U.S. Immigration Detention Facilities: Mass Deaths and Severe Human Rights Abuses Worsen Amid 'Punishment Over Human Rights' Stance

KO YONG-CHUL Reporter

korocamia@naver.com | 2025-10-09 20:20:11


 

A shocking 15 immigrants have died this year in federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities. Ten of these deaths occurred in the first half of the year, and some are reported to have been suicides. Experts are pointing to this tragic toll as the catastrophic result of a government stance that prioritizes 'punishment over human rights' by treating immigrants as criminals.

Record High Detainee Population and Deepening Facility Problems 

The current number of immigrants in ICE detention has exceeded a record high of 60,000, severely exacerbating facility overcrowding, unsanitary conditions, and inadequate medical care. Notably, at the Everglades Detention Facility in Florida, also known as 'Alligator Alcatraz,' over 1,200 detainees are reportedly unaccounted for. This facility was hastily built in the Florida swamps and has previously been ordered by a federal court to cease operations and be dismantled due to lawsuits from environmental groups and Native American tribes. This symbolically illustrates the inhumane and environmentally irresponsible reality of detention facility operations.

Detention Becomes 'Torture': Loss of Human Rights Amid Trauma 

Experts who attended an American Community Media (ACoM) press briefing on the 3rd denounced the inhumane state of the detention facilities. Heather Hogan, an attorney with the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), testified that despite most detainees having no criminal records, they are subjected to prison-like conditions, often in handcuffs and shackles, and receive dehumanizing treatment from staff. The environment—where detainees receive a perfunctory meal at dawn and then spend the entire day waiting for interviews—inflicts extreme fatigue and hunger. For those who have suffered trauma such as kidnapping or rape in their home countries, detention is a new form of mental torture. There are frequent instances where suicidal or at-risk detainees are placed in solitary confinement, leading to warnings that this practice could be classified as torture under international standards.

The 'Immigration Detention Facility Conditions Report' published by the California Department of Justice in April 2024 also highlighted that most facilities fail to meet standards for mental health, suicide prevention, and incident reporting procedures, and that issues with the use of force are frequent. Attorney Hogan criticized the government for using the abysmal conditions to pressure immigrants to abandon their asylum claims voluntarily, emphasizing that detention should be an administrative procedure, not a form of punishment.

Horrific Reality Exposed by Detention of Korean Workers 

The dire conditions of immigrant detention facilities were reaffirmed by the testimonies of Korean workers recently held at the Folksvile (presumably Folkston) ICE Detention Center in Georgia. The approximately 300 Korean laborers arrested in a September raid on the construction site of the Hyundai Motor-LG Energy Solution joint battery plant reported unsanitary conditions: mattresses were moldy, the water smelled, and the food was poor.

The Folkston Detention Center is operated by the private correctional company GEO Group and had already been flagged in a 2021 Department of Homeland Security Inspector General's report for problems including old facilities, mold, and insect infestations. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of South Korea stated it would conduct a full investigation into human rights abuses targeting the Korean workers in that facility.

Concealment of Death Toll and Deterioration of Human Rights Monitoring 

Andrew Free, an attorney who has tracked ICE detention death data, warned that the actual number of deaths could be much higher, revealing that in addition to the official 22 deaths in the 2025 fiscal year, at least five unrecorded death cases have been confirmed, and deaths in local detention centers are not being disclosed. This led to criticism that the government is deliberately suppressing information to obstruct human rights monitoring.

Yannick Gill, Senior Counsel at Human Rights First, condemned the repeated denial of access to facilities for human rights groups and federal lawmakers as a violation of the Constitution's Congressional oversight power. He further denounced instances of medical neglect, violence, sexual abuse, solitary confinement misuse, and denial of access to legal counsel as acts of torture explicitly defined by the international community. Gill also added that the expansion of the Trump administration's third-country removal agreements constitutes a violation of international law by effectively causing the enforced disappearance of refugees.

Concerns Over Vicious Cycle Fueled by $150 Billion Enforcement Budget 

Experts predict that the $150 billion immigration enforcement budget recently passed by Congress will further worsen the situation. This is because $45 billion of this budget is directly allocated to detention facility expansion. Concerns are raised that this will lead to a vicious cycle of expanding the detention network, as state and local prisons benefit financially from detention contracts. Furthermore, this budget could be misused to detain not only immigrants but also government critics and dissidents. The experts' final warning—that immigration policy is a test not just for immigrants but for the direction of American democracy and human rights—reconfirms the severe reality of U.S. immigration detention facilities.

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