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How the coronavirus spread through one immigration facility

Gregory Arnold, a former guard at the Otay Mesa Detention Center, in May
Gregory Arnold, a former guard at the Otay Mesa Detention Center, in May.
(Gregory Bull / Associated Press)
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Gregory Arnold walked into the warden’s office April 1 as the coronavirus ripped through one of the largest immigration detention centers in the United States. Waiting with about 40 guards to begin his shift, he heard a captain say that face masks were prohibited.

Incredulous, Arnold and a guard who had recently given birth wanted to hear it from the boss. Arnold told Warden Christopher LaRose that he was 60 years old and lived with an asthmatic son.

“Well, you can’t wear the mask, because we don’t want to scare the employees, and we don’t want to scare the inmates and detainees,” Arnold recalled the warden saying.

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“With all due respect, sir, that’s ridiculous,” Arnold retorted.

He said he wanted to wear a mask and gloves, and “everyone else should be doing the same.” But the warden was unmoved. And in the weeks that followed, Otay Mesa Detention Center would see the first big outbreak among U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s 221 detention centers.

The origins of the outbreak are uncertain, but accounts of workers and detainees reveal shortcomings in how the private company that manages the center handled the disease: There was an early absence of facial coverings and a lack of cleaning supplies, and symptomatic detainees were mixed with others.

The Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego in 2017.
Workers said managers frequently discouraged them from wearing masks.
(Elliot Spagat / Associated Press)
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Other centers would follow with their own outbreaks, and a Homeland Security Department internal watchdog survey of 188 detention centers taken in mid-April echoed some of what the Associated Press found at Otay Mesa: 19% of facility directors said there weren’t enough standard surgical masks, 32% said there weren’t enough N95 respirator masks, and 37% felt there wasn’t enough hand sanitizer for detainees.

Like they are at prisons, living conditions at these facilities are cramped — but the people held in immigration detention centers aren’t accused of any crime. They wait to appear before an immigration judge to argue that they should be allowed to remain in the country.

Otay Mesa sits on a tucked-away periphery of San Diego amid vehicle storage lots, a gas-fired power plant, a state prison, county jail and juvenile detention camp. The average daily population of 956 detainees last year made it ICE’s 11th-busiest detention center.

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The squat, two-story facility — managed under contract by CoreCivic Inc. and shared with U.S. Marshals Service inmates — is surrounded by two layers of chain-link fence topped by razor wire. Rooms with two to four bunk beds open into common areas with televisions, sofas and board games.

Margarita Smith, a guard who was named CoreCivic’s Otay Mesa employee of the year in 2019, said managers frequently discouraged workers from wearing masks. The topic came up during briefings in March.

“They didn’t want anyone wearing masks,” said Smith, who was tapped in January by CoreCivic to lead an employee morale committee. “They said it would frighten the detainees and make them think that we’re sick or something.”

In a court filing, LaRose, the warden, said policies on masks evolved with guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Workers were required to wear them around quarantined detainees; masks were optional for other employees starting the third week of March, he said — a statement that Arnold and Smith dispute.

Arnold said he wore a mask after learning March 31 about the detention center’s first case, an employee who handed out equipment to guards starting their shifts. Unaware of any ban on facial coverings, detainees thanked him.

“I was disgusted,” Arnold said. “It’s obvious this thing was ramping up. I knew it was going to happen. I could just tell.”

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The contractor gave masks to detainees April 10 on the condition that they sign an English-language liability waiver, according to several detainees, then quickly retreated after a tense showdown.

“Everyone was screaming,” said Issis Zavala of Honduras, who refused to sign but was released with an ankle bracelet because a 2007 bout of tuberculosis made her vulnerable to COVID-19. “They said, ‘You just sign it. OK, if you don’t want to sign, we’ll just go.’”

On March 17, the day San Diego limited public gatherings to 50 people and closed restaurants, Otay Mesa colleagues gathered to grill the warden. Smith recalled wondering why so many people — including about half the lieutenants — were allowed to meet so closely together in one room.

When an employee pressed for clean rags, the warden answered twice that there was no need, because the chemicals used for cleaning were very powerful. Others asked when they would get more wipes and gels.

Gloves were hard to find, Smith said. Arnold said the ones he saw were too small for his hands. Dispensers of hand sanitizer were often empty.

