LaSalle Detention Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Location830 Pinehill Road, Jena, Louisiana
Coordinates31°42′31″N 92°09′07″W / 31.70858°N 92.15193°W / 31.70858; -92.15193
Capacity1,160
Opened2007
Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center
Interactive map of Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center
Location830 Pinehill Road, Jena, Louisiana
Coordinates31°42′31″N 92°09′07″W / 31.70858°N 92.15193°W / 31.70858; -92.15193
Capacity1,160
Opened2007
Former nameLaSalle ICE Processing Center
Managed byGEO Group
Street address830 Pine Hill Road
State/provinceLouisiana
ZIP Code71342
CountryUnited States
Websitewww.ice.gov/detain/detention-facilities/central-louisiana-ipc

Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center (known as CLIPC and formerly named LaSalle ICE Processing Center) is an immigration detention facility operated by the GEO Group and located at 830 Pinehill Road, about two miles northwest of downtown Jena, LaSalle Parish, Louisiana.[1]

The Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center has a capacity of 1,160, is constructed on approximately 100 acres, and has a size of 182,890 square feet. CLIPC began intaking immigrant detainees on October 22, 2007.[2] Prior to being awarded their contract under U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in 2007, the facility was a juvenile correction facility.[3]

It is currently most notable for being the detention site of Mahmoud Khalil, a Pro-Palestinian activist who was detained for protesting over the past 17 months before his arrest and detention.[4][5] Since released.

Jena Juvenile Correction Facility

CLIPC operated as the Jena Juvenile Correction Facility from 1998 to 2001, until a federal investigation found the facility unfit for use and ordered it closed.[6] The federal investigation described that mostly white guards used "cruel and humiliating punishments" and "routinely used excessive force" on the mostly black juvenile inmates.[7]

Hurricane Katrina

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Jena Correctional Facility temporarily reopened to house some 450 inmates evacuated from Jefferson Parish Prison. On October 2, 2005, Human Rights Watch reported that correctional officers allegedly beat and mistreated these inmates.

Inmates at Jena claimed that officers beat, kicked, and hit them while they wore shackles. In some instances, officers ordered inmates to kneel for several hours and hit them if they fell. Officers also forced inmates to hold their faces against walls which they had covered in chemical spray. Inmates allege that, when they became ill and vomited, officers wiped their faces and hair in the vomit.[8]

Immigration detention

Since 2007, CLIPC has functioned as a detention center for individuals accused of breaking immigration laws. Although the facility's population fluctuates, it often holds a population more than one third the size of Jena (about 3,145 people).[9]

Abuse and allegations of civil rights violations

Detainee deaths

References

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