logo
#

Latest news with #Anadith

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

time02-05-2025

  • Health

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old girl who died in Border Patrol custody in 2023 despite her mother's repeated pleas for medical care. The girl died nine days after the family had surrendered to border agents after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, died after medical personnel in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection detention facility refused to summon an ambulance, according to U.S. officials, lawyers and her family. Her death came amid a flood of illegal crossings into the U.S. and criticism of U.S. authorities for overcrowded detention facilities. It led to investigations into what went wrong during Anadith's custody, which far exceeded the agency's own limit of 72 hours, and into medical care for detained immigrants. The Texas Civil Rights Project and Haitian Bridge Alliance are seeking $15 million in damages in the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday and comes amid renewed scrutiny on treatment of immigrants during the Trump administration's crackdown. 'CBP's refusal to provide Anadith the medical care she needed was cruel and inhumane,' Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, said in a statement. 'CBP must act now to prevent another tragedy like this.' An internal investigation found that medical personnel were informed about Anadith's medical history but declined to review her file before she had a seizure and died May 17 in Harlingen, Texas. 'Despite the girl's condition, her mother's concerns, and the series of treatments required to manage her condition, contracted medical personnel did not transfer her to a hospital for higher-level care,' the CBP report said. The Border Patrol's chief medical officer was reassigned in the wake of the death. Anadith, whose parents are Honduran and who was born in Panama, was diagnosed with the flu May 14 at a temporary holding facility in Donna, Texas, then moved with her family to Harlingen. Staff met repeatedly with Anadith and her mother over the next four days over concerns including a high fever, flu symptoms, nausea and breathing difficulties, a CBP report said. A congressional investigation in January found that her death 'was not aberrant but consistent with other examples of poor care in CBP custody.' It said children were held too long in detention, and that chronic understaffing and sometimes unreliable medical care were widespread in detention facilities.

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody
Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old girl who died in Border Patrol custody in 2023 despite her mother's repeated pleas for medical care. The girl died nine days after the family had surrendered to border agents after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, died after medical personnel in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection detention facility refused to summon an ambulance, according to U.S. officials, lawyers and her family. Her death came amid a flood of illegal crossings into the U.S. and criticism of U.S. authorities for overcrowded detention facilities. It led to investigations into what went wrong during Anadith's custody, which far exceeded the agency's own limit of 72 hours, and into medical care for detained immigrants. The Texas Civil Rights Project and Haitian Bridge Alliance are seeking $15 million in damages in the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday and comes amid renewed scrutiny on treatment of immigrants during the Trump administration's crackdown. 'CBP's refusal to provide Anadith the medical care she needed was cruel and inhumane,' Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, said in a statement. 'CBP must act now to prevent another tragedy like this.' An internal investigation found that medical personnel were informed about Anadith's medical history but declined to review her file before she had a seizure and died May 17 in Harlingen, Texas. 'Despite the girl's condition, her mother's concerns, and the series of treatments required to manage her condition, contracted medical personnel did not transfer her to a hospital for higher-level care,' the CBP report said. The Border Patrol's chief medical officer was reassigned in the wake of the death. Anadith, whose parents are Honduran and who was born in Panama, was diagnosed with the flu May 14 at a temporary holding facility in Donna, Texas, then moved with her family to Harlingen. Staff met repeatedly with Anadith and her mother over the next four days over concerns including a high fever, flu symptoms, nausea and breathing difficulties, a CBP report said. A congressional investigation in January found that her death 'was not aberrant but consistent with other examples of poor care in CBP custody.' It said children were held too long in detention, and that chronic understaffing and sometimes unreliable medical care were widespread in detention facilities.

