WASHINGTON – New documents obtained by the ACLU this week reveal further details about Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) plans to expand ICE detention facilities in 10 states across the country. The documents signal a massive expansion of ICE detention capacity – including at facilities notorious for misconduct and abuse – which echo reports earlier this week that the Trump administration has sought proposals for up to $45 billion to expand immigrant detention. The discovery also comes on the heels of a “strategic sourcing vehicle” released by ICE earlier this month, which called for government contractors to submit proposals for immigration detention and related services.
“The documents received provide important details regarding what we have long feared – a massive expansion of ICE detention facilities nationwide in an effort to further the Trump administration’s dystopian plans to deport our immigrant neighbors and loved ones,” said Eunice Cho, senior staff attorney at the ACLU’s National Prison Project. “This expansion is a disastrous waste of billions of taxpayer dollars that will only line the coffers of the private prison industry.”
The more than 250 pages of documents disclosed this week include information regarding facility capacity, history of facility use, available local transport, proximity to local hospitals, immigration courts, and transport, as well as access to local consulates and pro bono legal services. Specifically, the documents reveal that Geo Group, Inc. (GEO) and CoreCivic submitted proposals for a variety of facilities not currently in use by ICE, including:
GEO, CoreCivic, and MTC also sought to renew contracts at current ICE detention facilities, including:
Sabot Consulting also submitted a proposal to construct new facilities in Utah and Wyoming. Although a large portion of the document is redacted, the proposal cites to “potentially problematic statutory requirements” in Utah state law that would pose challenges to the construction of a new facility absent a contract with the state department of corrections. The proposal also includes a map of the geographic boundaries of the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeal. Meanwhile, Target Hospitality submitted a proposal for use of temporary buildings for use as detention facilities at Carrizo Springs, TX, previously used to hold unaccompanied immigrant minors in the custody of the Office of Refugee Settlement. Active Deployment Systems also submitted a proposal including “proposed camp layout[s]” to “utiliz[e] available land to construct a comprehensive using modular units” for ICE detention in sites near Harlingen, TX; Kansas City, MO; and in Montana.
ICE previously released these documents in an earlier production, subject to significant redactions, and secured as part of an ongoing Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit first filed by the ACLU in September 2024. The lawsuit sought records related to ICE’s contract solicitations to “identify possible detention facilities” in 17 states covered by the Chicago, Harlingen, Newark, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Seattle, San Francisco, and El Paso ICE Field Offices. Notably, information regarding the availability of medical care, pricing, and potential staffing challenges remains redacted in most proposals. Details regarding potential impediments to facility operation – including pending or expected legal issues, and political opposition to ICE’s mission within the local community – were also omitted from the latest production of FOIA documents obtained via the ACLU’s litigation.
The FOIA documents are available here.