Culture Feature

Mass Hysterectomies at Immigrant Detention Center? Here Are the Facts.

Whistleblower files official complaint on disturbing conditions at Georgia detention center.

Photo by: Metin Ozer / Unsplash

A whistleblower who worked as a nurse at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Georgia has come forward with a claim that immigrants are facing serious medical neglect in regards to the COVID-19 pandemic—as well as an unusually high rate of hysterectomies.

The whistleblower is Dawn Wooten LPN. She has worked at the facility for three years as a licensed practical nurse, and has over 10 years of experience working as a nurse in prisons. She originally worked full time at the Irwin County Detention Center (ICDC) in Ocilla, Georgia but was demoted to an on-call position in mid-July after repeatedly complaining to staff leadership about the dangerous working conditions. Irwin is a private prison which houses immigrants detained by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and is run by LaSalle Corrections, a private company that runs immigration detention facilities in Georgia, Texas, and Louisiana.

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Culture Feature

Fiona Apple Wants to Teach You How to Document ICE Arrests

"Don't stop filming! And saving the unedited version so you can go back and see all the facts."

Fiona Apple joins the Watkins Family Hour band for Bob Dylan's 'Highway 61 Revisited' at Lincoln Center Out of Doors

Sachyn Mital/Shutterstock

Fiona Apple has narrated a new film that explains how to document and record U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests.

The informative video premiered on Vulturethis week, along with an extensive interview with Apple. "I think so many people want to help and they don't know how," said the musician, whose album Fetch the Bolt Cutters dropped to critical acclaim earlier this year.

Available in both English and Spanish—the Spanish version is narrated by activist Erika Andiola—the video, entitled "We Have Rights When Documenting Immigrant Arrests," was made in partnership with the organizations We Have Rights, Brooklyn Defender Services, and WITNESS.

ICE, which was created in response to the September 11 attacks, employs over 20,000 people. Originally created to protect America, it now seems to specialize in terrorizing immigrant families day and night.

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Culture News

Tekashi 6ix9ine Is Afraid of Dying from Coronavirus in Prison, and He's Not Alone.

Healthcare professionals say that nonviolent and at-risk prisoners must released from facilities ASAP.

Katch/Shutterstock

UPDATE: Tekashi 6ix9ine was released from prison this week. He will serve the rest of his sentence on house arrest.

The rapper, whose real name is Daniel Hernandez, was incarcerated in December 2019 for involvement in a violent street gang. His lawyer, Lance Lazzarro, has called for his immediate release due to the fact that Hernandez suffers from asthma, a vulnerability that puts him at risk from coronavirus. Hernandez was also hospitalized last year for bronchitis and sinusitis, and he has been suffering from shortness of breath, one of the main symptoms of COVID-19.

"Mr. Hernandez has been complaining to prison officials this week of shortness of breath, but apparently the warden of his facility will not allow Mr. Hernandez to go to the hospital despite the recommendation of the facility's medical director that Mr. Hernandez be treated by a doctor at a hospital," Lazzaro said.

In Britain, Julian Assange's lawyers are also requesting the WikiLeaks founder's release on the basis of health risks. He will make an application for bail on Wednesday.

Tekashi 6ix9ine Isn't the Only Immunocompromised Prisoner—Most Just Don't Have Lawyers

Tekashi 6ix9ine and Julian Assange are a few of the many current prison inmates facing profound risks from coronavirus. Even if you dislike them personally, their desperate pleas should raise the alarm about the state of prisons on the whole in light of our global pandemic.

As the rest of the world self-isolates and as New York City shuts down, inmates remain in close quarters, making prisoners extremely vulnerable to exposure—and most of them don't have access to a lawyer and press coverage.

Prisons and coronavirus is a particularly dangerous combination, one that could lead to disaster. "Jails and prisons are often dirty and have really very little in the way of infection control," said Homer Venters, former chief medical officer at Rikers' Island. "There are lots of people using a small number of bathrooms. Many of the sinks are broken or not in use. You may have access to water, but nothing to wipe your hands off with, or no access to soap."