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody
Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Winnipeg Free Press

time02-05-2025

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old girl who died in Border Patrol custody in 2023 despite her mother's repeated pleas for medical care. The girl died nine days after the family had surrendered to border agents after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, died after medical personnel in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection detention facility refused to summon an ambulance, according to U.S. officials, lawyers and her family. Her death came amid a flood of illegal crossings into the U.S. and criticism of U.S. authorities for overcrowded detention facilities. It led to investigations into what went wrong during Anadith's custody, which far exceeded the agency's own limit of 72 hours, and into medical care for detained immigrants. The Texas Civil Rights Project and Haitian Bridge Alliance are seeking $15 million in damages in the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday and comes amid renewed scrutiny on treatment of immigrants during the Trump administration's crackdown. 'CBP's refusal to provide Anadith the medical care she needed was cruel and inhumane,' Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, said in a statement. 'CBP must act now to prevent another tragedy like this.' An internal investigation found that medical personnel were informed about Anadith's medical history but declined to review her file before she had a seizure and died May 17 in Harlingen, Texas. 'Despite the girl's condition, her mother's concerns, and the series of treatments required to manage her condition, contracted medical personnel did not transfer her to a hospital for higher-level care,' the CBP report said. The Border Patrol's chief medical officer was reassigned in the wake of the death. Anadith, whose parents are Honduran and who was born in Panama, was diagnosed with the flu May 14 at a temporary holding facility in Donna, Texas, then moved with her family to Harlingen. Staff met repeatedly with Anadith and her mother over the next four days over concerns including a high fever, flu symptoms, nausea and breathing difficulties, a CBP report said. A congressional investigation in January found that her death 'was not aberrant but consistent with other examples of poor care in CBP custody.' It said children were held too long in detention, and that chronic understaffing and sometimes unreliable medical care were widespread in detention facilities.

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody
Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Associated Press

time02-05-2025

  • Health
  • Associated Press

Rights groups file a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old immigrant who died in custody

Civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit on behalf of the family of an 8-year-old girl who died in Border Patrol custody in 2023 despite her mother's repeated pleas for medical care. The girl died nine days after the family had surrendered to border agents after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, died after medical personnel in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection detention facility refused to summon an ambulance, according to U.S. officials, lawyers and her family. Her death came amid a flood of illegal crossings into the U.S. and criticism of U.S. authorities for overcrowded detention facilities. It led to investigations into what went wrong during Anadith's custody, which far exceeded the agency's own limit of 72 hours, and into medical care for detained immigrants. The Texas Civil Rights Project and Haitian Bridge Alliance are seeking $15 million in damages in the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday and comes amid renewed scrutiny on treatment of immigrants during the Trump administration's crackdown. 'CBP's refusal to provide Anadith the medical care she needed was cruel and inhumane,' Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, said in a statement. 'CBP must act now to prevent another tragedy like this.' An internal investigation found that medical personnel were informed about Anadith's medical history but declined to review her file before she had a seizure and died May 17 in Harlingen, Texas. 'Despite the girl's condition, her mother's concerns, and the series of treatments required to manage her condition, contracted medical personnel did not transfer her to a hospital for higher-level care,' the CBP report said. The Border Patrol's chief medical officer was reassigned in the wake of the death. Anadith, whose parents are Honduran and who was born in Panama, was diagnosed with the flu May 14 at a temporary holding facility in Donna, Texas, then moved with her family to Harlingen. Staff met repeatedly with Anadith and her mother over the next four days over concerns including a high fever, flu symptoms, nausea and breathing difficulties, a CBP report said. A congressional investigation in January found that her death 'was not aberrant but consistent with other examples of poor care in CBP custody.' It said children were held too long in detention, and that chronic understaffing and sometimes unreliable medical care were widespread in detention facilities.

