In recent weeks, devastating accounts have emerged of how Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) treats pregnant women in detention. These are not isolated incidents—they represent a systemic failure to protect mothers and birthing people in their most vulnerable moments.
Iris Dayana Monterroso-Lemus experienced a pregnant person's worst nightmare. After being detained by ICE in Tennessee while around five months pregnant, she was transferred multiple times between facilities before ending up at Louisiana's Richwood Correctional Center. For three days, she pleaded for medical attention as she felt pain and no fetal movement. She was finally hospitalized on April 29th, and delivered a stillborn baby. "I had him inside here for three days, in this Louisiana facility, my baby dead in my stomach, inside my stomach for three days, dead," she told reporters.
Cary López Alvarado, a U.S. citizen nine months pregnant, was detained during ICE raids in California. When she tried to protect her workplace from federal agents, she was physically shoved and lost her balance. "I can't fight back, I'm pregnant," she told officers as they handcuffed her. After her release, she was hospitalized with sharp abdominal pain and doctors closely monitored both her and her baby.
One Aurora ICE Processing Center nurse called 911 about a woman four months pregnant who arrived at the facility's medical unit bleeding and in pain. When the dispatcher asked critical questions about signs of life and fetal heartbeat, the nurse replied: "We don't have the equipment to do that." This response encapsulates the inadequacy of medical care and respect for pregnant people in these facilities.
These stories matter because they reveal fundamental truths about how our society values motherhood, regardless of citizenship status. When we allow pregnant women to be denied medical care, to deliver babies while shackled, or to carry stillborn children for days, we abandon our most basic principles of compassion and care. Since January, at least four 911 calls from detention facilities in Colorado, Texas, and Georgia have involved pregnant women in distress, bleeding or suffering severe pain. [WIRED]