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[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
wearing your short pants) when you return to your barracks at the end of your recreation time. Ordinarily, detainees may wear any hairstyle with the following exceptions: 1. For safety and hygiene reasons, kitchen workers and detainee workers operating machinery will keep their hair in a neat, clean, and commonly acceptable style. 2. The hairstyle will not interfere with safety and hygiene requirements. 3. All kitchen workers will wear a hairnet when working in the kitchen. Ordinarily, facial hair may be grown without restriction with the following exceptions: 1. For safety reasons, detainee workers operating machinery may not be authorized to wear facial hair and are expected to be clean shaven at all times. 2. Due to restrictions for employment. There will be no exceptions to this requirement including medical reasons. CLOTHING The system to identify each detainee in custody and determine their location shall include wristband, booking card information (I-385), classification sheet, housing identification card, and a color-coded uniform. Wristbands are to be worn properly (around the wrist) at all times. Wristbands will not be removed for any reason. Failure to comply with this directive will result in disciplinary action. Upon admission to this facility, a detainee is classified according to his criminal record and other behavioral criteria. This classification determines the detainee s assigned barracks and all color-coded materials associated with that barracks. Colors used for coding and identification are red, blue, yellow, white, and orange. 37 Classification Uniform/Wristband Level Color 1 Blue 2 Orange 3 Red The basic uniform for detainees shall be distinctive in appearance as to identify the detainee according to his/her security level. All issued clothing shall be worn as specified in the following instructions and in no other manner. These requirements are essential to ensure compliance with security, hygiene, and conduct within the realm of propriety for all people. 1. Clothing must be clean and not torn. 2. Only kitchen workers will be authorized to wear white uniforms. 3. The wearing of mixed colors is not authorized for outer garments. 4. Undergarments may be worn without outer garments only while inside the sleeping quarters or the restrooms. NO EXCEPTIONS! 5. Shower shoes may be worn only inside the housing unit. 6. Shoes will be worn at all times when outside the housing units. 7. Hats or other head covers will not be authorized for the general population. Workers will be issued the proper head cover when required and will be worn only while performing work related duties. 8. Detainees will wear a complete uniform (shirt, pants, and shoes) at all times while in the dining hall, medical, court, religious services, and all visitations. 9. Pants will be worn at a point about the waist that prevents the crease of the buttock from showing, despite the length of the shirt. 11. No article of clothing will be worn in a manner not normally intended for that item (using a shirt as a head band or head cover, etc.). DETAINEES ARE NOT TO WALK ABOUT THE FACILITY WITH THEIR HANDS INSIDE THE WAISTBAND OF THEIR PANTS, REGARDLESS OF WEATHER CONDITIONS. CONTRABAND Items that are considered to be of detriment to the safe and orderly operation of the facility are prohibited. Contraband may be destroyed or held as evidence. Contraband items include, but are not limited to: 1. Any non-prescribed drug, narcotic drug, marijuana, intoxicating liquor of any kind, deadly weapons, dangerous instruments, explosives, or any other 38 article that, if used or possessed would endanger the preservation of order in the facility. 2. Any item which could be used as an aide to escape. 3. Any item which could be used to disguise or alter the appearance of a detainee. 4. Any article of clothing or item for personal use or consumption, which has not been cleared first through the OIC or purchased by a detainee from the vending machines. 5. Cameras, video, audio, or related equipment that can be used to make unauthorized photographs, audio, or audio/video recordings of detainees, staff, or government property. UNAUTHORIZED PROPERTY Items not inherently illegal, which are considered contraband when, possessed by a detainee or visitor within the facility. This includes, but is not limited to, any approved item which, though approved, is in excess of the quantity allowed. Magazines and photographs depicting nudity or explicit sexual acts are prohibited. Materials offering training in martial arts, destructive device manufacturing, or similar devices are prohibited. LEGAL FILE An Immigration legal record, commonly called an A file , is maintained by the Deportation Department for each individual. This A File contains your legal transactions and documentation pertaining to your case. It includes, but is not limited to, identification cards, photos, passports, and immigration history. DETENTION FILE A detention record is maintained for each individual. This detention record shall include no less than the following: 1. Facility Disciplinary Action 2. Behavior Reports 3. Funds, Valuables, and Property Receipts 4. Detainee s Written Requests, Complaints, and Issues 5. Immigration Responses to the Aforementioned 6. Special Housing Unit Records 39 MARRIAGE REQUESTS All marriage requests from BICE detainees receive a case-by-case review. BICE shall use the following guidelines: 1. The OIC shall consider detainee marriage requests on a case-by-case basis. 2. The OIC alone may approve a marriage request; he/she may not delegate this authority. The FOD/DDP must concur in any marriage request denied by the OIC. 3. A detainee s request for permission to marry will be granted unless: a. He is not legally eligible to be married; b. He is not mentally competent, as determined by a qualified medical practitioner; c. The intended spouse has not affirmed, in writing, his/her intent to marry the detainee; d. The marriage would present a threat to the security or orderly operation of the facility; or e. Compelling government interests exist for denying the request. For example, BICE will generally deny a marriage request if a final order of exclusion, deportation, or removal has been served, and performance of the marriage ceremony would require postponement of the detainee s physical removal from the United States. (Compelling interests could also include the fact that a newly arrived detainee, or one in exclusion proceedings, has limited constitutional rights.) Compelling interests ordinarily do not include administrative inconvenience or the possibility that the marriage may allow the detainee to pursue a new avenue of relief from deportation. An OIC uncertain about compelling interests in a given case should consult the District Counsel. 4. The request for permission to marry must be submitted to the OIC, in writing, by the detainee or his legal representative. All requests must specifically address items 3.a.-c., above, and be accompanied by the
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