Feeling that the warden wasn’t taking the virus seriously, Smith, 48, felt she had no choice. She has asthma, had missed a week of work in early March with pneumonia and had been sick off and on since November. She quit.

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“I thought to myself, I’m not going to get sick again,” she said. “I just had a feeling that things weren’t going to go good.”

The detainees, of course, had not choice but to stay. Carlos Gonzalez Gutierrez, Mexico’s consul general in San Diego, wrote to ICE on April 16 about a “generalized fear” among detainees, raising concerns about mixing ill and asymptomatic detainees and requiring liability waivers for masks. A consulate hotline received more than 100 calls.

Common grievances included lack of personal hygiene products and masks and insufficient social distancing, Gonzalez Gutierrez said. Detainees complained that they were instructed to drink saltwater to deal with pain, and that employees were not wearing personal protective equipment.

CoreCivic spokeswoman Amanda Gilchrist said the contractor rigorously followed the guidance of health officials and ICE. She noted that the CDC didn’t fully embrace masks until the first week of April and said employees and detainees do not have to sign a waiver to receive face coverings.

“We have responded to this unprecedented situation appropriately, thoroughly and with care for the safety and well-being of those entrusted to us and our communities,” she said.

Victor Rodriguez, 44, was among 35 detainees who went on a five-day hunger strike starting April 4. The Guatemalan man was upset about a detainee who worked in the dining hall handling food and appeared to have a fever, for which he was given ibuprofen. (CoreCivic said it prohibited detainees with symptoms from working in the kitchen and that it followed CDC guidelines on cleaning and disinfectants.)

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Authorities insist detainees had plenty of free soap — 23,300 bars from March 24 to April 23 — but Rodriguez said the bar he got daily was barely enough to wash his hands or shower. Requests for hand sanitizer were denied because authorities worried they could be used for homemade alcohol.

Elizabeth Cruz, 22, said a detainee who was coughing badly in her cell the first week of April was removed for about a week, returned and removed again before testing positive for COVID-19.

Cruz said she reported chest pain and difficulty breathing for two weeks but couldn’t get more than allergy medication.

“I know my body, and I am not well,” she remembered telling a nurse, who told her there was nothing more she could do.

Cruz, of El Salvador, eventually tested positive and was placed in isolation with eight other infected detainees.

The virus has brought renewed scrutiny to ICE. The agency housed an all-time high of more than 56,000 people last year, with more than 500,000 bookings over a 12-month period, but policies to severely limit asylum and recent releases aimed at controlling the virus reduced the population to 22,340.

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Overall, ICE has had 3,596 detainees test positive for COVID-19 — 27% of those tested. Of those, 967 are currently in custody; the rest were released, deported or have recovered.

Chad Wolf, acting Homeland Security secretary, told reporters in May in San Diego that ICE stopped taking detainees at Otay Mesa and “one or two others” and will continue to release older and medically fragile detainees. ICE cut the population at Otay Mesa by more than half in three months, to 376 detainees from 761 on April 1.

For weeks, Otay Mesa had the dubious distinction of the most cases in the ICE system, but the spread effectively stopped; 168 detainees have tested positive since the start of the outbreak, as have 11 ICE employees and more than 30 CoreCivic workers. ICE said in a statement that increased testing and isolating detainees who tested positive contributed to improved conditions.

Cases are surging at facilities in Farmville, Va., where 315 detainees have tested positive; Anson, Texas, with 290; Eloy, Ariz., with 250; and Houston, with 206. At Eloy, 128 of about 315 employees had tested positive as of earlier this month, according to CoreCivic, which manages the facility.

Arnold resigned after his April 1 confrontation with the warden, just as the virus was tearing through Otay Mesa. Smith took a two-week leave before resigning, torn over her loyalty to the job and what she considers CoreCivic’s tendency to “cut corners.” Both have sued the company in federal court.

CoreCivic will address the former guards’ accounts in court, Gilchrist said, but “we can say generally that we deny their specious and sensationalized allegations that are designed to obtain a favorable outcome in court.”

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Daniel Struck, an attorney for the warden, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Smith and Arnold believe the spread started with someone from outside of Otay Mesa — perhaps a guard or a lawyer. Smith called detainees “sitting ducks.”

“After the first officer got it, it was like a fire there,” Smith said. “It just took off after that.”

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