Featured Issues

Featured Issue: Immigration Detention and Alternatives to Detention

3/14/25 AILA Doc. No. 24121300. Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief

Update: On March 14, 2025, AILA released a statement in response to the Trump Administration resuming the practice of detaining families pending their court proceedings in the detention facility in Karnes County, TX, and indicating its plans to use a second facility in Dilley, TX, for family detention.

AILA calls on Congress to significantly reduce and phase out the use of immigration detention for immigration enforcement purposes. Detention is costly, leads to inefficiencies in processing cases, and has a long track record of human rights abuses. Community-based case management services and legal representation is more humane and should be offered to noncitizens to support their compliance of immigration obligations.
 


By the Numbers

  • Book Outs/Books In: The Office of Homeland Security Statistics provides data on the number of migrants who are released from CBP custody to proceed with removal cases, transfers to ICE detention, and transfers to Health & Human Services (HHS). It also provides initial book-in data on ICE detention.
  • Detention: For FY2024, Congress has provided funding to detain a daily average of 41,500 noncitizens at a cost of approximately $3.4 billion. During FY2023, Congress provided funding to detain a daily average of 34,000 noncitizens at a cost of approximately $2.9 billion. A December 2024 ICE memo in response to Congressional requests for information noted that increasing detention capacity by more than 60,000 beds will require a funding increase of approximately $3.2 billion dollars.
  • Current Population: Per ICE, on December 8, 2024, there were 39,062 people in custody and on January 22, 2025, there were 39,703. For future data, see bi-weekly data posted on the ICE website under “Fiscal Year 2025 statistics” here.
  • Daily Costs: Projected average daily costs of detaining an adult noncitizen: $164.65. The actual cost of detaining a noncitizen varies based on geographic region, length of detention, facility type, etc. A recent ICE memo in response to the costs of expanding detention noted that they expect a 5% inflationary increase from FY2024 enacted bed costs.
  • Deaths at Adult Detention Centers - AILA supplies a continually updated list of ICE press releases announcing deaths in adult immigration detention. Note: there can be delays in ICE’s reporting of deaths and there have been instances of seriously ill individuals released from ICE custody, whose deaths are not included in this list.
  • ICE Alternatives to Detention: For FY2024, Congress provided approximately $470 million in funding for ICE’s Alternatives to Detention (ADT) program. This is an increase from approximately $443 million in FY2023 in which 194,427 people were enrolled.
  • Daily Costs of ICE ATD: Average daily cost for participants enrolled in ICE’s Intensive Appearance Supervision Program (ISAP): $8.00
  • Community-Based Case Management: The FEMA/CRCL Case Management Pilot Program (CMPP), also known as the “Alternatives to Detention Grant Program,” received $15 million in continued funding for FY2024. Prior to January 20, 2025, it was operating in five cities.
  • Average daily cost of providing case management for individual family members by a community-based organization (2018 pilot): $14.05
  • Legal Representation: There is no right to a government-provided attorney in immigration court and 70 percent of detained persons face proceedings without counsel. There is a pilot program that serves adult individuals with mental disabilities. Congress did not provide any funding for adult legal representation for FY2024.

 


 

AILA’s Recommendations to Congress

  1. Reduce detention funding to at least 25,000 average daily population or less.
  2. Explicitly prohibit detention funding from being used to detain families and children in custodial settings.
  3. Provide continued funding community-based case management programs outside of ICE such as the Case Management Pilot Program (CMPP) operated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL)
  4. Conduct robust oversight of past congressional appropriations transparency requirements and continue to require ICE to disclose and publish information relating to detention contracts, inspection process and reports, detention data, and policies for the alternatives to detention program.

Background

Created in 2002, Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) has over 22,000 full-time employees, with a total annual budget of more than $9 billion. The agency has three core operational directorates: Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), and the Office of the Principal Legal Advisor (OPLA). Housed within the Department of Homeland Security, ICE joins Customs & Border Protection (CBP) in making up the nation’s largest police force.

Immigration enforcement, including taking noncitizens into custody, is the largest single area of responsibility for ICE. ICE detains noncitizens arrested from the interior of the country and those transferred from the border. Twenty-years ago, the average daily population of detained immigrants was approximately 7,000. During the first Trump Administration, it reached a height of 50,000 average daily population. Regardless of the circumstances of their first encounter with authorities, noncitizens are detained across America in a sprawling network of private and public detention facilities. Most of these facilities operate through contracts between ICE (or, less commonly, the U.S. Marshals Service) and localities for the purposes of detaining noncitizens. In some cases, localities later sub-contract services for operating detention facilities to private prison companies. In other instances, localities reserve space in local, county, or state jails and prisons for the purposes of detaining immigrants. In all cases, localities are financially incentivized to detain individuals to increase profit margins from contracts. One key part of the financial equation is the use of noncitizens to clean and maintain facilities in exchange for $1 a day.

