Florida, Alligator Alcatraz
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The Latino Newsletter on MSN37mOpinion
Resource Panic and Alligator Alcatraz“Alligator Alcatraz,” the public moniker for an abandoned airport in the Florida Everglades that has been turned into an immigration detention center, has captured national attention since its opening on July 3.
But data and news reports about the first month’s arrivals show the majority of Alligator Alcatraz’s detainees do not have U.S. criminal convictions. President Donald Trump, federal officials and Florida Republicans touted the remote Everglades immigration detention centers — dubbed Alligator Alcatraz — as a place to detain people deemed the "worst of the worst.
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ICE detention standards are difficult to enforce because they aren’t written into law. Rather than follow a uniform standard, detention centers operate under a patchwork of different standards.
Trump administration officials want “Alligator Alcatraz” to be a blueprint, but Democrats are pushing back on expansion.
The ACLU, ACLU of Florida and Americans for Immigrant Justice are working with detainees and other groups representing them, including Florida Keys Immigration, Sanctuary of the South, U.S. Immigration Law Counsel, Victoria Slatton of Sanabria & Associates, and the Law Offices of Catherine Perez, PLLC.
The state of Florida has opened a migrant detention center in the Everglades. Its official name is Alligator Alcatraz, a reference to the former maximum security federal penitentiary in San Francisco Bay.