War Crime / Crime Against Humanity

ICE Detention: Deaths, Abuse, and Inhumane Conditions in Immigration Detention Facilities

Under Trump, ICE detention grew from approximately 41,000 to over 55,000 people at peak. At least 41 people died in ICE custody during the first term; a DHS OIG inspection found facilities with standing sewage, rotten food, and detainees unable to access medical care. Multiple investigations documented sexual abuse, inadequate mental health care, and coerced medical procedures.

Overview

The Trump administration's immigration enforcement agenda required detaining vastly more people — and the system rapidly exceeded its capacity and quality controls. ICE detention grew from approximately 41,000 people in fiscal year 2017 to a peak of over 55,000 — the highest level in U.S. history — as the administration directed ICE to detain all undocumented immigrants encountered, including those with no criminal records who had lived in the United States for decades.

The expansion was not matched with proportional increases in medical staff, facility capacity, or oversight.

Deaths in Custody

At least 41 people died in ICE custody during Trump's first term. Deaths included people with treatable conditions who did not receive adequate medical care, people with serious mental illness who were held in solitary confinement, and people who died waiting for medical evaluation.

The Associated Press reviewed ICE medical records and found that in multiple cases, detainees had complained of serious symptoms for days before receiving care; in some cases, care was denied or delayed because ICE facility contracts did not require the level of medical staffing that would have been required in a comparable local jail.

Facility Conditions

DHS's own Inspector General conducted unannounced inspections of ICE facilities in 2019 and found:

  • Overflowing toilets and standing sewage
  • Rotten food served to detainees
  • Detainees unable to access medical care for documented serious conditions
  • Evidence of sexual abuse by staff in at least one facility
  • Widespread use of solitary confinement for prolonged periods, including on individuals with serious mental illness

The OIG described conditions at multiple facilities as "dangerous" and presenting "immediate risks" to detainee health and safety.

The Irwin County Gynecological Procedures

Among the most serious allegations was a September 2020 whistleblower complaint from a nurse at the Irwin County Detention Center in Georgia, who alleged that a contracted gynecologist had performed numerous invasive gynecological procedures — including hysterectomies — on immigrant women detained at the facility, in many cases without meaningful informed consent and apparently not for documented medical necessity. Multiple detained women came forward with corroborating accounts. The DHS OIG confirmed the investigation was ongoing. A federal criminal investigation was also opened.

The allegation drew comparisons to forced sterilization programs that have been designated as crimes against humanity under international law.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Trump orders ICE detention expansion

    Executive Order 13768 directs ICE to detain all undocumented people encountered, regardless of criminal history, and to expand detention capacity. The order ends 'catch and release' for most categories.

  2. Detention reaches 40,000; deaths begin surging

    ICE detention passes 40,000 for the first time in years; deaths in custody begin increasing as the population grows faster than medical staff and facility infrastructure.

  3. CBP conditions at border facilities — OIG 'immediate risk' finding

    The DHS OIG reports that Border Patrol facilities holding migrants are dangerously overcrowded, presenting 'immediate risks' to health and safety. Facilities designed for 125 hold over 900. Agents report 7-day-old infants in outdoor pens.

  4. OIG: ICE facility conditions 'dangerous'

    DHS OIG releases a second report finding dangerous conditions at four ICE facilities — including standing sewage in showers, rotten food, detainees unable to access medical care — and recommending urgent corrective action.

  5. Doctors Without Borders: 'systemic mistreatment'

    Médecins Sans Frontières issues a report documenting 'systemic mistreatment' of migrants in U.S. government custody, including denial of adequate food, water, sleep, and medical attention.

  6. Irwin County hysterectomy whistleblower

    Nurse Dawn Wooten at the Irwin County Detention Center in Georgia files a complaint alleging an ICE contractor performed unnecessary gynecological procedures, including hysterectomies, on immigrant women who did not give meaningful informed consent. The DHS OIG confirms it is investigating.

  7. 41 deaths in ICE custody during first term

    By the end of the first Trump term, at least 41 people have died in ICE custody — a number that will continue to be revised upward as deaths initially classified as non-custody are reviewed.

Sources

  1. Concerns about ICE Detainee Treatment and Care at Detention Facilities — DHS Office of Inspector General
  2. Inside a Texas Building Where the Government Is Holding Immigrant Children — The New York Times
  3. Justice-Free Zones: U.S. Immigration Detention Under the Trump Administration — ACLU archived ✓
  4. Whistleblower complaint raises alarm about gynecological surgeries on immigrant women at ICE facility — The Guardian
  5. CBP Treatment of Detained Migrants — House Committee on Oversight and Reform
  6. AP review: Deaths in ICE detention have risen in Trump era — The Associated Press

Verification

Publication provenance

Related records

Updated October 30, 2020 Deportation to Torture
Critical Rights and Rule-of-Law Concern

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