
Officials denounce immigration guards camped at a Glendale hospital monitoring detainee
Ariana Gomez, labor representative at California Nurses Association, which represents nurses at Dignity Health Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center, said Thursday there is 'overwhelming discomfort' about the use of the guards.
'It is very unusual to have immigration-related guards in the hospital lobby for any length of time,' said Gomez. 'This has never happened before.'
California state Senator Sasha Renée Pérez said their encampment shows 'how aggressive the Trump administration has become in their pursuit to demonize and target our immigrant community.'
Pérez also said she will back legislation to ensure immigration agents do not enter the private areas of hospital facilities, such as emergency rooms.
At first, the guards positioned themselves behind a reception desk. The guards eventually moved a couple of feet away and several panels were erected to partially obscure their presence from hospital visitors in the lobby.
Photos of the guards, who sit in chairs or stand, show them wearing masks, green-army shirts or pants. One photo shows a guard wearing an arm patch that reads: 'Detention Officer.' Immigration advocates, who have been camped out in the lobby since last week, took the images.
On Tuesday night, two of the guards declined to identify themselves to the Times.
Dignity Health Glendale Memorial Hospital said in a statement that the 'hospital cannot legally restrict law enforcement or security personnel from being present in public areas which include the hospital lobby/waiting area.'
The patient, Milagro Carolina Solis-Portillo, an El Salvador national, was arrested July 3 by federal officials near her Sherman Oaks home and later brought to the hospital after she suffered a medical emergency during her transport.
Solis-Portillo 'is an illegal alien from El Salvador who has been removed from the United States twice and has been arrested for crimes of false identification, theft, and burglary,' said DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. She declined to comment on the protocol of DHS-contracted security at hospitals.
Gomez, the nurses' labor representative, said the agents' presence is intimidating to people who enter the lobby.
She also said that some family members of patients will not come to visit because they're afraid. The nurses have not been given direction from the hospital about what to say and how to respond when people ask about the guards. By law, nurses cannot share any patient information.
'The nurses do not want the guards there,' said Gomez.
In a statement released through her attorney, Solis-Portillo said that she was treated inhumanely during her arrest by the agents, alleging that they yelled at her as she began vomiting while in their custody.
She suggested she came to the U.S. for security reasons and disputed the government's account of her background.
'I wouldn't be safe in any other country. I have never had a single criminal conviction,' said Solis-Portillo.
She said that agents told her to 'shut up' as she was being arrested and that she started 'panicking and vomiting and drowning in my own vomit,' during her arrest.
'When they saw how badly I was choking, they finally exited the freeway into a secluded area. As I threw up, they grabbed me by my head and yelled, 'Stop! Stop!' I was about lose consciousness, and they laughed at me, treated me inhumanely and abused their authority.'
Lynn Damiano Pearson, senior staff attorney at the National Immigration Law Center, called the guards' extended presence in the hospital lobby 'a pretty unusual situation.'
'I would say absolutely that this is a gross misuse of resources,' said Pearson, who questioned whether the woman is a threat to public safety.
Pearson, who is not involved in the case, said that immigration officials can't enter private areas, such as a hospital room, without a warrant.
McLaughlin disputed Pearson's characterization of the use of the guards.
'I doubt the victims [Solis-Portillo] robbed and and burglarized would call it 'gross misuse,'' said McLaughlin and said officers responded to her medical condition.
She also said it is a 'longstanding practice to provide comprehensive medical care from the moment an alien enters ICE custody. This includes access to medical appointments and 24-hour emergency care.'
If Solis-Portillo has twice been removed twice from the U.S., she may be subject to expedited removal by the government without additional court proceedings, said Pearson.
