Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy on efforts to locate large ICE detention centers across the country
The Trump administration is developing a nationwide network of immigration detention centers, including plans to convert private warehouses and manufacturing facilities into holding facilities for those detained during immigration raids. Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy has been covering the story, which has drawn opposition from both Republican and Democratic local officials concerned about the placement of these facilities in their communities. Some communities are conducting public campaigns to discourage property owners from cooperating with the administration's plans, and legal challenges are anticipated.
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Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy on efforts to locate large ICE detention centers across the country
There’s been no bigger or more controversial national news story in recent weeks than the Trump administration’s unprecedented immigration crackdown. All across the country – and perhaps most notably in Minnesota – federal immigration officers have employed an array harsh and often discriminatory and violent tactics to round up people suspected of being undocumented – many of them U.S. citizens.
And of course, the massive sweep has created a need for places to house detainees – at least temporarily – and so it is that we’re now learning of plans to create a vast network of so-called detention centers (that is prisons) across the country. What’s more, as Kevin Hardy, a reporter for the national news outlet Stateline recently reported, in addition to taking over existing jails and prisons, the administration is moving to convert and use large private warehouses and manufacturing buildings for this purpose. Not surprisingly, this is causing a lot of concerns for local government leaders on a variety of grounds, and recently, Newsline caught up with Hardy for an extended conversation to learn more.
In Part One of our recent extended conversation with Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy, we discussed the revelation that the Trump administration plans to establish a new network of so-called detention centers – that is, prisons – to house the thousands of people swept up in recent immigration raids. What’s more, the plan is to convert a large number of private warehouses and manufacturing facilities – many of them located in communities not typically used for prisons – to this purpose.
In Part Two of our chat, we dug deeper into the subject and, in particular, the opposition that has arisen to this scheme from both Republican and Democratic local officials, the public campaigns that some communities have undertaken to convince owners of these facilities not to go along with the administration’s plans, and the prospects for expected court challenges.
Click here to listen to the full interview with Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy.
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