Immigrant Detention For Profit Faces Growing Resistance After Big Expansion Under Trump

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A dozen Central Americans in T-shirts that read Mujeres Luchadores — Fighting Women — marched through a small Texas town last month toward the gates of an imposing private detention center where they all used to be incarcerated.

“Biden, hear us! Shut down Hutto!” they chanted.

They’re referring to T. Don Hutto Residential Center, the former state prison in Taylor — just northeast of Austin — named after the founder of the private prison company that holds the contract with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“These corporations are profiting off of our suffering,” former Guatemalan detainee Sulma Franco says into a bullhorn. “We want all the cages shut down now!”

Sonia Mendares, right, is waiting for the release of her 10-year-old daughter from an ICE detention facility in Laredo.
Julia Robinson
Demonstrations like this are part of a growing grassroots resistance to privately run immigrant jails across the country.

The Trump administration dramatically expanded the detention network —often over local objections — and private prison companies were riding high. Under Trump, ICE detained a record 56,000 migrants, asserting they had to be locked up or they would abscond once they lost their immigration cases.

But the political winds have shifted. These days, privately run immigrant jails are facing mounting public opposition, state legislatures are considering measures to shut them down, and the prison industry has fallen out of favor with the new administration in Washington, D.C.


Julia Robinson
Phasing out private prisons

President Biden has instructed the Justice Department to phase out private prisons that incarcerate federal offenders, ordered ICE to arrest fewer immigrants, and signaled an interest in alternatives to immigrant detention.

Opponents to detention for profit believe migrants who have committed no crime and who came to the U.S. seeking asylum should not be incarcerated while their cases are pending.

Critics also say private operators prioritize profits over the well-being of detainees. Former President Donald Trump’s separation of families, which led to mothers being locked up in facilities like Hutto, further inflamed opponents.


Julia Robinson
Meanwhile, major banks have stopped lending to the two publicly-traded prison companies, CoreCivic and GEO Group. And last month, Wall Street further lowered their bond ratings, citing large debt repayments and hostile operating conditions under the new Biden administration.

To try to counter the souring public mood, the four largest prison companies, including GEO and CoreCivic, formed a trade group called Day 1 Alliance.

“There’s been a multitude of misinformation out there, and so I really wouldn’t look to public sentiment for that because there are so many mistruths out there about the industry,” says Alexandra Wilkes, national spokeswoman for the alliance.

But Mark Fleming, associate director of litigation at the National Immigrant Justice Center, which works against the industry, says: “The private prison companies are certainly facing some headwinds here. They are definitely increasingly unpopular in the public sphere.”


Under Siege And Largely Secret: Businesses That Serve Immigration Detention
Finding ways to keep doing business

Hutto, which opened in 2006, was troubled from the beginning. There was a successful ACLU lawsuit over substandard living conditions, and later, allegations of sexual assaults.

In Taylor, as in many places that have private prisons, the locality acts as a middleman between ICE and the detention company, so there is a forum for public complaints.

In Williamson County, where Taylor is located, immigrant advocates asked the commissioners to sever the contract with Hutto. And in 2018, they got their way when the commissioners voted to wind down the contract.

But the celebration was only temporary. Last year, ICE and CoreCivic — the company that runs Hutto — signed a 10-year contract that bypasses Williamson County and public opposition altogether. Hutto stayed open.

Paola Reyes-Cortes, left, Joshua, center, and Iris, right, migrated to the U.S. from Honduras and were separated during their detention.
Julia Robinson
Prison companies “have found ways to keep doing business,” Fleming says. “They have proven over the years that they are resourceful and resilient.”

As elected bodies in prison towns are becoming more responsive to angry citizens, ICE has increasingly relied on this workaround — the agency contracts directly with a prison operator and avoids messy public meetings. ICE says it has to have a place to detain deportable immigrants, about one-third of whom have criminal charges.

The same thing happened on an even larger scale in California. Two weeks before a sweeping state law that would have phased out for-profit detention went into effect last year, ICE quietly signed long-term contracts with three companies to keep their facilities open.

ICE also tried this tactic in Ionia, Mich., but now the outcome is uncertain.

In 2019, the agency announced its intention to open a 600-bed detention facility in that town between Grand Rapids and Lansing. But local opposition quickly formed, the governor came out against it, and even the all-GOP Ionia County Board of Commissioners gave it a thumbs down.

“We took that as really good news that the proposal was shut down so quickly,” says J.R. Martin, with No Detention Centers in Michigan. “We learned that pretty much as soon as that decision had been made, ICE was working on whatever they could do to go around it and to find some other way of establishing a new facility in that area.”

ICE sidestepped the naysayers and began the process to contract directly with a detention company to build a brand-new, 150,000-square-foot jail in Ionia.

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