Just before 1 p.m. on May 22, 2009, Johanna Vasquez
was waiting for the bus in Houston. The afternoon was calm, and she was on her
way to meet her boyfriend of the last several months when a police car pulled
up. Though she had been doing nothing wrong, she feared she knew where the
encounter would end.
Vasquez had been living undocumented in the United
States for 11 years, but her immigration status was the last thing on her mind
at that moment. She was a transgender woman, born Moris Vasquez Villanueva in
Jucuarán, El Salvador, where she had been tormented throughout her youth for
her identity. At 16, she was brutally gang-raped by seven men who called her “a
sickening piece of trash.” Violence against transgender women is widespread in
El Salvador and elsewhere in Central America, and she had come north in search
of a life free of abuse and persecution.
Houston police charged her with tampering with a
government record—a permanent resident card she had acquired through a friend,
onto which she had pasted her own photograph. Trans women often deal with issues
concerning I.D. cards because their real documents rarely match
their appearance. So if they want to avoid scrutiny or rejection, they carry
fake I.D.s. Vasquez had one with the name she preferred to be called. She
pleaded guilty to the charge.
Though she had been taking hormones for seven years
and had been living as a woman since leaving El Salvador, at Harris County Jail
outside Houston she was placed in custody with men, which is common for
transgender detainees. When she was transferred to another facility, guards
laughed and mocked her on arrival. Then they shaved her head.
“From the moment they arrest you they already start
treating you differently, as if you’re someone from another planet,” says
Vasquez, now 34. “They start treating you badly. They don’t know how to treat
you, like a man or a woman. That’s when you start suffering and being afraid.”
The Center for American Progress found, through a
Freedom of Information Act request, dozens of incidents of physical and sexual
abuse against LGBT individuals by other detainees in immigrant detention. So
prison officials may have been acting in her interest when they told Vasquez
they were placing her in “protective custody”—solitary confinement. But even in
solitary, transgender detainees are at risk: An investigation by the Government
Accountability Office found numerous instances of assault by guards
against trans detainees. Vasquez spent 46 days in isolation.
Polk County Adult Detention Center in Livingston,
Texas. (Photo:
Courtesy ICE.gov)
The arrest and conviction had triggered a notice to
local law enforcement from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the agency
responsible for removing undocumented immigrants from the country and housing
them as they make their way through the removal process, that it would be
taking custody of Vasquez. So after 46 days, she was transferred to the IAH
Secure Adult Detention Facility, an immigration detention facility in
Livingston, Texas, about an hour north of Houston. Also known as the Polk
County Adult Detention Center, IAH is an all-male outfit a stone’s throw from
the Polk County jail, where officials occasionally rent out unoccupied beds to
ICE.
Almost immediately, it became clear to Vasquez the
hardships she had endured in solitary would be nothing compared with what she
would experience at Polk. “I didn’t feel protected, just exposed,” she says. As
she took her first steps into the prison, she says, one guard turned to another
and said, “Oh, look, another faggot.” Guards forced her to expose her breasts.
She was again placed in solitary confinement. After a week, guards transferred
her to a cell she would share with three men. The first night, one of her cell
mates complained he didn’t want to be housed with “someone like her.” Guards
denied his request to be transferred, and the next night, he beat Vasquez
bloody with a broomstick. She was then transferred back to solitary to await a
hearing before a judge. Despite repeated requests to IAH, Polk, and ICE over
the past month, none would comment on Vasquez’s experiences in detention.
Vasquez’s story is not unique. The National Center
for Transgender Equality estimates that as many as 50,000 undocumented
immigrants identify as transgender. Many flee abuse in their countries of
origin, entering the U.S. with the hope of finding safety. Yet some continue to
face discrimination and abuse; in some instances it occurs under the
supervision of the U.S. government.
In July 2014, Marichuy Leal Gamino told officials
she was raped in her cell by a male inmate at the Eloy Detention Center in
Arizona, a private institution contracted by ICE to house undocumented
immigrants. Gamino, a trans woman, had been detained in the men’s facility for
more than a year, and after reporting her rape, prison officials placed her in
solitary confinement for months until she was released in January of this year.
