© 2025 Texas Public Radio
Real. Reliable. Texas Public Radio.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
KCTI-AM in Gonzales is currently off-air. Engineers are awaiting parts to restore service as quickly as possible.

In recorded calls, reports of overcrowding and lack of food at ICE detention centers

People place white carnation flowers on the fence of the Krome Detention Center during a vigil protesting US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and mass deportations in Miami on May 24, 2025.
GIORGIO VIERA/AFP via Getty Images
/
AFP
People place white carnation flowers on the fence of the Krome Detention Center during a vigil protesting US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and mass deportations in Miami on May 24, 2025.

The text message, sent to NPR, came in early May:

In early May, NPR began receiving desperate messages from family members of detainees in Florida.
Jasmine Garsd/NPR / Jasmine Garsd/NPR
/
Jasmine Garsd/NPR
In early May, NPR began receiving desperate messages from family members of detainees in Florida.

It was accompanied by a screenshot of a photo of a man with swollen red eyes, with another screenshot of his full detainee information.

"Please help me. Im desperate."

The woman who sent it, Maria, was texting about her brother at the Krome Detention Center in Miami, Florida. She requested their last name be withheld, for fear of retaliation against her brother who has been held in detention for more than two months.

She told NPR, he had a fever, a serious eye infection for almost two weeks, and says he was denied medication for both.

"There are a lot of sick people there, and they aren't getting medical attention," she told NPR over the phone. "They are sleeping on the floor, and sometimes don't get meals."

MIRAMAR, FLORIDA - MAY 01: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference, in front of posters of people that law enforcement arrested, held at the ICE-Enforcement and Removal Operation office on May 01, 2025 in Miramar, Florida. DeSantis talked about a multi-agency immigration enforcement effort named Operation Tidal Wave that they say resulted in more than 1,100 arrests in a single week in Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images North America
/
Getty Images North America
MIRAMAR, FLORIDA - MAY 01: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference, in front of posters of people that law enforcement arrested, held at the ICE-Enforcement and Removal Operation office on May 01, 2025 in Miramar, Florida. DeSantis talked about a multi-agency immigration enforcement effort named Operation Tidal Wave that they say resulted in more than 1,100 arrests in a single week in Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Florida has pledged to be a national model for state cooperation with President Trump's immigration crackdown. As detention centers here and across the country fill up, NPR has received an outpouring of messages about severe overcrowding and inhumane conditions in immigration facilities across the state. More than a dozen detainees, family members and lawyers described similar issues as Maria, including detainees underfed and in ill health. Krome is a storied detention center, dogged for years by allegations of inhumane conditions, and investigated by the Department of Justice in 2000 on accusations of sexual abuse. This year alone there have been two deaths at the facility: Maksym Chernayak, a Ukrainian immigrant, and Genry Ruiz Guillen, from Honduras.

"I had a client who was at Krome," says Miami based lawyer Jeff Botelho, whose client recently told him "they had been sleeping on the floor for a week or two. For food he said they were given a cup of rice and a glass of water a day. It was very concerning."Lawyers, advocates and experts are warning that this is the new normal across the country: the federal government is holding more than 48,000 people in immigration detention, about a 20% increase since January. But deportations are not keeping pace.  

Experts say that's largely what's driving the overcrowding in detention centers.

"There's incredible pressure to ramp up arrests inside the interior of the United States," says Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), a non-profit immigrant advocacy group. He estimates that ICE is at 125% detention capacity. "And so far, there has been, if anything, just a slight increase in the capacity to actually deport people."

In a written statement, Immigration and Customs Enforcement told NPR that "some ICE facilities are experiencing temporary overcrowding due to recent increases in detention populations. We are actively implementing measures to manage capacity while maintaining compliance with federal standards and our commitment to humane treatment. The reality is that these accusations do not reflect ICE's policies or practices."

What do the detention and deportation numbers say? 

The increase to nearly 50,000 detainees marks a sharp increase from the number of detentions during the Biden administration, which climbed to 39,703 in January 2025.

Syracuse University professor Austin Kocher, who tracks immigration statistics, notes that immigration arrest numbers are simply not made available by local or federal officials.

ICE did not respond to NPR's questions about Florida's detention numbers so far in 2025.  

Deportation numbers are even trickier to come by. The government claims it has deported more than 160,000 people since Trump took office for a second term in January. Some experts are skeptical that those figures are accurate.

"Up until about three weeks ago or so, things were pretty consistent with what they were in terms of the end of the Biden Administration," says Tom Cartwright, who has been tracking deportation flights for years. "Typically four to five deportation flights per day."

But Cartwright says that number has increased in the last few weeks to six to seven flights a day, mostly to Central America. And while he has no way of knowing how many people are in each airplane, he calculates each plane has the capacity to carry between 120 and 150 people.

