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Completing a month-long probe into allegations of abuse at a detention facility in Staunton, Virginia, state investigators confirmed that immigrant children were strapped to chairs with bags placed over their head, as several had alleged—but claimed that this treatment did not meet the definition of abuse.
Several immigrants, some as young as 14, alleged in June that staffers at Shenendoah Valley Juvenile Center (SVJC) had beaten them while they were handcuffed and placed them in solitary confinement for long periods of time. A child development specialist at the facility also told the Associated Press that she saw several children there with broken bones.
“The fact that they conducted all interviews under the watchful eye of detention staff and failed to even talk to counsel who have collected evidence and litigated the case for nearly a year, demonstrates a lack of seriousness in the review.” —Jonathan Smith, Washington Lawyers’ Committee
According to the AP, many detainees had been sent to the facility after the federal government accused them of being gang members—but a staff member told a Senate subcommittee in April that the immigrants in the center “weren’t necessarily identified as gang-involved individuals.”
Several plaintiffs in a lawsuit against SVJC which began last November, represented by the Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs, were held there under both the Obama and Trump administrations, between 2015 and 2018.
The abuse allegations drew widespread condemnation, with Daily Beast reporter Kelly Weill calling SVJC “Abu Ghraib for eighth graders” and Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam calling on state officials to conduct a thorough investigation into the conditions at the center.
The review found that a “restraint chair” is sometimes used at the facility, and “a mesh spit guard can be placed on the resident’s head.” A 23-hour incident of solitary confinement was also identified. But the state “found no abuse or neglect had taken place.”
The Washington Lawyers’ Committee said Monday that the investigation was “deeply flawed.”
“The fact that they conducted all interviews under the watchful eye of detention staff and failed to even talk to counsel who have collected evidence and litigated the case for nearly a year, demonstrates a lack of seriousness in the review,” said Jonathan Smith, the group’s executive director.
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