Tanya Guzman-Martinez, a trans woman detained with men at the same facility as
Gamino five years prior, says she suffered sexual
abuse multiple times. Nicoll Hernández-Polanco, a trans woman from
Guatemala, was detained for six months in a men’s facility in Arizona, where
she reports physical and sexual abuse from inmates and harassment from guards.
She was released just a few weeks ago, after a national advocacy campaign led
by Arizona-based LGBT immigration group Mariposas Sin Fronteras brought attention
to her case.
Experts say attention to the plight of trans
detainees is on the rise, though whether anything substantial will be done
about it remains to be seen. Earlier in May, Hillary Clinton responded to a
question during a campaign stop in Nevada about abuse of transgender immigrants
in detention. “I don't think we should put children and vulnerable people into
big detention facilities because I think…that their physical and mental health
are at risk,” Clinton said. Though advocates are taking a wait-and-see
approach, to hear a prominent politician be so forthright about these issues is
a welcome change, they say.
It’s a problem the government has been aware of for
a while. More than half of complaints by LGBT detainees made or referred to the
Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General over a five-year
period detailed sexual or physical abuse, according to documents obtained by
the Center for American Progress. All told, LGBT people are 15 times more
likely than the general prison population to be sexually assaulted, according
to a report by Just Detention International, a nonprofit that seeks to end
sexual abuse in prisons, and experts believe a similar situation exists in
detention. Vasquez lodged no official complaints—she didn’t realize she could
complain, and given her experience, she had little faith it would go anywhere
if she did.
After several more weeks of solitary confinement,
Polk officials explained to Vasquez that she had a choice. Though she had
missed the one-year deadline to file for asylum, she could wait for her
immigration case to wind its way through the system and perhaps qualify for
other types of protection, which could take years, or be deported.
Asylum guarantees rights and protections that other
immigrants who entered the country illegally are not eligible for. Homosexuality is
illegal in more than 75 countries; the U.S. began granting asylum to
LGBT individuals who faced persecution at home in 1994. Immigrants granted
asylum are eligible to work, can obtain a green card, and eventually may become
citizens. Spouses and children are eligible for the same protections. But
experts say it is unrealistic to expect people who have suffered abuse at the
hands of officials in their countries of origin—which is a big reason people
apply for asylum protection—to recount intensely personal and traumatic
experiences to an immigration official within a year, assuming they are even
aware such a deadline exists.
"The one-year bar is really problematic for
trans people," says Olga Tomchin, a former Soros Justice Fellow at San
Francisco’s Transgender Law Center and a leading expert on transgender issues
in the immigration system. “A lot of people when they first flee into the U.S.,
fleeing violence and persecution, their immediate needs are to survive.” If one
has experienced abuse at the hands of detention officials in America, she
continued, "it’s not intuitive that you would then say to the exact same
government agent, ‘Oh, actually, protect me—I’m trans.’ ”
Missing the one-year deadline prevents people who
would otherwise be eligible for asylum from qualifying. A report by the
Washington, D.C.–based nonprofit Human Rights First found that 15 percent of
asylum applications—53,400 people—were rejected for having missed the deadline.
There’s no telling how many who might have been eligible didn’t bother to
apply.
Vasquez, for one, was unaware she could qualify for
legal protections. When she first crossed the border into the United States at
Laredo, Texas, she knew no one. She continued to Austin and lived with a
Mexican family who took her in when they found out she was alone. She worked as
a house painter for a few years before moving in with a friend of her mother’s
in New York City. She worked at the factory he ran before he kicked her out for
refusing his sexual advances. She was homeless off and on for almost two years
after she arrived, and was a commercial sex worker for a stretch because
employers wouldn’t hire trans women. “For me it was really hard: First, because
I didn’t know anyone, and second, because I never hid my sexuality.… I was
scared,” she says.
Had she been apprehended at a port of entry, as are
roughly two-thirds of all would-be immigrants, instead of via the criminal
justice system, Vasquez would have been taken into custody by U.S. Customs and
Border Patrol. According to DHS, one category of deportation proceedings has
nearly doubled in less than 10 years: expedited removal, whereby undocumented
immigrants are denied counsel or a hearing before an immigration judge and sent
home. To protect against improper removal of those who might be eligible for
asylum, CBP is required to ask detainees who may be shuffled into an expedited
removal process if they fear persecution or torture in their countries of
origin and whether they are afraid of returning. If the answer to either
question is yes, CBP is obligated to refer the migrant to an asylum counselor
at United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, who will determine his
or her eligibility to apply for asylum or other protection. But despite CBP’s
being responsible for more than half of apprehensions, it accounted for only 26
percent of “credible fear” referrals to USCIS from 2009 to 2013, according to
data provided to Human Rights Watch by USCIS.
