Immigration Detention Expands in Size and Severity Amid Accountability Concerns

Feature and Cover Navigating Immigration Challenges for Indian American Families Balancing Work and Home

A recent report highlights the Trump administration’s expansion of immigration detention, targeting individuals with no criminal records and creating a system that pressures them to abandon their legal cases.

Washington, D.C., January 14 — A new report from the American Immigration Council reveals that the Trump administration has significantly intensified its immigration detention practices, locking up hundreds of thousands of individuals, most of whom have no criminal records. This harsh system makes it exceedingly difficult for detainees to contest their cases or secure their release.

The report, titled *Immigration Detention Expansion in Trump’s Second Term*, outlines how historic funding increases and aggressive enforcement tactics have propelled immigration detention to unprecedented levels in U.S. history. Rather than addressing genuine public safety concerns, the government is allocating billions of dollars toward mass detention, coercing individuals who pose no threat into surrendering their legal rights and accepting deportation.

As the Trump administration broadens its mass deportation agenda, the ramifications extend well beyond detention centers. The Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) aggressive tactics during large-scale enforcement actions in neighborhoods across the country have already resulted in tragic, preventable deaths, underscoring the human cost of an immigration enforcement system that operates with minimal oversight or accountability.

“This has absolutely nothing to do with law and order. Under mass deportation, we’re witnessing the construction of a mass immigration detention system on a scale the United States has never seen, where individuals with no criminal records are routinely incarcerated without a clear path to release,” said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council. “Over the next three years, billions more dollars will be funneled into a detention system that is on track to rival the entire federal criminal prison system. The goal is not public safety, but to pressure individuals into relinquishing their rights and accepting deportation.”

According to the report, the number of individuals held in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention surged nearly 75 percent in 2025, rising from approximately 40,000 at the beginning of the year to 66,000 by early December, marking the highest level ever recorded. With Congress authorizing $45 billion in new detention funding, the report warns that the system could more than triple in size over the next four years.

Key findings from the report include a significant shift in the demographics of those being detained. Arrests of individuals with no criminal records skyrocketed by 2,450 percent during Trump’s first year, driven by tactics such as “at-large” arrests, roving patrols, worksite raids, and re-arrests of individuals attending immigration court hearings or ICE check-ins. The percentage of individuals arrested by ICE and held in detention without a criminal record increased from 6 percent in January to 41 percent by December.

The rapid expansion of the detention system has exacerbated already troubling conditions. By early December, ICE was utilizing over 100 more facilities for detaining immigrants than at the start of the year. For the first time, thousands of immigrants arrested in the interior are being held in hastily constructed tent camps, where conditions are reported to be brutal. More individuals died in ICE detention in 2025 than in the previous four years combined.

Moreover, detainees are increasingly stripped of their opportunity to petition a judge for release. New policies have normalized prolonged, indefinite detention, with the Trump administration pursuing measures that deny millions of individuals the right to a bond hearing, where they could argue for release into their communities while their immigration cases are pending, even for those who have lived in the United States for decades.

The administration is also using detention as a means to escalate deportations. By November 2025, for every individual released from ICE detention, more than fourteen were deported directly from custody, a stark contrast to the one-to-two ratio observed a year earlier.

As the administration expands detention, it simultaneously undermines oversight. The rapid growth of the detention system has coincided with significant cuts to internal watchdogs and new restrictions on congressional inspections. This erosion of oversight has far-reaching consequences: as ICE operates with fewer checks on its authority, aggressive enforcement actions in cities have led to preventable harm and deaths, highlighting the dangers posed by a lack of accountability.

“The Trump administration continues to falsely claim it’s going after the ‘worst of the worst,’ but public safety is merely a pretext for detaining immigrants and pressuring them to abandon their cases,” said Nayna Gupta, policy director at the American Immigration Council. “Horrific conditions inside detention facilities compel individuals to accept deportation, which fuels the administration’s inhumane deportation quotas and goals.”

The report profiles three individuals whose experiences illustrate the real-world impact of this unprecedented expansion of detention:

One case involves a green card holder and father of two, who was detained by ICE at an airport due to a past conviction that he was assured would not jeopardize his legal status. During his detention, ICE neglected to address his medical issues for months.

Another case features an asylum seeker who was granted humanitarian protection by an immigration judge but remains detained months later without explanation, as ICE seeks to deport her to a third country. She reports that her treatment in federal prison for an immigration offense was better than her current conditions.

Lastly, a DACA recipient was detained following a criminal arrest and transferred repeatedly across the country as ICE searched for available bed space, witnessing consistently poor conditions across various detention centers.

With billions in additional funding already approved, the report warns that immigration detention is set to expand even further, exacerbating the human, legal, and financial costs for families, communities, and the nation as a whole.

“This is a system built to produce deportations, not justice,” said Reichlin-Melnick. “When detention becomes the default response to immigration cases, the costs are borne by everyone. Families are torn apart, due process is set aside, and billions of taxpayer dollars are squandered on these unnecessary and cruel policies that do nothing to enhance public safety,” according to American Immigration Council.

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