An 18-year-old high school student being held for federal immigration authorities in the Sherburne County jail was repeatedly sexually assaulted last month by his cellmate, a registered sex offender serving time in the jail as a "boarder" from the Minnesota Department of Corrections.
The assault, detailed in a criminal complaint, occurred at the state's largest jail for immigrant detainees and highlights an emerging nationwide pattern of sexual abuse at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention centers.
Sherburne County, which has a contract with ICE, houses 85 immigration detainees, many of whom haven't been charged with a crime but are routinely commingled with prisoners serving time.
Since the attack, immigration detainees have been separated from prisoners in the jail's cells. Besides the criminal investigation, Sherburne County also has begun an administrative investigation, part of a new federal law designed to stem sexual abuse of immigrant detainees, into whether the jail staff's actions or inactions contributed to the offense.
More than 50 ICE detainees recently sent a letter to the Star Tribune outlining their concerns about being housed at the jail, from fears of being victimized by prisoners to improper medical care.
Sorsor Jallah, a 26-year-old immigrant from Liberia who drafted the letter, said the detainees fear for their lives because they are housed with rapists and other violent offenders. He said many are too afraid to complain.
"A lot of [the detainees] were saying not to sign their names because it might impact their case," Jallah said.
Nationwide problem
Sexual abuse against ICE detainees takes place across the country. A number of lawsuits and civil rights complaints have been filed for failing to protect ICE detainees from sexual assault. In a review of documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, the American Civil Liberties Union found nearly 200 allegations of abuse from detainees in detention facilities from across the nation from 2007 to 2011.