“Sending someone who qualifies for asylum back to a
situation where they face really serious harm and not providing them adequate
opportunities to make a claim for asylum is a violation of international law,”
said Clara Long, a researcher at Human Rights Watch and author of a report the
organization published on credible fear screenings. “It’s also a violation of
federal law.”
Given her experiences, Vasquez would almost
certainly have qualified for asylum, but because she missed the one-year deadline,
she was not given the opportunity to apply.
Once a migrant has lost the option of asylum,
either by missing the one-year deadline or as a result of the failure of
officials to facilitate applications, there is little hope it will be granted.
Vasquez felt she had no good options. The odds were against her case—one study
found that fewer than 5 percent of detainees obtain favorable outcomes from
removal proceedings—and detention had been agonizing. Twenty-three hours a day
in isolation, compounded by physical and verbal abuse from guards. During the
one hour she was allowed to leave her cell, she stayed inside out of fear. She
was unsure how much more she could bear.
Without the possibility of asylum, and rather than
face more time in solitary, Vasquez chose to return to El Salvador. She hoped
that since her departure more than a decade earlier, things had changed.
LGBT Salvadorans rallied in May 2012 to demand
investigations into alleged hate crimes in San Salvador. (Photo: Ulises
Rodriguez/Reuters)
In the hills and mountains that surround the town
where Vasquez was born, neat black roads wind through lush greenery down to the
shimmering ocean. Vasquez’s father was a fisher, and she grew up with her
parents and five siblings in an airy house in a beach town on the Pacific
coast.
When Vasquez arrived back in El Salvador in
December 2009, she had full breasts, but her head was closely shorn from the
jailhouse haircut. She still wasn’t accustomed to the image that looked back at
her from the mirror, and to those who had not seen her in years her appearance
was even more jarring. “I was scared. It was a journey I had not planned,” she
says. Though things had initially been rocky with her family, in the
intervening years they had come to support her. Still, her mom was shocked to
see her. "You can imagine—she was used to seeing me with long hair, all
made up, and then I arrived with breasts and my hair. It was so difficult to
live there because the people were scandalized because they saw my chest, because
they saw my short hair—they saw me as between a man and a woman, and they
didn't understand," she says.
She arrived during a tumultuous time for LGBT
Salvadorans. The previous spring, a left-wing president had been elected, the
first in 20 years. The new leadership began allowing LGBT groups to register as
officially recognized organizations, a privilege that had been all but
impossible under previous administrations. The LGBT community seemed poised to
come out of the shadows.
In response, anti-LGBT activists mobilized to ban
same-sex marriage. Each time LGBT policy is liberalized, anti-LGBT hysteria
finds its way to the fore, explains Ernesto Zelayandia, a Salvadoran LGBT
activist and a fellow at the Human Rights Campaign. “For the conservative
sectors, once there was a switch in government this opened the gates for a
great debate on marriage equality,” he says. Hundreds of parents took their
children out of school to rally in support of the ban, and churches organized
prayer chains. “Whenever there is protest and demonstrations from the
conservative sector, there is an increase in the events of violence against
LGBT people,” Zelayandia says.
The ban failed to pass, but the damage had been
done. A rash of hate crimes swept across the country. In one gruesome month,
five LGBT individuals were murdered, most of them bearing signs of torture,
including dismemberment, according to a report, Sexual Diversity in El
Salvador, by the International Human Rights Law Clinic at the University of
California, Berkeley. Only one article in a major Salvadoran newspaper was
published about them. “The impunity for violent crimes against LGBT individuals
is sky-high,” says Zelayandia, citing more than 130 murders of LGBT people
since the ’90s. “None of them has been solved.”
The International Human Rights Law Clinic report
also describes a total lack of interest among officials when LGBT individuals
reported cases of rape and assault. Some even reported violations at the hands
of police.
