Just five days after he reached the United States, the 15-year-old
Honduran boy awoke in his Tucson, Arizona, immigrant shelter one morning
in 2015 to find a youth care worker in his room, tickling his chest and
stomach.
When he asked the man, who was 46, what he was doing, the man left.
But he returned two more times, rubbing the teen’s penis through his
clothing and then trying to reach under his boxers. “I know what you
want, I can give you anything you need,” said the worker, who was later
convicted of molestation.
In 2017, a 17-year-old from Honduras was recovering from surgery at
the shelter when he woke up to find a male staff member standing by his
bed. “You have it very big,” the man said, referring to the teen’s
penis. Days later, that same employee brushed the teen with his hand
while he was playing video games. When the staff member approached him
again, the boy locked himself in a bathroom.
And in January of this year, a security guard at the shelter found
notes in a minor’s jacket that suggested an inappropriate relationship
with a staff member.
Pulled from police reports, incidents like these at Southwest Key’s
Tucson shelter provide a snapshot of what has largely been kept from the
public as well as members of Congress — a view, uncolored by politics,
of troubling incidents inside the facilities housing immigrant children.
Source: ProPublica
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