Inside prisons, it may be nearly impossible to successfully separate sick patients from well patients. Outbreaks are inevitable, and healthcare in prisons is often lacking to begin with.

Because of this, most public health officials are arguing that the best solution to the problem is mass release. According to the Marshall Project, Mark Stern, the former Assistant Secretary for the Washington State Department of Corrections, has suggested "downsizing" prison populations in order to ensure inmate and staff health and safety. Downsizing might involve releasing low-risk prisoners and proposing alternatives to arrest for certain crimes.

David Falthi, director of the ACLU's National Prison Project, puts it more succinctly. "The only effective response is to reduce the population density by releasing people," Fathi says, "starting with those who are most at risk of severe injury or death if they were to contract the virus." In particular, people who suffer from preexisting health conditions, like Tekashi 6ix9ine, and other vulnerable populations like older people, ought to be sent back to their families where they can isolate and be taken care of.

"Across the U.S. we have built a system of punishment that is traumatic, and this is only increased with the coronavirus," said Becca Fealk, an organizer with the American Friends Service Committee of Arizona. "ADC must do more than just provide soap to reduce the chance of an outbreak. They need to release people, including older/aging adults who can be cared for by their loved ones."

Many prison administrations have insisted that they're complying with the CDC's guidelines with regards to their incarcerated populations, but if prisons aren't providing inmates with basic human rights and living supplies—and if even Tekashi 6ix9ine can't get to a doctor—how can we expect them to take care of people during an outbreak?

Prisons Begin Releasing Inmates—But Is It Enough?

Faced with a public health crisis that could lead to mass deaths, prisons all around the nation and the world are taking note. Alameda County plans to release 250 inmates, per NPR, and Los Angeles jails have also begun releasing nonviolent inmates. In New Jersey, up to 1,000 inmates will be released this Thursday, including those serving for parole violations and those serving municipal court convictions. In some places, prisons and law enforcement are coming together to reduce their inmate population. France has delayed or suspended short-term sentences, reducing daily prison admissions from 200 to 30.

These actions garnered support from Senator Kamala Harris, who tweeted that the Bureau of Prisons should release "all low-risk inmates, including those who are in pretrial detention because they can't afford to make bail."

Some jails are also beginning to waive copays in an effort to make sure their incarcerated populations receive healthcare.

"The state's decision to temporarily suspend the $4 copay — the equivalent of a week's worth of work at the prisoner minimum wage of 10 cents an hour — for people reporting cold and flu-like symptoms is a step in the right direction," said Prison Law Office attorney Corene Kendrick, "but it exposes how counterproductive it is to have such a barrier to seeking care. Unfortunately, prior to the COVID-19 crisis," she added, "We regularly heard from incarcerated people that there were shortages of hygiene supplies such as toilet paper and menstrual products." Many incarcerated people's families wind up paying for their hygiene and healthcare.

The coronavirus crisis is exposing the flaws in many institutions, and mass incarceration is just one of them. All these revelations beg deeper questions about why inmates weren't given these supplies or opportunities in the first place. Activists have been asking these questions for years, and the tragedy of the American carceral system has come to the fore in the case of migrants enclosed on the U.S.-Mexico border and in ICE facilities across the nation.

In three ICE detention centers in New Jersey, prisoners are currently on hunger strike in protest of poor conditions and coronavirus risks. One detainee told Vice that his fellow inmates are being kept in a small room without access to soap or even cleaning supplies.

"They say they are locking us in so we can be protected," said a current hunger striker named Olisa Uzoegwu. "But they don't do anything different. The cells stink. The toilets don't flush. There's never enough soap. They give out soap once a week. One bar of soap a week. How does that make any sense?"

This week, hundreds of doctors and thousands of activist organizations expressed this concern about these issues, flooding ICE with letters demanding that they release their overcrowded detention centers. The only crime committed by inmates in these facilities is usually non-sanctioned entry to the United States. Despite all this, ICE is still making arrests. Agents were spotted tracking down undocumented immigrants in San Francisco the day of the state's lockdown.

