The faces of the Trump regime's xenophobic crackdown efforts are off the radar, which doesn't hold true for their targets. Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khlalil, one of countless innocents snatched off the streets, faces appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court, as the price of avoiding rearrest.
Khalil's counterpart, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, won a major legal victory this weekend, after a federal judge tossed out human smuggling charges against him, on grounds of vindictive prosecution -- since he too is challenging the federal government's attempts to deport him. The feds, of course, are appealing the judge's action, which they're blasting as "naked judicial activism" -- an odd twist of phrase for the maximalist-minded master they serve, who openly flaunts his abuses of power at every turn.
The overall volume of arrests averages 900 to 1,000 per day nationwide, well short of the 3,000 figure so desired by Trump's key henchman, Stephen Miller -- but enough to underscore the regime's ongoing attempt to impose its will, however it can, wherever it can. About half occur in custodial situations -- inmates already sitting in local, state or federal lockups -- with the remainder spread out over at-large roundups, or immigration status check-ins at ICE field offices.
These trends point at the resolve of Noem's successor, Markwayne Mullin, to take ICE off the front pages, in favor of a lower-key, more targeted approach. It doesn't make him a candidate for sainthood. Neither does it suggest that Mulli's in danger of finding his softer, fluffier side -- let alone his cohort, David Venturella, the former GEO prison executive tapped as acting director of DHS's sister agency, ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement).
Just what we need to restore public confidence, right? The face of a for-profit prison company, who also showered Trump's 2024 campaign with fountains of cash. Still, on that subject, one other piece of unfinished business is worth noting -- and that's the fate of ICE's plan to warehouse all its unfortunate fish, figuratively and literally, into massive holding pens, modeled along Amazon's lines.
If the possibility exists, however remotely, a more rigorous review is then required -- which typically takes months to complete. What seems like politically expedient red raw meat in 2026 may well give off a fouler odor, once the winds start blowing, whether this fall, or in 2028 -- as communities start pushing back, and force the cancellation or sidelining of such ghastly projects.
A judge in Michigan canceled a similar preliminary injunction that would have temporarily halted similar retrofitting plans for a warehouse in Romulus, Bloomberg Law reports. The lawsuit in that case alleges that one sewer line isn't nearly enough for 500 projected detainees, for a building that's sitting on top of a floodplain. Similar pushbacks are proceeding in Arizona and New Jersey, raising headaches that authorities might well have avoided, as Hurson stated, in his ruling:
“Had D.H.S. done so, it likely would have found that the rapid transformation of a cargo-processing facility with four toilets and two water fountains into a temporary residence and workplace for hundreds, if not thousands, would jeopardize the health and safety of the surrounding ecosystem in myriad ways, most notably through the likely overtaxing of the sewer system."
Time will tell how that battle plays out, though for his part, acting DHS head Todd Lyons claimed that the plans are actually beneficial -- allowing the government to control the space, instead of relying on private contractors. "It's actually retrofitted to become a detention facility, one that we'll actually be proud of, one that would have actually have standards," Lyons told Congress.
Then again, when we consider the bigger picture -- from how many have already died in these holding pens, to persistent allegations of physical and sexual assault, substandard sanitation, and total disregard for detainees' rights, including access to lawyers -- Lyons's breezily self-assured statements seem totally divorced from the cold, hard reality of what's happening on the ground.
ICE Corrections:
Detention
Centers
To Die For.
Your Surveillance State,
One Warehouse At A Time
Or maybe a blacker, bare-knuckled style humor is called for here, one that's more in keeping with the mission:
Ice Detention:
Where Revenge Is Always
A Dish Served Cold!
You get the gist. The issue hasn't gone away, just off the front pages -- which is all the more reason to keep the pressure on, and shine an unforgiving light on Mullin's excesses, and those of his fellow overdogs...even as millions upon millions of unfortunates sleep on the sidewalks, or on the back seats of their cars, wondering when this uniquely ill-starred era of feral capitalist madness is ever going to end. We owe them every effort to ensure that day comes sooner, rather than later. -- The Reckoner
Environmental Review Plan For Detention Centers:
Over Lack Of Environmental Reviews:
The New Republic:
https://newrepublic.com/post/211006/dhs-secretary-mullin-wife-special-government-employee-job
https://theweek.com/cartoons/editorial-cartoons-alligator-alcatraz
<American Civil Liberties Union, Florida,
American Friends Service Committee>
"There’s absolutely no reason for detention centers to hold people for extended periods of time, other than to fund the prison industry complex and waste taxpayer dollars."
<Representative Andre Carson, Facebook>
"It is detaining people first and sorting out legality later. It is expanding executive power while narrowing public oversight. It is treating constitutional limits as obstacles rather than obligations."


















