Existing law prohibits a city, city and county, or local law enforcement agency from entering into a contract with the federal government or any federal agency to house or detain noncitizens for purposes of civil immigration custody in a locked detention facility. Existing law requires the Attorney General to engage in reviews of county, local, and private locked detention facilities in which noncitizens are being housed or detained for purposes of civil immigration proceedings in California. Existing law requires that review to include a review of the conditions of confinement, a review of the standard of care and due process provided to the detainees, and a review of the circumstances around their apprehension and transfer to the facility.
This bill would require any private detention facility operator to comply with, and adhere to, the
detention standards of care and confinement agreed upon in the facility’s contract for operations. The bill would define a private detention facility as a detention facility operated by a private, nongovernmental, for-profit entity pursuant to a contract or agreement with a governmental entity. If a private detention facility commits a tortious action that violates the requirement to comply with detention standards of care and confinement, the bill would allow an individual, the Attorney General, or a district attorney to bring a civil cause of action for injunctive and equitable relief. The bill would also allow the Attorney General, or a district or city attorney, to seek a civil penalty of $25,000 for each individual injured. injured, and would allow the court to award a prevailing party reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.
The bill would also establish the California Detention Standards and Compliance Safety Working Group within the Office of the Inspector General, to include members representatives of the State Department of Public Health and the Inspector General. Health, the State Department of Social Services, the Attorney General, attorneys and advocates working directly with individuals in detention, and any other relevant state agency.
The bill would require the working group to oversee, inspect, and monitor the health and safety conditions of detention facilities operating in the state. The bill would require the working group to submit a report to the Legislature and recommend a plan for implementing detention condition improvements. provide recommendations to the Legislature with respect to ensuring health, public safety, and humane standards in all detention facilities in California.
The bill would state that its provisions are severable.