Weekend Read: No one cares if you miscarry. No one cares if you ever go home.
Tylenol for the pain. Diapers for the blood. Towels for underwear.
That鈥檚 what guards gave Nancy Gonzalez Hidalgo when she miscarried in prison.
鈥淚t was the worst day of my life,鈥 she told the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 Liz Vinson.
Vinson charted Hidalgo鈥檚 path from the gas station where agents arrested her, to the prison where she miscarried, to the immigrant detention center where guards threatened her and told her she had no rights.
More than a year after she entered the U.S. for a vacation on a tourist visa, Hidalgo is still being held captive at Irwin County Detention Center in Ocilla, Georgia. She just wants to go home 鈥 back to Mexico.
We took on Hidalgo鈥檚 case through our Southeast聽Immigrant Freedom Initiative, and where our attorneys worked to finally get Hidalgo the medical care she still hadn鈥檛 received after her miscarriage. As Vinson writes:
Immediately upon her arrival at Irwin, Hidalgo began experiencing severe abdominal pain. At first, she was prescribed Advil, but she knew she needed to see a gynecologist. Prison staff said they couldn鈥檛 provide one, because Hidalgo wasn鈥檛 pregnant.
When she eventually saw a doctor, he diagnosed her with an infection and prescribed antibiotics. However, the prison did not give Hidalgo her first round of medicine, therefore worsening the infection caused by her miscarriage. By November 2018, the pain was so excruciating, she said, it would radiate into her legs and wake her during the night.
Hidalgo isn鈥檛 the only one to experience this kind of treatment.
The Obama administration ordered pregnant women detained only in 鈥渆xtreme circumstances,鈥 but the , as well as the 鈥渃ritical reporting procedures鈥 that once oversaw how pregnant women are treated in detention.
Now other women are reporting experiences like Hidalgo鈥檚, like , who was at the end of her marriage interview with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services when an officer walked in with handcuffs.
Even amidst her confusion and panic, Puerto had the wherewithal to tell the ICE officer that she had hypertension and needed the medication she had kept within reach in her purse.
鈥淒on鈥檛 worry, we鈥檙e going to give you your medication,鈥 Puerto to Natalia Megas for The Daily Beast that the officer told her.
But he didn鈥檛. Puerto was transferred to three different ICE facilities over the next three days, growing dizzy, experiencing heart palpitations and living with the fear that she or her baby would die.
ICE has a directive on housing pregnant detainees, and CoreCivic Inc., the for-profit immigrant detention operator that detained Puerto, has protocols for medical care that it鈥檚 supposed to follow. It鈥檚 not clear why Puerto was only given the medication from her purse the night before she was released, days after she was first detained.
鈥淚 would never want to go through this experience again. I would never want to go through it again,鈥 Puerto told Megas.
We鈥檙e committed to providing pro bono representation for women like Hidalgo and Puerto. And we鈥檙e committed to fighting the rollback of policies that guarantee the safe and fair treatment of immigrants in detention.
鈥淚 beg of you to have compassion and consideration for me,鈥 wrote Hidalgo in a letter to the Board of Immigration Appeals.
We ask the same.
The Editors
P.S. Here are some other pieces we think are valuable this week:
- by Anna Lee, Nathaniel Cary, and Mike Ellis for The Greenville News
- by Ed Pilkington for The Guardian
- by Sarah Stillman for The New Yorker
- by Richard A. Oppel Jr and Jugal K. Patel for The New York Times
澳彩开奖's Weekend Reads are a weekly summary of the most important reporting and commentary from around the country on civil rights, economic and racial inequity, and hate and extremism.聽Sign up to receive Weekend Reads every Saturday morning.
Credit John Moore/Getty Images