Oversight Programs Cut Under Cost-Saving Push
Hundreds of employees from three Department of Homeland Security (DHS) oversight officesโthe Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL), the Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman, and the Office of Inspector Generalโwere laid off under the Trump administrationโs plan to streamline government operations. DHS said the move was designed to save money and reduce internal opposition to enforcement priorities. These offices once monitored detention centers, investigated complaints, and reported conditions to Congress.
Advocates Say Detainees Have Lost Vital Safeguards
Immigration advocates like Jennifer Ibaรฑez Whitlock warn that detainees have lost their only direct link to help. Without oversight workers, she said, advocates must now turn to Congress for assistanceโan inefficient and inconsistent process. Former employees said they once ensured compliance with civil rights standards and reviewed policies to prevent abuses. Their absence, they fear, leaves detainees vulnerable to mistreatment and neglect.
Deaths and Detention Expansion Raise Alarm
In fiscal year 2025, at least 15 people died in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custodyโthe highest toll since 2020. More than 59,000 people are detained, the largest number in six years. Former watchdogs say the rapid expansion of detention without adequate oversight creates conditions ripe for overcrowding, unsanitary facilities, and poor medical care. DHS maintains that CRCL still fulfills all legally required duties โefficiently and cost-effectively.โ
Legal Battles Over Terminations and Oversight
Eighty-six former DHS oversight employees have filed complaints with the Merit Systems Protection Board, arguing their dismissals violated federal law. Attorneys contend that Congress mandated these offices and that their elimination undermines statutory responsibilities. Meanwhile, nonprofits have launched separate lawsuits to reinstate oversight roles, warning that unchecked enforcement could erode accountability and endanger detaineesโ civil rights.
Supporters Cite Efficiency, Critics Fear Secrecy
DHS supporters argue the reductions remove bureaucratic barriers to homeland security operations. Critics counter that transparency has been sacrificed in favor of speed. โMore people are going to die in custody,โ one former official warned, citing the disappearance of internal checks. Advocates say even small protectionsโsuch as hotline posters and complaint channelsโhave vanished, leaving detainees voiceless.
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Civil rights jobs have been cut. Those ex-workers warn of ICE detention violations
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