At most, that's an estimated 1,050 people being deported every day, out of the 50,000 or so who are detained.

Overcrowding, illness and hunger reported  in detention facilities 

"They're serving rotten food. People are getting sick. My spouse is not eating," J. told NPR in May. His loved one was being held at Glades County Detention Center. J. asked that we refer to him by his first initial, because he fears retaliation against his loved one.

J. is one of the many family members of detainees who called NPR to report their loved ones not receiving meals or getting rotten food. Detainees who NPR spoke to over the phone confirmed this, and many said they'd had to sleep on the floor for weeks.

In fact the situation at Krome Detention Center is believed to have gotten so dire, Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-FL) paid a surprise visit there last week. She told NPR that in the intake area two to three dozen men are "crammed into the perimeter of a very tiny room for up to 48 hours. They defecate in front of each other, they eat, they sleep on stone floors. It's really inhumane."

Advocates say this situation is playing out nationally.

"We have seen a rapid deterioration over the last few months," says Setareh Ghandehari, advocacy director at the non-profit advocacy group Detention Watch Network. "We're hearing reports… that there isn't enough food." She says she's increasingly been hearing accounts from people in detention going hungry. "I've heard people in use the word 'starving .'"

There have been nine deaths in ICE detention since January, which is on track to be the deadliest year since 2020. At least three of those deaths have been in Florida.

Major expansion of detention facilities coming 

The Trump administration is promising to increase the rate of arrests of immigrants to three thousand people a day.

"President Trump is going to keep pushing to get that number up higher each and every single day," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told Fox News last week.  

Miller was discussing the sweeping budget bill passed by the House and now before the Senate. It would give $75 billion over the next couple of years, in additional funding for ICE, including $45 billion for detention facilities, and $14.4 billion for removal operations.

"We can have, permanently, the safest, strongest, most secure system in American history," Miller told the network.

But immigrant advocates warn the measure will expand mass detention and surveillance.

"I think that it is not designed to increase the removals of people who are not legally allowed to be here," says Deborah Fleischaker, former acting chief of staff for ICE during the Biden administration. "It is designed to hold more people for longer."

Fleischaker believes ICE has, historically, been underfunded. But the bill, as written "is so significant and so extreme. What they're trying to enable… I don't think it is within the imagination of the American people when they voted for Donald Trump."

Isacson, with WOLA adds that the actions occurring now, will multiply.

"Plainclothes people using rough tactics and covering their faces to take people off the streets and sort of muscle them into vehicles," he says. "This is going to be common. And it's going to become much more common to see that all around the country military bases may have detention facilities."

"What are the chances my deportation flight will make a wrong turn?"

"I am anguished. I have not heard anything about my son."

Late in May, NPR began receiving messages from Vivian Ortega, a mother in Venezuela, regarding her son, Jhonkleiver Ortega.

Ortega came to the U.S. three years ago, and was working in construction. He was picked up in November 2024 for not having a driver's license, which under Florida state law is not available to immigrants without legal status. She told us she had sold her house in Venezuela to pay for his $7,000 bond, in January of this year. When he went to his next court hearing in February he was detained.

Vivian had heard from him infrequently, and she was terrified "he was barely eating in there."

Data trackers and policy experts say in the end, the Trump administration's goal of deporting one million migrants a year is so high, encouraging self-deportation is paramount.

"The fact that [detention] is often so unsafe and unhealthy leads me to believe that there's also a desire to wear people down," says Isacson.

High profile flights with migrants sent to the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba, CECOT, El Salvador's notorious detention center, and more recently a flight headed to South Sudan, have sent a strong message. For Vivian, the possibility was a source of constant anguish.

On June 3, NPR was able to locate Jhonkleiver Ortega at Glades Detention Center in Florida. He had been to immigration court the day before. NPR was given permission by the family to record his conversation with his mother.

"They told me they had to review my asylum case," Ortega told his mother. "They told me I have to send proof that I was tortured in Venezuela. And in four months they would give me an answer. And I said I can't anymore. It's been months of this. They barely feed us here. I can't anymore. I asked to be deported. This week or next I will be on a flight to Venezuela. If they give me a call from Louisiana I'll call you before the flight."

"What?" his mother asks.

"I asked the judge what are the chances that my flight will get lost and accidentally end up in another country? And she said if that happens you call the deporter. Or email me."

If you have immigration tips you can contact our tip line, on Whatsapp and Signal: 202-713-6697 or reporter Jasmine Garsd: jgarsd@npr.org  

Copyright 2025 NPR

Jasmine Garsd is an Argentine-American journalist living in New York. She is currently NPR's Criminal Justice correspondent and the host of The Last Cup. She started her career as the co-host of Alt.Latino, an NPR show about Latin music. Throughout her reporting career she's focused extensively on women's issues and immigrant communities in America. She's currently writing a book of stories about women she's met throughout her travels.