OCHOPEE, Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Thursday that the Everglades detention center dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" will close after nearly a year of operation; contractors have been ordered to begin full demobilization this week and detainees were relocated earlier as officials cited hurricane-season safety concerns. Federal authorities coordinated transfers and state officials cited the availability of permanent federal detention capacity. The closure follows reports that the $1.2 billion facility processed thousands, with ICE reporting more than 1,300 detained in April and the governor later stating roughly 21,000 processed overall; advocacy groups described sanitation failures and limited legal access, and contractors were instructed to make significant progress on dismantling by midweek, prompting oversight and fiscal questions.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The Everglades detention center's closure affects your tax dollars. It cost $1.2 billion to run, and its shutdown raises questions about fiscal responsibility. Keep an eye on how your state officials manage public funds.
This closure is a big deal. It's about safety, rights, and money. The center had sanitation issues and limited legal access. Now, it's being dismantled due to hurricane risks. Worth forwarding if you know someone interested in immigration or public spending.
Governor Ron DeSantis and state officials benefited politically and operationally by framing the facility as a temporary solution that processed large numbers of migrants, allowing the administration to demonstrate decisive immigration enforcement while shifting ongoing detention responsibility to federal facilities.
Migrant detainees, who reported sanitation failures and limited legal access, suffered from harsh conditions and relocation disruptions, while taxpayers and oversight entities face scrutiny over the $1.2 billion cost and expedited construction process.
Trump empties Florida's Alligator Alcatraz amid soaring costs
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