A federal judge in Lower Manhattan has ordered the deposition of William Joyce, ICE’s New York Deputy Field Office Director, in an ongoing lawsuit regarding conditions inside holding cells on the 10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza.
The deposition will be conducted during the second week of January, and will focus on whether ICE is abiding by the restrictions set forth by Judge Lewis Kaplan in a temporary restraining order that went into effect over the summer.
A spokesperson for ICE didn’t immediately return THE CITY’s request for comment about the upcoming deposition.
Joyce, one of the highest-ranking ICE officials in New York, briefly became internet famous back in June for his odd attire during a tense encounter with Democratic Reps. Dan Goldman and Jerry Nadler in front of a gaggle of reporters in the lobby of 26 Federal Plaza. Joyce was wearing a shirt with a toucan on it drinking a Guinness. He later told reporters he had bought the shirt on Ebay.
Goldman and Nadler had been seeking entry to the 10th floor to inspect conditions of holding cells there, and were repeatedly turned away, a matter that’s being litigated in a separate lawsuit that is also still pending.
The deposition comes as part of ongoing litigation that started over the summer as conditions inside ICE’s 10th floor holding cells deteriorated dramatically.
The holding cells have no beds and are located in the same room as toilets. They’re intended for brief stays of less than 12 hours and are often the first stop for immigrants arrested by ICE before being sent to a detention center for longer-term stays.
But as ICE arrests began surging in late May, THE CITY reported how dozens of people were held inside the cells for days or even weeks in squalid conditions with limited access to food and water.
In August, New York Civil Liberties Union and Make the Road filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of people detained there, and Judge Kaplan quickly sided in their favor, ordering capacity restrictions, access to private calls with lawyers for people who spend more than 24 hours there, three meals a day and sanitary products.
At the time, ICE opposed the order saying it meant the agency could keep just 22 people there at once, instead of the more than 150 people held there overnight at times before it.
ICE’s own internal data for the months since suggests the order had a dramatic impact on how many people are being held at the 10th floor.
Since it went into effect, just a few people are being held there each night, with most spending less than a day there, THE CITY recently reported.
But in legal filings submitted to the court in late November, attorneys for Make the Road and NYCLU have argued other parts of the judge’s order are not being followed and requested Judge Kaplan hold ICE in contempt of court for continuing to deny private legal calls with attorneys, among other concerns.
In a letter submitted to the court Thursday, Jay Clayton, then United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York called the request to hold ICE in contempt “not appropriate or fair.”
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