DHS declined to provide additional details about Solis-Portillo's case.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
39 minutes ago
- New York Post
Illegal migrants charged with rape, aggravated sodomy and kidnapping of woman: ICE
Two illegal migrants from Guatemala currently living in the US were charged with rape, aggravated sodomy, and the kidnapping of a woman from an Oklahoma casino earlier this week. The victim told police that she was taken by the two illegal migrants against her will from the First Council Casino & Resort in Newkirk, Oklahoma, and was raped and assaulted repeatedly while traveling from Oklahoma to Arkansas City, Kansas. Advertisement Luis Miguel Dominguez-Barrios, an illegal migrant from Guatemala, crossed the southern border illegally on Aug. 31, 2013, and was subsequently released by the Obama administration. Dominguez-Barrios had previously been arrested for disorderly conduct, domestic violence, and threatening a law enforcement officer. Jose Fernando-Lux Morales, who is also an illegal migrant from Guatemala, crossed the southern border illegally as an unaccompanied minor in 2018. Dominguez-Barrios, currently being held on a $1 million bond after being charged with rape, aggravated criminal sodomy and aggravated kidnapping, and his alleged accomplice Fernando-Lux Morales is being held on a $500,000 bond for aggravated kidnapping. Advertisement Jose Fernando-Lux Morales, who is also an illegal migrant from Guatemala, crossed the southern border illegally as an unaccompanied minor in 2018. Department of Homeland Security US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has also tacked on arrest detainers, which request local law enforcement to notify ICE before potentially releasing criminals from custody, as well as holding individuals for up to 48 hours before their scheduled release time to allow the immigration agency to assume custody. 'Depraved, violent predators like Luis Miguel Dominguez-Barrios and Jose Fernando-Lux Morales have no place in our country,' Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News Digital. 'Under President Trump and Secretary Noem's leadership, vicious criminals who kidnap and sexually assault women will face the consequences for their heinous crimes and will never be allowed to prey on innocent Americans again.' 'ICE's arrest detainers ensure these criminal illegal aliens never walk free on US streets again,' McLaughlin added. Advertisement Luis Miguel Dominguez-Barrios, an illegal migrant from Guatemala, crossed the southern border illegally on Aug. 31, 2013, and was subsequently released by the Obama administration. Department of Homeland Security According to McLaughlin, DHS has arrested more than 359,000 illegal aliens and removed more than 332,000 as of Monday. The Department of Homeland Security recently implemented a hiring campaign to recruit additional ICE agents as deportations and arrests ramped up under Secretary Kristi Noem and the Trump administration. Fox News Digital reported last week that more than 100,000 Americans have applied for the role. The Arkansas City, Kansas police department told Fox News Digital they could not comment on an ongoing matter and First Council Casino & Resort in Oklahoma could not be reached for comment.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
DHS Secretary says entire southern border wall to be painted black to stop people from climbing it
WASHINGTON (AP) — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Tuesday that the entire border wall along the southern border with Mexico is going to be painted black to make it hotter and deter illegal immigration — and she credited President Trump with the idea. Noem spoke during a visit to a portion of the wall in New Mexico, where she also picked up a roller brush to help out with the painting. She touted the height of the wall as well as the depth as ways to deter people seeking to go over or under the walls. And then Noem said Homeland Security was going to be trying black paint to make the metal hotter. 'That is specifically at the request of the president, who understands that in the hot temperatures down here when something is painted black it gets even warmer and it will make it even harder for people to climb. So we are going to be painting the entire southern border wall black to make sure that we encourage individuals to not come into our country illegally,' Noem said. U.S. Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks, who attended the event with Noem, said the paint would also help deter rust. During Trump's first term, building the wall was a central focus of his hardline immigration policy. During his second term, his mass deportation agenda with arrests in the interior of the country has been the main focus, but Homeland Security will be getting about $46 billion to complete the wall as part of new funding passed by Congress this summer. Noem said they have been building about a half mile of barrier every day. 'The border wall will look very different based on the topography and the geography of where it is built,' she said. She said that in addition to barriers like the one she visited Tuesday, the department is also working on 'water-borne infrastructure.' Long sections of the roughly 2,000-mile border between the U.S. and Mexico sit along the Rio Grande River in Texas. The Trump administration is pushing forward with completing the wall at the same time that the number of people crossing the border illegally has plummeted. ___ Rebecca Santana, The Associated Press


Fox News
5 hours ago
- Fox News
DHS secretary reveals why border wall is being painted black
DHS assistant secretary for public affairs Tricia McLaughlin explains the benefits of painting the border wall black on 'Jesse Watters Primetime.'