults through its Diversity Educational Programs. JDC’s programs serve approximately 9,500 disadvantaged San Franciscans a year, with the overarching goal of assisting the community’s most vulnerable members with accessing the judicial system and strengthening their personal, professional, and economic security.
The Bar Association of San Francisco (BASF) is a nonprofit voluntary membership organization of attorneys, law students, and legal professionals in the San Francisco Bay Area. Founded in 1872, BASF enjoys the support of more than 7,500 individuals, law firms, corporate legal departments, and law schools. Through its board of directors, its committees, and its volunteer legal services programs and other community efforts, BASF has worked actively to promote and achieve equal justice for all and oppose discrimination in all its forms, including, but not limited to, discrimination based on race, sex, disability, and sexual orientation. BASF provides a collective voice for public advocacy, advances professional growth and education, and attempts to elevate the standards of integrity, honor, and respect in the practice of law.