Jamele Bouie: Detention Doesn't Begin to Describe It
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/14/opinion/columnists/trump-immigrant-detention.html
No paywall link
https://archive.li/bk4cW
Writing about a recent ruling by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that affirmed the Trump administrations policy of mandatory and indefinite detention for immigrants held by either ICE or Customs and Border Protection, my colleague David French makes a point that bears repeating:
There are thousands upon thousands of immigrants facing brutal conditions whove been convicted of no crime and havent even been accused of a crime beyond their initial alleged illegal entry.
People who have lost legal status because they have overstayed their visas, he also notes, arent guilty of any crime at all, since their original entry is lawful. And even illegal entry is a misdemeanor for a first offense.
Immigration detention is not a criminal procedure. And yet the Trump administration is treating it as a criminal punishment. It is using detention to inflict pain on anyone immigrant or citizen caught in its grasp. It is subjecting detainees to horrific conditions of deprivation and abuse, meant to pressure people into leaving the country, even if they have valid asylum claims or even legal status. And the administration is trying to expand its system of internment camps, purchasing warehouses across the country meant to hold tens of thousands of people an archipelago custom-ordered by Americas most famous real estate developer, Donald Trump.
It would not be an exaggeration to call these concentration camps. A concentration camp exists wherever a government holds groups of civilians outside the normal legal process sometimes to segregate people considered foreigners or outsiders, sometimes to punish, Andrea Pitzer writes in One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps. Conditions within the administrations detention facilities certainly meet the bill.
*snip*