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Colombian migrant found dead in ICE custody after guards ignored pleas to call Mom: report

The Independent — World Ryan J. Foley 2 переглядів 6 хв читання

Brayan Rayo Garzon was sick, terrified and begging to hear his mother’s voice.

Locked inside an ICE detention cell in rural Missouri, the 26-year-old Colombian migrant spent his final days battling COVID-19, suffering chills and fevers — and pleading with guards to let him make a phone call home.

Instead, jail staff allegedly ignored his desperate handwritten notes.

In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Missouriopen image in gallery
In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Missouri (Local Library)

Within an hour of one final plea, Rayo was found unconscious in his isolation cell with a sheet around his neck, according to jail records and an autopsy reviewed by the Associated Press.

His death in April marked the first in a horrifying wave of suicides now rocking ICE detention centers under President Trump’s aggressive deportation crackdown.

At least 10 ICE detainees have taken their own lives since Trump returned to office in January 2025, according to an AP investigation examining autopsies, police records, ICE data and coroner reports.

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel"open image in gallery
Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel" (Local Library)

That number already shatters previous annual records for suicides in ICE custody.

Public health experts are sounding the alarm, warning that the deaths point to catastrophic failures inside America’s immigration detention system.

“Something is going profoundly wrong,” said Dr. Sanjay Basu, an epidemiologist at the University of California-San Francisco. “This is one of those alarming, sudden increases.”

Most of the dead were Hispanic men in their early 30s. Seven had no violent criminal records despite Trump repeatedly describing deportation targets as the “worst of the worst.”

Detainees wave and spell out a rough SOS to a helicopter flying overhead, at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Krome Detention Center in Miamiopen image in gallery
Detainees wave and spell out a rough SOS to a helicopter flying overhead, at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Krome Detention Center in Miami (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The suicides now account for nearly one-fifth of all deaths in ICE custody this year.

Experts say many could have been prevented.

Investigators found repeated breakdowns across detention facilities — including ignored warning signs, delayed mental health treatment, isolation confinement and failures to monitor detainees already considered at risk.

In some cases, detainees allegedly had access to materials used to kill themselves.

Rayo’s final days paint a devastating picture.

People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custodyopen image in gallery
People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

A former Colombian soldier who later worked as a street vendor, Rayo crossed into California with his family in 2023 and eventually settled in St. Louis. Friends and relatives said he adapted quickly to life in America, working as a painter and food delivery driver while trying to save money for an immigration lawyer.

But after his arrest in March 2025 for allegedly using a stolen credit card at a vape shop, ICE took him into custody and transferred him to the Phelps County Jail in Rolla, Missouri.

Records show problems began immediately.

ICE policy requires medical and mental health screenings within 12 hours of detention. Rayo reportedly waited 35 hours.

Many of those who have taken their own lives in ICE custody did not have criminal records despite the Trump admin’s claims that the agency was targeting the “worst of the worst”open image in gallery
Many of those who have taken their own lives in ICE custody did not have criminal records despite the Trump admin’s claims that the agency was targeting the “worst of the worst” (Getty)

He complained of anxiety, trouble breathing and asked for mental health care.

A nurse who didn’t speak Spanish reportedly used a handheld translation device to evaluate him before clearing him for general population.

Days later, he tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis bacteria and was diagnosed with COVID-19 after being rushed to a hospital.

Then came isolation.

Sick, nauseous and alone, Rayo was placed in a cinderblock quarantine cell under camera surveillance. Guards barred him from making nightly phone calls to his mother, Adriana Garzon — calls the two used to share a Catholic blessing before bed.

“I gave him strength,” his grieving mother said.

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jailopen image in gallery
This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jail (Local Library)

Records show his mental health appointments were canceled twice — once because of staffing shortages and again because he had COVID.

On his fourth day in isolation, Rayo slid handwritten notes under his cell door, begging guards to let him speak with his mother.

“I know you have family, and you know that they worry about us,” he wrote in Spanish. “God bless you.”

A guard reportedly translated the notes using another officer’s phone and said he would follow up.

Less than an hour later, Rayo was found hanging in his cell.

Doctors later informed his devastated mother that her son was dead.

The tragedy is just one of several now raising questions about conditions inside ICE detention centers, where the detainee population has exploded by roughly 50% during Trump’s second term.

Five of the suicide deaths occurred in privately run detention facilities operated by companies including CoreCivic and GEO Group. Others happened in county jails and temporary migrant camps.

In Texas, inspectors documented nearly 50 violations at one ICE facility after two detainees died within days of each other. Investigators found guards failed to conduct required suicide checks and left dangerous equipment unsecured.

Another detainee — a Chinese national suffering mental distress — allegedly went days without mental health care because nobody at the facility spoke Mandarin.

Experts warn the crisis is spiraling.

“This reflects failures in how the system’s being operated,” said Dr. Homer Venters, former chief medical officer for New York City jails. “People aren’t being assessed adequately, and obvious red flags aren’t acted on.”

Homeland Security officials insist suicide deaths remain “extremely rare” and say ICE staff receive annual suicide-prevention training.

But for families like Rayo’s, those assurances ring hollow.

His mother says she still replays their final conversations in her mind — and wonders whether one phone call could have saved her son’s life.

This story includes a discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

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