Increasingly, that task has fallen to for-profit firms. Since 2020, the federal government has spent an estimated $7.8 billion on such surveillance technologies, including a $96 million contract with Peter Thiel's data-mining firm Palantir.
9. Put immigrants in prisons.
The most recent data shows that America's immigrant detention centers are already over capacity, with 41,500 beds and 43,759 inmates. ICE is now seeking to more than triple that capacity.
Trump pledged, on Day One, that he would allocate "all legally available resources" to immigrant detention, evidently including America's prisons. In February, the Federal Bureau of Prisons took in the first ICE detainees at facilities in Atlanta, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, and elsewhere.
The policy also embraces military bases. The Northern Command is currently "providing facilities at Buckley Space Force Base" to enable [ICE] to stage and process criminal aliens within the US."
10. Privatize immigrant detention.
More than 90% of such detainees are already overseen by private contractors. Now, ICE is planning to warehouse thousands more by leasing mobile structures from a shipping container company.
And a new plan, floated by former Blackwater CEO Erik Prince, would sell the government "outside assistance" in the form of privatized "processing camps," along with a "small army" of private citizens with the power to arrest and detain immigrants.
For the prison industry, the deportation drive has proven to be a profitable enterprise indeed. "This is truly one of the most exciting periods in my career," said CoreCivic's CEO on a recent call with investors.
11. Bring back family detention.
During the first Trump administration, America was haunted by the specter of immigrant children in cages. Now, the architect of the president's "zero-tolerance" policy and recently appointed "border czar" Tom Homan plans to revive family detention on a whole new scale.
Family detention centers, according to the Detention Watch Network, have a "well-documented history of negligence and abuse." Despite that sordid history, ICE is reportedly readying a "Request for Proposal" (RFP) for "detention facilities intended specifically for families."
At the same time, the administration is making it harder for sponsors of immigrant children to free them from detention.
12. Send asylum seekers to other countries.
The deportation machine is no longer simply an American enterprise. It is now an international affair, with Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Panama already taking in thousands of "third-country deportees."
"We have offered the USA the opportunity to outsource part of its prison system," says El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, whose prisons are rife with human rights violations.
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