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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'They're Not Breathing': Inside the Chaos of ICE Detention Center 911 Calls
On April 28, a nurse at the Aurora ICE Processing Center near Denver called 911. A woman in custody, four months pregnant, had arrived at the facilitys medical unit, bleeding and in pain. As the staff rushed to get vitals, the dispatcher rattled off questions: How old was she? Was the pregnancy high risk? The nurse hesitated: She just came to us three days ago.
On 911 audio obtained by WIRED, the dispatchers voice cuts in:
Is there any sign of life?
Have we heard a heartbeat?
Does she feel any kicking?
We dont have the equipment to do that, the nurse replies.
It was just one incident in a spike of emergencies playing out inside Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers nationwide.
A WIRED investigation into 911 calls from 10 of the nation's largest immigration detention centers found that serious medical incidents are rising at many of the sites. The data, obtained through public records requests, show that at least 60 percent of the centers analyzed had reported serious pregnancy complications, suicide attempts, or sexual assault allegations. Since January, these 10 facilities have collectively placed nearly 400 emergency calls. Nearly 50 of those have involved potential cardiac episodes, 26 referenced seizures, and 17 reported head injuries. Seven calls described suicide attempts or self-harm, including overdoses and hangings. Six others involved allegations of sexual abuseincluding at least one case logged as staff on detainee.
WIRED spoke with immigration attorneys, local migrant advocates, national policy experts, and individuals who have been recently detained or have family currently in ICE custody. Their accounts echoed the data: a system overwhelmed, and at times, seemingly indifferent to medical crises.
Experts believe the true number of medical emergencies is far higher.
The records WIRED reviewed capture only the medical emergencies that resulted in a 911 calltypically made by facility staff. Experts say many serious incidents likely go unreported, citing years worth of reports and independent medical reviews. Even among those that did prompt outside help, a third of all the calls had vague or nonexistent descriptions, with details often withheld by authorities.
On 911 audio obtained by WIRED, the dispatchers voice cuts in:
Is there any sign of life?
Have we heard a heartbeat?
Does she feel any kicking?
We dont have the equipment to do that, the nurse replies.
It was just one incident in a spike of emergencies playing out inside Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers nationwide.
A WIRED investigation into 911 calls from 10 of the nation's largest immigration detention centers found that serious medical incidents are rising at many of the sites. The data, obtained through public records requests, show that at least 60 percent of the centers analyzed had reported serious pregnancy complications, suicide attempts, or sexual assault allegations. Since January, these 10 facilities have collectively placed nearly 400 emergency calls. Nearly 50 of those have involved potential cardiac episodes, 26 referenced seizures, and 17 reported head injuries. Seven calls described suicide attempts or self-harm, including overdoses and hangings. Six others involved allegations of sexual abuseincluding at least one case logged as staff on detainee.
WIRED spoke with immigration attorneys, local migrant advocates, national policy experts, and individuals who have been recently detained or have family currently in ICE custody. Their accounts echoed the data: a system overwhelmed, and at times, seemingly indifferent to medical crises.
Experts believe the true number of medical emergencies is far higher.
The records WIRED reviewed capture only the medical emergencies that resulted in a 911 calltypically made by facility staff. Experts say many serious incidents likely go unreported, citing years worth of reports and independent medical reviews. Even among those that did prompt outside help, a third of all the calls had vague or nonexistent descriptions, with details often withheld by authorities.

https://www.wired.com/story/ice-detention-center-911-emergencies/
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'They're Not Breathing': Inside the Chaos of ICE Detention Center 911 Calls (Original Post)
justaprogressive
Jun 27
OP
BOSSHOG
(43,454 posts)1. Brought to Us By Conservative Values
The One theme of trumps bill, hurt people, make them suffer, spur on death. All so billionaires can get bigger yachts.
Passages
(3,402 posts)2. We seem to hit a new low every day.