ICE FACILITY ACCUSED of Denying Prescribed Medication to Toddler

An 18-month-old toddler was allegedly denied life-saving medication and proper nutrition after returning to immigration detention following hospitalization for severe respiratory illness, according to a federal lawsuit filed in Texas.

Medical Crisis at Detention Center

The child, identified as Amalia in court documents, developed a dangerous fever reaching 104 degrees on January 1st while detained with her parents at a Dilley, Texas, immigration facility. She began vomiting frequently and experienced breathing difficulties that worsened over several weeks. On January 18th, medical staff transported her to a hospital with critically low oxygen levels.

Doctors diagnosed Amalia with multiple serious conditions, including pneumonia, viral bronchitis, respiratory syncytial virus, and COVID-19. Medical professionals placed her on supplemental oxygen and kept her hospitalized for ten days until January 28th. Upon discharge, physicians prescribed a nebulizer and respiratory medications to continue her recovery.

Medication Confiscated Upon Return

The lawsuit alleges that detention center staff immediately confiscated Amalia’s prescribed medical equipment and medications when she returned to the facility. Authorities also reportedly took away nutritional drinks prescribed to help the toddler regain the ten percent of body weight she had lost during her illness. The family’s attorney, Elora Mukherjee, stated that the child nearly died at the Dilley facility.

Family Released After Legal Action

Amalia’s parents, Venezuelan nationals who arrived in the United States in 2024, were detained alongside their daughter during a routine immigration check-in on December 11th. The family filed their lawsuit on February 6th, seeking immediate release from detention. Immigration authorities released all three family members following the legal action. The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to requests for comment regarding the allegations. This case highlights ongoing concerns about conditions at immigration detention facilities and medical care standards for detained families seeking asylum protection.

4 COMMENTS

  1. Was the toddler’s presence required at the routine immigration check-in, or could she have been left with a babysitter? If the latter, the word “hostage” comes to mind.

  2. It is not even funny the comments some left
    here after something like this happens to a very small child. The authors need to find a God and beg him for forgiveness. The
    things in the USA are not good at all and dont think Putin and XI are not watching.
    The US was a good country up to the end
    of WW2. Things here have been a down hill slope from that point on. The people that support Trump I have one question when all the dollars you have in the bank are no longer able to buy anything will Trump support you?

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