The deportation flight was in the
air over Mexico when chaos erupted in the back of the plane, the flight
attendant recalled. A little girl had collapsed. She had a high fever and was
taking ragged, frantic breaths.
The flight attendant, a young woman
who went by the nickname Lala, said she grabbed the plane’s emergency oxygen
bottle and rushed past rows of migrants chained at the wrists and ankles to
reach the girl and her parents.
By then, Lala was accustomed to the
hard realities of working charter flights for Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. She’d learned to obey instructions not to look the passengers in
the eyes, not to greet them or ask about their well-being. But until the girl
collapsed, Lala had managed to escape an emergency.
Lala worked for Global Crossing
Airlines, the dominant player in the loose network of deportation contractors
known as ICE Air. GlobalX, as the charter company is also called, is lately in
the news. Two weeks ago, it helped the Trump administration fly hundreds of
Venezuelans to El Salvador despite a federal court order blocking the
deportations, triggering a showdown that experts fear could become a full-blown
constitutional crisis.
In interviews with ProPublica, Lala
and six other current and former GlobalX flight attendants provided a window
into a part of the deportation process that is rarely
seen and little understood. For migrants who have spent months or
years trying to reach this country and live here, it is the last act, the final
bit of America they may experience.
All but one of the flight
attendants requested anonymity or asked that only a nickname be used, fearing
retribution or black marks as they looked for new jobs in an insular industry. Because ICE,
GlobalX and other charter carriers did not respond to questions after being
provided with detailed lists of this story’s findings, the flight attendants’
individual accounts are hard to verify.
But their stories are consistent
with one another. They are also generally consistent with what has been said
about ICE Air in legal filings, news accounts, academic
research and publicly released copies of the ICE
Air Operations Handbook.
That morning over Mexico, Lala
said, the girl’s oxygen saturation level was 70% — perilously low compared with
a healthy person’s 95% or higher. Her temperature was 102.3 degrees. The flight
had a nurse on contract who worked alongside its security guards. But beyond
giving the girl Tylenol, the nurse left the situation in Lala’s hands, she
recalled.
Lala broke the rule about talking
to detainees. The parents told Lala their daughter had a history of asthma. The
mom, who Lala said had epilepsy, seemed on the verge of her own medical crisis.
Lala placed the oxygen mask on the
girl’s face. The nurse removed her socks to keep her from further overheating.
Lala counted down the minutes, praying for the girl to keep breathing.
The stories shared by ICE Air
flight attendants paint a different picture of deportations from the one
presented to the public, especially under President Donald Trump. On social
media, the White House has depicted a military operation carried out with ruthless
efficiency, using Air Force C-17s, ICE agents in tactical vests and soldiers in
camo.
The reality is that 85% of the
administration’s “removal” flights — 254 flights as of March 21, according to
the advocacy group Witness at the Border — have been on charter planes. Military
flights have now all but ceased. While there are ICE officers and hired
security guards on the charters, the crew members on board are civilians,
ordinary people swept up in something most didn’t knowingly sign up for.
When the flight attendants joined
GlobalX, it was a startup with big plans. It sold investors and new hires alike
on a vision of VIP clients, including musicians and sports teams, and luxury
destinations, especially in the Caribbean. “You can’t beat the eXperience,”
read a company tagline…
-ProPublica
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