A Global Issue and a Gathering Storm: Colombia, France, Iran, and the US Grapple with Prison Risks

But the coronavirus pandemic is a global issue, and prisons all around the world are facing questions about how to handle incarcerated populations and prison employees. In some cases, inmates are taking things into their own hands. In Colombia, a prison riot left 23 inmates dead. Prisoners were rioting in protest of overcrowding and poor health services that they felt left them at an extreme risk. Riots have also broken out in prisons in Brazil and Italy.

The largest prison coronavirus outbreak in the nation is in New York City, with 38 inmates at the Rikers' Island prison testing positive; 20 have been released, and 200 more will be tested today. In As Mayor Bill DeBlasio considers whether to release 200 more people, 551 people serving "city sentences" for minor offenses and another 666 serving for technical parole or probation violations (like missing a drug test or a parole check-in) are trapped in Rikers alone. These are nonviolent offenders who do not deserve to be exposed to a potentially deadly virus. Still, the New York Police Chief has said that his officers will not cease making arrests, even though 70 officers have tested positive for COVID-19.

All across the nation and the world, jails are releasing inmates. Why they—especially nonviolent offenders—were there in the first place begs a different question. For now, the most important thing is to open the jails and let the people go. Short of mass release, prisons should not be arresting new inmates outside of extreme circumstances; they need to take more precautionary measures, institute comprehensive testing and quarantine, and follow protocols like those called for by the Federal Defenders of New York.

"A storm is coming," wrote Ross MacDonald, the chief physician at Rikers. "We have told you who is at risk. Please let as many out as you possibly can."

How to Help

In the meantime, anyone concerned can make a call to their state representative and inquiring about their current efforts; calling airports and prisons using this script from the New Sanctuary Coalition; participating in actions and protests like those being hosted by the Never Again Action, donating to the ACLU, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and other similar organizations.



Music Features

Artists Are Planning to Take Their Music Off Amazon

An organization is calling for artists to remove their music from the website over ties to ICE.

Amazon Music

Amazon, our guardian angel of speedy delivery and on-demand streaming, has been scrutinized for their affiliations with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other government agencies.

A group of musicians, who operate under the organization No Music for ICE, recently stated they were refusing to perform at Amazon-sponsored events. Artists like Jay Som, Car Seat Headrest, and Atmosphere signed the petition, along with countless others. Now, they're taking their activism a step further by choosing to remove their music from the website and encouraging their peers to do the same.

"A mass, collective takedown is an escalation, another step in musicians acting in solidarity with the numerous groups across the country protesting to shut down ICE and end family separations, deportations, and other horrors," reads the organization's statement.

The statement goes on to explain how Amazon has been attempting to compete with streaming giants like Apple Music and Spotify, as well as grow as an established market for purchasing music. Instead, they've only made a small blip on the radar: According to an industry insider who spoke with No Music for ICE, Amazon only accounted for about 4 percent of first-week streams from a handful of major rock acts. Because of this, the statement explains, removing music is an effective way to "kick Amazon where it hurts."

But the timing is important, too; No Music for ICE explains that the mass takedown will start on Black Friday, continuing throughout the holiday season, when a heightened state of consumerism is typically on our minds. The organization's website also includes instructions on how to remove your music from Amazon, for both label-signed artists and totally independent artists. Bringing capitalism and xenophobia to the ground in one fell swoop is surely something to sing about.

News

Everything Mike Pence Reminded Us of During That Oval Office Meeting

When you're trying to figure out how much you owe at the group dinner and your friends have already moved on to fighting about the check

Pence-Trump

Photo by History in HD (Unsplash)

With only 10 days remaining for Congress to pass legislation on government spending, prospects of a shutdown hung in the air during an Oval Office meeting between President Trump and Democratic leadership on Tuesday—as did a palpable tension.

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MUSIC

READY TO POP | Amanda Brown, Erik Dylan & More Offer Songs For Change

Also, OMYO, Glowing Glare & Eli Lieb Extend Real Issues in Song.

