The numbers are stark and getting worse. Since the start of the federal fiscal year in October, at least 23 people have died while in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody — already surpassing the total for the entire previous fiscal year and putting 2026 on track to be the deadliest year for immigration detainees in more than two decades.
The spike in fatalities comes amid an unprecedented expansion of the nation’s immigration detention system, with nearly 70,000 people currently held in ICE facilities across the country — the highest number ever recorded. That figure represents a roughly 75 percent increase from the approximately 40,000 individuals detained at the start of 2025.
A System Under Strain
The rising death toll has alarmed medical professionals, immigration attorneys, and former agency officials who point to a confluence of factors creating dangerous conditions inside detention centers. The rapid expansion of bed capacity has not been matched by corresponding increases in medical staffing or oversight infrastructure.
In October, ICE halted payments to contractors providing medical care inside its detention facilities — a suspension that is not expected to be reversed until late April. The payment freeze has left medical providers scrambling to maintain services while absorbing costs, and detainees report longer wait times for routine care and critical medications.
The consequences have been immediate and measurable. Confirmed measles outbreaks emerged at the Florence Detention Center in Arizona and the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas, which houses families with children. A separate outbreak was reported this month at Camp East Montana, a Texas facility that has also recorded three detainee deaths in recent months.
Oversight Gutted at Critical Moment
The deterioration in conditions coincides with significant reductions in the workforce responsible for monitoring them. The Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, the internal DHS office tasked with investigating complaints and conditions inside detention facilities, has lost hundreds of staff members over the past year through layoffs and attrition.
Current and former employees describe an office that can no longer fulfill its basic oversight mandate. Complaint investigations that once took weeks now languish for months. Facility inspections have been delayed or canceled. The institutional knowledge needed to identify systemic problems before they turn fatal is evaporating.
For families trying to locate someone in detention, the situation creates an additional layer of anxiety. Communication systems inside many facilities are limited, and the rapid shuffling of detainees between locations — sometimes across state lines — makes it difficult for attorneys and relatives to maintain contact.
Expansion Without Infrastructure
The detention population surge is being driven overwhelmingly by individuals with no criminal convictions. Analysis of ICE data shows that 92 percent of the growth in the detained population during fiscal year 2026 consists of immigrants without criminal records — a significant shift from prior years when the agency prioritized detention of those with serious criminal histories.
ICE has been purchasing and converting commercial warehouses into detention facilities in communities across the country, part of a plan to eventually secure more than 100,000 detention beds. The conversions have sparked resistance in both liberal and conservative areas, with local officials raising concerns about infrastructure strain, emergency services capacity, and the speed at which facilities are being stood up.
In Georgia, one small town saw its city council unanimously vote to demand the federal government halt construction at a proposed facility until community questions were answered. Similar pushback has emerged in communities in Texas, California, and several Midwestern states.
Medical Professionals Sound the Alarm
Healthcare workers assigned to immigration detention centers have begun speaking publicly about conditions they describe as chaotic and dangerous. Reports describe rushed medical screenings during intake, critical delays in dispensing prescribed medications, and facilities operating well beyond their designed capacity.
Some medical staff have resigned rather than continue working in conditions they believe compromise patient safety. Others describe being pressured to process detainees through medical screening faster than clinical standards allow, creating opportunities for serious conditions to go undetected.
The previous fiscal year already held the record for ICE detention deaths, with 31 fatalities in 2025. At the current pace, 2026 could see that figure doubled — a trajectory that immigration advocates say demands immediate congressional attention and independent investigation.
Understanding the difference between jail, prison, and immigration detention is important for families navigating these systems. Immigration detention operates under civil rather than criminal authority, which means detainees have fewer procedural protections than individuals held in the criminal justice system — even as conditions inside the facilities increasingly mirror those of the most troubled jails and prisons in the country.
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- Texas Jail & Prison Directory — Find facilities across the state, including immigration detention centers
- How to Find Someone in Jail or Detention — Step-by-step guide for locating detained individuals
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