Family Seeks $15 Million in Death of Migrant Girl in U.S. Custody
Family Seeks $15 Million in Death of Migrant Girl in U.S. Custody

New York Times

time01-05-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

Family Seeks $15 Million in Death of Migrant Girl in U.S. Custody

The death of an 8-year-old migrant girl in 2023 while she was in the custody of U.S. Customs and Border Protection prompted investigations and the removal of the agency's chief medical officer. Now, two immigrant rights groups are seeking $15 million in damages on behalf of the girl's family. In a wrongful death claim filed with the federal government on Thursday, lawyers for the family offer the most detailed public account yet of the life and death of the child, Anadith Danay Reyes Álvarez, and her family's efforts to obtain answers about her care in federal custody. Her death came during a record increase in migration, as the Biden administration struggled to curb illegal crossings and faced criticism about overcrowded detention facilities and the treatment of minors. Illegal crossings plunged in the final months of the Biden administration after a change in asylum policy, and have remained very low under President Trump. But the Trump administration has made families with children targets for detention and removal as President Trump seeks to fulfill a campaign pledge to deport millions of undocumented immigrants. Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, one of the groups that filed the claim, said Anadith's family wanted to ensure there was accountability and transparency in Customs and Border Protection facilities, which she described as 'one of the most obscure and opaque types of detention in our American immigration system.' 'They do not want their daughter to have died in vain,' Ms. Garza said. Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment on the wrongful death claim. After Anadith's death, Troy Miller, then acting head of the border agency, requested a review of CBP facilities and made recommendations to address the medical care issues. Anadith, a Panamanian national, was diagnosed with sickle cell disease and a heart condition at a young age. When she was 5, she traveled with her father to Spain for open-heart surgery and returned to Panama. The family made their way up through Mexico and sought to cross into the United States in May 2023 in hopes of providing safety and a better life for their daughter, according to the complaint. Her parents, who are Honduran, are members of a long-persecuted Afro-Indigenous population known as Garifuna, and had fled their own country before their daughter was born. The other immigrant rights group that filed the family's legal claim was the Haitian Bridge Alliance, which focuses on serving Black immigrants. On May 9, 2023, she, her parents and two siblings were detained alongside other migrants at the border near Brownsville, Texas. The family was then taken to a processing center in Donna, a nearby city, where security camera footage showed her parents handed over their daughter's medical records to border officials in a medical screening area, the claim states. But medical personnel there did not properly assess her medical history or communicate the details of her medical conditions to the staff at the facility in Harlingen where the family ended up, investigators have found. Anadith and her family were held in custody for nine days, more than twice as long as newly arrived migrants, particularly children, should be detained, according to the border agency's own standards. In that time, Anadith exhibited a high fever and complained of pain in her chest and abdomen, among other symptoms, lawyers said. The claim contends immigration officials failed to provide the girl with proper medical care and to adhere to a 22-year-old consent decree that lays out the minimum standards for care of the nation's youngest new arrivals. Between the evening of May 14 and her death on May 17, an internal investigation found, medical professionals at the holding facility in Harlingen saw Anadith at least nine times. A nurse practitioner who saw the child told internal investigators that she dismissed three or four requests from Anadith's mother to call an ambulance or take the child to the hospital. The previous year, a report from the detention ombudsman at Homeland Security had warned that critical shortages in medical services at border facilities could put migrants' lives at risk. A report from the Senate Judiciary Committee earlier this year found the circumstances of Anadith's death were 'not an aberration, but indicative of systemic problems' within border facilities and medical care. Anadith's family is now in the process of seeking asylum, and her parents have secured work permits, lawyers said. In an interview on Thursday, the girl's mother, Mabel Álvarez, said her family had filed the claim in hopes of preserving Anadith's memory and preventing another tragedy. She recalled that her daughter was healthy when she first arrived at the South Texas border. But she said the small room where her family was detained was filthy with trash and dust. She also recalled it was frigid, the reason such facilities are often referred to as 'hieleras,' or coolers. Ms. Álvarez wept as she described staff members who she said ignored her pleas for medical attention as her daughter's condition worsened. After the family's release from immigration detention, Ms. Álvarez said, she took on a job at a factory in New York, but she had to leave it as she struggled with depression and anxiety. 'It was a difficult thing, that my daughter died in my arms, looking for help,' she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store