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‘Dystopian’ conditions for ICE detainees
Los Angeles Times
|September 04, 2025
1 in 3 held in overcrowded sites. Advocate tells of ‘poor food quality, abuse by guards,’ lack of clean clothes.
DETAINEES wave to a helicopter overhead as they spend time outdoors at ICE's overcrowded Krome detention center in Miami in July.
Mattresses on the floor, next to bunk beds, in meeting rooms and gymnasiums. No access to a bathroom or drinking water. Hourlong lines to buy food at the commissary or to make a phone call.
These are some of the conditions described by lawyers and the people held at immigrant detention facilities around the country over the last few months. The number of detained immigrants surpassed a record 60,000 last month. A Los Angeles Times analysis of public data shows that more than a third of ICE detainees have spent time in an overcapacity dedicated detention center this year.
In the first half of the year, at least 19 out of 49 dedicated detention facilities exceeded their rated bed capacity and many more holding facilities and local jails exceeded their agreed-upon immigrant detainee capacity. During the height of arrest activity in June, facilities that were used to operating with plenty of available beds suddenly found themselves responsible for the meals, medical attention, safety and sleeping space for four times as many detainees as they had the previous year.
“There are so many things we've seen before — poor food quality, abuse by guards, not having clean clothes or underwear, not getting hygiene products,” said Silky Shah, executive director of Detention Watch Network, a coalition that aims to abolish immigrant detention. “But the scale at which it’s happening feels greater, because it’s happening everywhere and people are sleeping on floors.”
Shah said there’s no semblance of dignity now. “I've been doing this for many years; I don’t think I even had the imagination ofit getting this bad,” she added.
This story is from the September 04, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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