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posted ago by Cuetardian ago by Cuetardian +29 / -0

Seen on Facebook 04/05/2025, under the names you see here. I'm posting it because we need to be aware that this is the Left's latest tactic: Spreading outrageous stories like this one all over social media and clearly hoping to get them on the news.


Bekehti Bekwake Kingsley April 3 at 1:14 AM ·

Dictator Trump has now created concentration camps in America where people are getting killed after being rounded up without committing any crime.

Thanks Rebecca Granovsky-Larsen:

"Outrage began to grow precisely with the news of the death of Maksym Chernayak on February 20. As that news broke, so did the death of Genry Ruiz Guillén, a 29-year-old Honduran, who had died on January 23. Both died in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and had been detained at Krome before being transferred to a hospital where they could not be saved.

Details of each case are limited — in that of Ruiz Guillén, there isn’t even an official cause of death — and family members and lawyers are trying to clarify the sequence of events that led to the loss of life to determine whether the deaths could have been prevented.

Suspicions about possible irregularities in the protocols are not unfounded. Florida immigration lawyers have known about Krome’s notorious status for years, although the current situation is clearly different. Speaking to a local television station, immigration attorney Katie Blankenship said she would never be able to erase the images of women held at Krome — which began admitting female detainees more than 20 years after an investigation into sexual abuse by guards in 2000.

“Every time I walked in there, there was literally a group of women with no room to move, banging on the window, pleading, because they saw someone who wasn’t an agent. They saw that I was a lawyer and said, ‘Please help us. Please help us. Please help us.’” Blankenship adds that her clients — whom she now meets in separate rooms as the meeting rooms have become collective cells for dozens of people — are sleeping in the bathrooms: “Their faces are literally under the toilet.”

Other accounts from women collected by various local media outlets describe how they were forced to spend hours — up to 16 in some cases — with tight chains around their wrists, chests, and hips on buses outside the facilities without water, food, or access to bathrooms. The accounts, which cover different dates, concur that guards instructed them to urinate or defecate inside the buses, and that some women had no choice but to do so."