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Nebraska detention center plan faces backlash
Los Angeles Times
|September 13, 2025
Corrections officials say the site could soon house detainees. Others are skeptical.
McCOOK Work Ethic Camp in Nebraska may be converted to a detention center.
No formal agreement has been signed to convert a remote state prison in Nebraska into the latest immigration detention center for President Trump’s sweeping crackdown, more than three weeks since the governor announced the plan and as lawmakers and nearby residents grow increasingly skeptical.
Corrections officials insist the facility could start housing hundreds of male detainees next month, with classrooms and _ other spaces at the McCook Work Ethic Camp retrofitted for beds. However, lawmakers briefed last week by state officials said they got few concrete answers about cost, staffing and oversight.
“There was more unanswered questions than answered questions in terms of what they know,” state Sen. Wendy DeBoer said.
Officials in the city of McCook were caught off guard in mid-August when Republican Gov. Jim Pillen announced that the minimum-security prison in rural southwest Nebraska would serve as a Midwest hub for immigration detainees. Pillen and federal officials dubbed it the “Cornhusker Clink,” in line with other alliterative detention center names such as “ Alligator Alcatraz ” in Florida and the “Speedway Slammer ” in Indiana.
“City leaders were given absolutely no choice in the matter,” said Mike O'Dell, publisher of the local newspaper, the McCook Gazette.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 13, 2025-Ausgabe von Los Angeles Times.
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