Amid this fraught atmosphere, Vasquez decided after
just a few weeks to make the journey back to the United States. “Definitely, I
could not live there,” she says of El Salvador. She took “La Bestia,” the
notoriously dangerous freight train through Central America favored by those
bound for the United States and a perennial source of great promise and fear.
Over the course of three months, she fled to Guatemala, where she caught the
train and rode north. CBP agents apprehended her as soon as she crossed
the border at Laredo. Because she had been through official deportation
proceedings once already, crossing into the country without authorization was a
criminal offense, punishable by up to two years in prison. There are various
conditions under which undocumented migrants can be held without trial, and
Vasquez was placed in a federal prison to serve time for “illegal reentry.” She
was also subject to an immigration process, similar to expedited removal,
whereby she could be deported without seeing a judge—and was not eligible to
apply for asylum.
Immigrant detention in the U.S. is under civil
jurisdiction, not criminal. Yet at any given time hundreds of detainees are
held in segregation and varying degrees of isolation, a tool prisons commonly
use as punishment. LGBT detainees in particular are often placed in solitary
confinement to protect them from violent or vituperative cell mates. According
to complaints filed with the DHS Office of Inspector General, detention
officials also use solitary as a form of harassment or punishment for being
trans.
Protective solitary confinement can have
debilitating effects on the health of trans detainees. A recent study
published in the American Journal of Public Health found that prisoners
in solitary confinement committed more than half of all incidents of self-harm
recorded in New York City jails. According to Sen. Dick Durbin, studies show
that half of all prison suicides happen in solitary.
Many human rights advocates and psychologists
maintain that prolonged solitary confinement is inhumane and tantamount to
torture. In a 2011 report to the United Nations, Juan Méndez, the U.N. special
rapporteur on torture, said the practice constitutes “cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment and even torture” and called for an absolute
ban on solitary confinement for longer than 15 days. Yet, aside from one
LGBT-only detention “pod” in California, it is the only alternative to housing
vulnerable populations with those who would abuse them. Still, given the
choice, some would prefer the threat of abuse to the effects of solitary. “I’ve
had clients who had been sexually assaulted and then put in solitary who would
much rather go back to the situation in which they were sexually assaulted than
to be in solitary for even a single more day,” says Tomchin, who is now a
deportation defense coordinator and staff attorney at the National Day Laborer
Organizing Network.
Comprehensive records are not collected, but
immigration attorneys and trans immigrant experts estimate that the vast
majority of trans detainees are housed in gender-inappropriate facilities and
face extreme risk of sexual and physical abuse. That contradicts policy. In
2003, Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act, which charged the
Department of Justice with creating and implementing standards for eliminating
rape in the prison system and clearly signaled that detention facilities would
be covered by the resulting regulations. DOJ took nearly a decade to release
its guidelines, and when it finally did, in May 2012, ICE and CBP were
exempted. DHS, of which ICE and CBP are a part, was tasked with crafting its
own guidelines. In Texas, where Vasquez was held, Gov. Rick Perry
in 2014 told DOJ he would just ignore the federal directive on the
grounds that it was onerous and impractical.
The DHS guidelines came in April of last year
and—to the pleasant surprise of the LGBT community—they are more progressive
than many were expecting. They allow for facilities to consider the
self-identified gender of the detainee when determining where the detainee
should be held. The document also created more accountability of officials when
detainees are put into segregation or solitary confinement, and emphasized that
such measures should be used only as a method of last resort.
“Unfortunately,” Tomchin says, “ICE never follows
its own rules. From my perspective as an advocate and someone who tries to work
with ICE to make better policies, it’s very frustrating, because it doesn’t
matter what policies they come up [with], it doesn’t matter what rules they
agree to, if they refuse to implement them and follow them.” The abuse and
protective segregation of Gamino took place months after the adoption of the
new guidelines.
After several months again in the custody of the
United States government, much of it in solitary confinement, Vasquez was
deported in September 2010. When she arrived back in El Salvador the second
time, little had changed. Despite a 2010 decree prohibiting discrimination
based on sexual orientation and gender identity, and the creation of a
government office focused on sexual diversity, the specter of anti-LGBT
violence still loomed.
