Lawsuit Accuses ICE and Private Prison Contractors of Abusing a Disabled Detainee⁠42%

By Julia Métraux⁠75%

7/10/2026, 2:25:13 PM

BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 611 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 47.7% and a BS Rank of ⁠42% (8,086 of 13,821 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 58.50% of the article peer group.

On Monday, Ulises Peña LĂłpez, represented by Disability Law United and Pangea Legal Services, sued the US government and private prison contractors GeoGroup and CoreCivic over his arrest by ICE officers and his following treatment in ICE detention facilities. Peña LĂłpez was deported to Mexico in October 2025 after spending over six months in ICE detention. Before his arrest, Peña LĂłpez, a carpenter, already lived with disabilities due to a mini-stroke, which was diagnosed in August 2024 and was managed before his detention. The lawsuit contends that after ICE officers detained Peña LĂłpez in February 2025 in Sunnyvale, California, they took him to an alleyway and beat him until he lost consciousness and required CPR. His wife, Aby, and their young daughter witnessed part of the beating by ICE, according to the lawsuit. Peña LĂłpez’s ongoing symptoms, the lawsuit says, include new and worsening “headaches, weakness and numbness on his right side, eye pain, hearing loss, insomnia and nightmares, blurry vision, back pain, and difficulty walking.” Peña Lopez is unable to work to support himself, according to an interview with the NPR affiliate KQED. “What I want more than anything, I can’t get back: to recover my health, to be with my wife and daughter, and to be able to work again,” Peña LĂłpez told KQED . The lawsuit filed for Peña LĂłpez’s complaints cites Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act , which mandates that places receiving federal funding, like ICE detention centers, accommodate disabled people, among other laws. Peña Lopez’s wife and children are also part of the lawsuit due to the distress his arrest and subsequent treatment caused them. During Peña LĂłpez’s eight months in ICE detention in facilities operated by GeoGroup and CoreCivic, the lawsuit says, LĂłpez received inadequate medical care and was also mocked by employees for his disability. The lawsuit alleges that staff’s verbal abuse was particularly cruel at Golden State Annex, operated by GeoGroup. Detention staff reportedly told Peña LĂłpez that “motherfucker, you don’t get to be asleep” and “you’re never gonna walk again.” During Peña LĂłpez’s transfer to California City Detention Center last August, the lawsuit says, “detention staff denied Ulises timely administration of his daily medication, violated his disability rights, and subjected him to unnecessarily harsh conditions,” such as not getting adequate medical care. At the facility operated by CoreCivic, Peña LĂłpez also struggled to get his medications. As a result, Peña LĂłpez’s health worsened before he was deported. A spokesperson for CoreCivic told Mother Jones that while the company does not generally comment on active litigation, “we can share that the safety, health , and well-being of the people in our facilities is our top priority.” ICE and GeoGroup did not respond to a request for comment before publication. For Peña LĂłpez’s lawyers, this lawsuit represents not only a pursuit of LĂłpez but also of others mistreated by ICE. “This lawsuit seeks accountability for the physical and emotional harms our clients suffered, but it also joins a growing wave of lawsuits challenging abusive ICE enforcement and detention practices,” said Elena Hodges, co-director at Pangea Legal Services, which is representing Peña LĂłpez and his family, in a press release. “We hope this case will send a powerful message to immigrant communities that they are not alone,” Hodges said, “and that ICE officials and private prison contractors are not above the law.” Update, July 10: After publication, an ICE spokesperson wrote to Mother Jones saying that “any claims of subprime medical care at ICE facilities are FALSE ” and that “staff always use the minimum amount of force to safely deescalate situations.”

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611 words analyzed.

Analysis

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