Just caught something pretty disturbing coming out of El Paso. ICE just quietly changed their story about how a Cuban detainee died at that tent camp on Fort Bliss back in January. They initially said it was "medical distress," but now they're admitting it was "spontaneous use of force" by staff trying to "prevent him from harming himself." That's... a significant shift.



The guy's name was Geraldo Lunas Campos, 55 years old, been in the U.S. for nearly 20 years before getting arrested last year. His autopsy showed he died from asphyxia—couldn't breathe because of pressure on his neck and chest while being physically restrained. The local medical examiner ruled it a homicide, which is apparently the first time that's happened with an ICE detainee death linked to staff in at least 15 years.

Here's where it gets worse. Multiple detainees who were there said Lunas Campos had been begging for his asthma medication for days. Guards refused and threatened him with solitary. On January 3rd, he allegedly "attempted self-harm," triggering the response. Detainees described hearing what sounded like someone being slammed against the floor or wall, then hearing him gasp that he couldn't breathe anymore. Then silence.

The facility itself is a mess. Camp East Montana was built in just two months last summer after the government handed a $1.2 billion contract to some small Virginia company called Acquisition Logistics that had zero experience running detention facilities. No policies on when contractors could use force. Contractors got only 40 hours of training—compare that to the 42+ days regular ICE agents typically get.

Since mid-December, three people have died there in six weeks. A Guatemalan man in early December from liver and kidney failure after hospitalization, Lunas Campos in January, then another detainee weeks later. ICE shipped that third one to a military hospital instead of the local medical examiner, so his autopsy isn't public.

DHS came out swinging in their defense, claiming Lunas Campos "violently resisted" and "continued to attempt to take his life." They also threw in this wild statement: "This is the best healthcare that many aliens have received in their entire lives. No lawbreakers in the history of human civilization have been treated better than illegal aliens in the United States." That's... not the defense they thought it was.

The real question now is whether local prosecutors will step in. Rep. Veronica Escobar, who's visited the camp multiple times, thinks they might have jurisdiction because the staff appear to be contractors, not federal employees, so they might not have the same immunity. The El Paso DA's office is still researching whether they can pursue charges.

This is the kind of situation where preventable deaths point to massive failures in training and oversight. When you've got a private contractor running a detention facility with minimal experience, inadequate training, and unclear use-of-force policies, these outcomes become almost inevitable. Experts are calling it another level of accountability problem.
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