Vasquez was despondent. “I arrived in a country I
didn’t want to be in,” she says. As soon as she left the airport, she says, a
truck full of armed men kidnapped her, gang-raped her, beat her severely, and
left her at the side of the road to die. A woman came across Vasquez and helped
her to the police to report the abuse. Instead of taking note of her case, an
officer at the station forced her to perform oral sex on him before telling her
the men should have killed her and throwing her out of the station. (Local
police could not be reached for comment.)
Determined to escape the violence, she again made
her way north. “I left the same day. The same minute,” she says. “To stay in El
Salvador where they will kill you or to leave? There was no choice.” She hitchhiked
through Central America to Chiapas, Mexico, where a trans woman and her family
took her in. She stayed with them from September 2010 through February 2011 and
then made her way to the United States—where she was again apprehended. She
served time in prison again before being sent to the Port Isabel Service
Processing Center, just north of the Rio Grande in Texas and among the largest
immigrant detention centers in the state, with a capacity of more than 1,200.
Advocates have detailed numerous human rights abuses and other issues there. In
2009 and again in 2010, detainees went on hunger strikes to protest the use of
solitary confinement and violations of due process.
Detention itself makes the likelihood that
immigrants will qualify for successful resolution to their cases extremely low.
Claims for asylum and similar protections require reams of evidence that are
difficult to obtain under the best of circumstances. Compounding matters is
that undocumented immigrants in removal proceedings have no right to legal
counsel.
Accessing Justice, a
report based on an investigation organized by Judge Robert A. Katzmann of
the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, found that representation and
detention were the biggest factors affecting the outcome of an immigrant’s
case. Though the findings are derived from New York City data, experts say the
broad strokes apply to cases around the country. Seventy-four percent of
immigrants who are not detained and have legal representation obtain a
successful outcome, according to the report. For those detained and
unrepresented, the figure plummets to 3 percent. Fewer than half of detained
immigrants are able to secure representation for their removal proceedings.
Even if detainees are lucky enough to find
representation, insecurity and a culture of trans-phobia prevail. “We get calls
every day from desperate transgender people in detention,” said Clement Lee, an
attorney at the LGBT-focused nonprofit Immigration Equality. “It is structured
in a way such that, especially for transgender asylum claims, people have some
incentive to give up.”
Vasquez was able to secure a hearing before Judge
William Peterson, then a resident judge at Port Isabel’s immigration court.
After months in detention and with Immigration Equality’s help, she put
together a claim for “withholding of removal” and represented herself before
the judge. Withholding of removal, a bastardized version of asylum, was her
best option. With no pathway to citizenship and recipients disallowed from
leaving the country and ineligible to sponsor spouses or children, it has fewer
protections than the real thing yet is more difficult to obtain. Nonetheless,
it lifts the possibility of deportation, and any chance Vasquez had at
obtaining asylum from within detention had passed long ago.
On June 19, 2012, she was granted withholding, and
all deportation orders against her were removed. ICE released her from
detention, and she was given a worker’s permit, a social security number, and a
government I.D. She moved back to New York City, where she now lives and works
cleaning offices. In October 2014, the name on her immigration documentation
was changed to Johanna.
Sitting in the cramped kitchen of her basement
apartment in Queens in May, the cinder-block walls painted a vibrant green,
Vasquez tries to stay optimistic. She has come a long way from that bus stop in
Houston, but her future is uncertain. Withholding of removal must be renewed
every year, and there’s no guarantee that her status will continue. Not being
able to leave the country and see her family wears on her. “My mom is 83 years
old, and if something happens, I can’t even go to visit her. It’s hard,” she
says. If she wants to be considered for full asylum, she will need to reopen
her case, running the risk of losing her current status and being deported.
Still, she acts as though her future is in New
York. She is looking around at colleges and plans to take some classes, perhaps
get a degree. For the time being, at least, she’s secure and looking toward
what’s next. A year ago, she started dating a new boyfriend, Edwin. They live
together in a three-bedroom apartment they share with others. She shows a photo
of their smiling faces.
“You know, we go from happiness to sadness to pain.
And the younger years are really hard. I have scars from when my dad would hit
me because I went around saying I was a girl,” says Vasquez. “We have gone
through a lot. If you ask me if I am happy? Yes. I learned to love myself the
way I am. I look in the mirror, and I see the woman I want to see.”
This article was originally published at TakePart.com.