Immigration detention facilities, regardless of the type of contracts, have been the sites of serious and repeated allegations of abuse, including allegations of sexual assault, violations of religious freedom, medical neglect, and the punitive use of solitary confinement. In 2020, the U.S. had the highest number of deaths in ICE adult detention since 2005. Several deaths in custody have been found to have been preventable. Conditions in ICE custody have been described as “barbaric” and “negligent” by DHS experts.

Civil immigration detention works mainly to facilitate deportation. While ICE has the authority to allow most noncitizens to continue with their removal cases on the outside of custody, it often defaults to detention based on alleged “flight risk or threat to public safety.” The vagueness of these concepts frequently works against the liberty interests of noncitizens and there is generally a lack of uniformity when it comes to these discretionary releases. Only a certain portion of the overall noncitizen population must be detained under “mandatory detention” laws and even those individuals may be released based on certain exceptions.

Lastly, because immigration detention is considered “civil,” indigent noncitizens are not generally provided counsel. As a result, representation rates for noncitizens in detention are as low as 14% and directly correlate with the ability to secure release or long-term protection.

 

Reports and Briefings

Government Reports

Legislative and Administrative Advocacy

Browse the Featured Issue: Immigration Detention and Alternatives to Detention collection
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DHS OIG Annual Performance Plan for FY2015

DHS’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) annual performance plan for FY2015, detailing planned evaluations on the scalability of USCIS’s visa and immigrant processing, ICE’s practices on I-9 inspections, USCIS’s credible fear screening, alternatives to detention, policies relating to UACs, and more.

AILA Blog

A Look Into Karnes

AILA member Ruby Powers volunteered at the Karnes detention facility recently; her experience inspired her to write an article which will be available in full soon on AILA's volunteer resource page. Excerpts from the piece are below: “I would like to echo the sentiments expressed by other attorneys

Cases & Decisions, Federal Court Cases

District Court Reaffirms that ICE Detainers Are Not Mandatory

The district court in Illinois cited Galarza v. Szalczyk to rule that local law enforcement offices should not consider ICE detainers issued pursuant to 8 CFR §287.7 as mandatory. (Moreno v. Napolitano, 9/29/14)

9/29/14 AILA Doc. No. 14100141. Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief
AILA Public Statements, Correspondence

Letter from AILA Chapters to the Obama Administration on the Need for Children and Families to Receive Due Process

All of AILA’s U.S.-based chapters signed on to this open letter which calls for the Obama Administration to immediately review its current inhumane and unconstitutional detention and removal policies towards children and families with children.

AILA Quicktake #98: DHS Announcements on Family Detention

AILA President Leslie Holman discusses the two disturbing announcements made this week by ICE and DHS regarding a new family detention facility in Dilley, Texas, and DHS appealing bond decisions for some mothers and children detained in Artesia, NM.

AILA Public Statements, Correspondence

Letter to President Obama Opposing Family Detention

On 9/25/14, AILA joined 167 organizations in urging President Obama to close the Artesia and Karnes detention centers and to halt plans to open a new family detention facility in Dilley, Texas.

AILA Blog

A Shameful Chapter in Our History

  The family detention center known as the “T. Don Hutto Residential Center“ opened in May 2006. Most of the families previously housed at this residential center, like those currently housed at the Artesia and Karnes Detention Centers, were families awaiting adjudication of their asylum claim

AILA Blog

Artesia Kaleidoscope

The three weeks are a kaleidoscope of shifting images: visual, auditory, sensory, and emotional. From 90 degree heat to heavy, cold, rain and flash flooding. It hadn't occurred to me to bring sweaters to the New Mexico desert. Apparently it hadn't occurred to the U.S. government either, as many of t

AILA Public Statements

AILA: Administration Trying to Drag Mothers and Children Back to Detention

In response to the Administration appealing bond decisions for some mothers and children released from Artesia, AILA President Leslie Holman stated, “I am utterly outraged by the latest tactics the Obama Administration has used to inflict needless misery on mothers and children seeking asylum.”