We all can use a little empathy in our lives.

Ready to Pop is here to remind you what's important in life. From vicious news cycles and tweets that just won't quit, it's easy to miss the point. Music is becoming increasingly integral to drive home messages that would otherwise be sugar-coated or glossed over. Thanks to a slew of new-ish singers, songwriters, and musicians, we've certainly got a few songs that are bringing social issues into clearer focus. Below, check out our latest obsessions, rated on a (slay) scale of "Super Chill" to "Wig Snatched."


Amanda Brown - "Final Day"

Truth is hard to swallow, but Amanda Brown faces her own, rather unapologetically, on her debut album Dirty Water. Among the many standouts, "Final Day" is a torch-wielding acoustic-drawn song that not only addresses the death of a loved one but ever-increasing police brutality. "They tell ya, 'Hands up!' / You comply / 'Cause it could all change in blinks of an eye," she mourns. The strings and drums dance around in the limelight behind her. It's a rather stark, somber and greatly affecting performance, which will assuredly send chills down your spine.

Slay Scale: Wig Snatched

Follow Amanda Brown on Twitter | Facebook | Instagram


OMYO - "Save Me"

The piano (and eventually the soul-tearing strings) traipse across the desert, leaving a wake of pain and unimaginable lonesomeness behind. "I felt the pain inside of me," pop duo OMYO declare. The song, which is delivered in their authentically transparent spirit, is dedicated to mental health, with proceeds benefiting a UK charity called YoungMinds. Somehow, there is still a stigma around mental health in 2018, but these two musicians aim to help break down those barriers. The track is built on the smoothness of R&B and packs quite the emotional punch. We all could do much better.

Slay Scale: Super Chill

Follow OMYO on Twitter | Facebook | Instagram


Erik Dylan - "Honest Work"

Immigration is one of many hot button issues right now. It's almost unheard of for a country or Americana artist to talk about it -- much less employ such an empathic view. Erik Dylan cuts out a powerful story of one immigrant woman named Marlena who comes to this country to find a better life, framing it around our very long history and early roots of immigrants building this country from the ground up. "Honest Work" is an unflinching perspective of compassion, which bookends his new album, Baseball on the Moon. "What could it hurt?" he questions, making the listener really evaluate their beliefs. It's stunning and raw and truly important for our times.

Slay Scale: Wig Snatched

Follow Erik Dylan on Twitter | Facebook | Instagram


Eli Lieb - "The Nights We Lived"

Pop music gets undue criticism sometimes. Sure, you've got your fluffy stuff, but there are plenty of artists, much like Eli Lieb, who explore life's bitter disasters. With the title cut to his new album, the singer-songwriter doesn't just address one issue, instead he regals stories of abuse, his father's death, and coming to understand the workings of the music industry. It's both incredibly emotional and magnificently endearing, as he tears his past apart to further acknowledge how the bad is as paramount to our journey as the good. "These are the nights we lived," he repeats, hammering home that being alive is truly a stunning blessing.

Slay Scale: Shook

Follow Eli Lieb on Twitter | Facebook | Instagram


Glowing Glare - "You Wanna Sleep?"

There is already a tremendous stigma attached to talking about mental health, but young men face an even tougher battle. Addressing suicide head on, the song mixes a dream-like state with a very grounded approach. "You say you want to be taken away / You say you want to dream, then say you want to feel no more pain," the electronic duo describe. The production is warm and comforting, soothing unease and tension through a calming wave of sound. "Please don't say you got this feeling wrapped around your bones," they later sing, a weepy moment that cuts to the heart of the matter. It's a potent performance that should make us all think a little differently about what it means to want to commit suicide.

Slay Scale: Super Chill

Follow Glowing Glare on Twitter | Facebook


Jason Scott is a freelance music journalist with bylines in Billboard, PopCrush, Ladygunn, Greatist, AXS, Uproxx, Paste and many others. Follow him on Twitter.


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