That’s what makes this bigger than one state. When the same pattern appears in Colorado and New York, it stops looking like an isolated incident and starts looking like a systemic practice.
Oversight only works when people compare notes across places.
Small “hold rooms.” Weeks of detention. No transparency.
When facilities built for short processing quietly become long-term detention sites, the question is no longer logistics — it’s accountability.
This matches what we have been seeing in New York City. ICE has been detaining people in an office building in Manhattan for far being what is constitionally permissible. When lawmakers protested (and got arrested) on one floor, ICE seemingly just moved everyone to another floor: https://crossingpointspolicy.substack.com/p/discovery-as-disobedience?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=th8gw
That’s what makes this bigger than one state. When the same pattern appears in Colorado and New York, it stops looking like an isolated incident and starts looking like a systemic practice.
Oversight only works when people compare notes across places.
Thank you for sharing this. This is nowhere to be found in my local news.
Thank you for saying that. A lot of these stories never reach local news unless someone pushes them into the open.
Silence is what allows it to continue without scrutiny.
Thank you for sharing this horrific reality
Thank you for paying attention to it. A lot of this only comes to light because people like us share the reporting and refuse to let it stay hidden.
Visibility is often the first step toward accountability.