9/23/14 AILA Doc. No. 14092351. Asylum, Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief
AILA Public Statements

AILA: Expansion of Family Detention Means the United States Will Jail More Victims of Violence

AILA President Leslie Holman reacts to confirmation that a massive family detention facility will open in Texas saying, “You can call it a ‘Family Residential Center’ but it is a prison. Dilley will be the largest immigration detention facility nationwide—all for the purpose of jailing families.”

9/23/14 AILA Doc. No. 14092345. Asylum, Detention & Bond, Expedited Removal, Removal & Relief
Cases & Decisions, DOJ/EOIR Cases

BIA Reverses IJ For Providing Required Advisals During Bond Proceedings

Unpublished BIA decision remands record because the IJ provided numerous required advisals during bond proceedings rather than removal proceedings. Special thanks to IRAC. (Matter of Deleon, 9/23/14)

9/23/14 AILA Doc. No. 14112604. Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief
Federal Agencies, Agency Memos & Announcements

ICE to Open Additional Facility in South Texas to House Adults with Children

ICE announcement that it plans to open and operate a new facility in early November in Dilley, Texas to detain adults with children in response to the influx of individuals apprehended along the Southwest border. Facility has capacity for 2,400 individuals.

Media Tools

AILA's Take on Asylum for Detained Families

AILA’s take on the Obama administration’s decision to deny asylum to Central American families fleeing violence.

Media Tools

Family Detention Case Examples

A compilation of case examples of mothers and children detained at the Artesia family detention center.

Media Tools

AILA's Take on Family Detention

AILA calls on the Obama administration to stop the mass detention and rapid deportation of Central American mothers and children in this backgrounder document.

Media Tools

AILA's Take on Bond for Detained Families

AILA backgrounder on the Obama Administration’s decision to denying bond to all Central American families being detained.

9/22/14 AILA Doc. No. 14092254. Detention & Bond, Expedited Removal, Removal & Relief
Media Tools

House Briefing on Family Detention

A 9/22/14 AILA-sponsored briefing in the House on family detention.

Federal Agencies, Agency Memos & Announcements

EOIR to Close El Centro, California Immigration Court

EOIR announcement that it will close its El Centro Immigration Court in California on September 30, 2014, as a result of DHS’s decision to close this location as a primary place of detention for respondents in removal proceedings, and the new hearing location will be the Imperial Immigration Court.

9/19/14 AILA Doc. No. 14091907. Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief
Federal Agencies, Agency Memos & Announcements

ICE Shares Stories from Artesia Detention Facility Demonstrating Humanitarian Mission

ICE press release sharing the experiences ICE employees at the Family Residential Facility in Artesia. Stories included how a HSI special agent used his skills as an EMT to help a toddler experiencing a seizure and how agents and officers have been teaching children there American football.

AILA Public Statements, Correspondence

Letter to Vice President Biden on Pro Bono Representation

A 9/19/14 letter from AILA and other legal services organizations urging the Administration to take action to remove impediments to access to counsel for children and families.

AILA Quicktake #97: Deputy Secretary Mayorkas' Speech and Artesia Hearings

AILA's Director of Advocacy Greg Chen sits down to provide a recap on Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas' appearance at the National Press Club this week. Chen also discusses the immigration court proceedings happening for detainees in Artesia.

AILA Blog

Offering Hope and Comfort to Detained Moms and Kids

Over the past year, the United States has seen a sharp increase in the number of women and young children fleeing violence in Central America.  In response, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) began opening new detention centers across the country to detain families, while their fates are deci

AILA Blog

Artesia Betrays America: Part III

I have no way of adequately expressing the dismay, and loss and anger and hurt and woundedness that this week made me feel.  Finally I figured out the word.  It is betrayal.  I felt betrayed.  Deeply betrayed by something that I have dedicated my life to.  Another lawyer who was there in the first w

Federal Agencies, FR Regulations & Notices

EOIR Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Custody and Bond Proceedings Representation

EOIR notice of proposed rulemaking to amend the regulations to allow a representative to enter an appearance in custody and bond proceedings without such an appearance constituting an entry of appearance for all Immigration Court proceedings. Comments are due by 11/17/14. (79 FR 55659, 9/17/14)

9/17/14 AILA Doc. No. 14091741. Detention & Bond, Removal & Relief
AILA Public Statements, Correspondence

AILA Letter to Congress on Artesia

A 9/16/14 AILA letter to members of Congress urging action on the Artesia, NM family detention center.