Note: This content contains details related to deaths that may be upsetting. Friend, we are just over one month into 2026, and six people have already died in ICE detention facilities this year. May they rest in power: Geraldo Lunas Campos, 55 years old Parady La, 46 years old Victor Manuel Diaz, 36 years old Luis Beltran Yanez–Cruz, 68 years old Heber Sanchez Dominguez, 34 years old Luis Gustavo Nunez Caceres, 42 years old As we shared in the email below, 2025 was the deadliest year in two decades for immigrants in ICE custody. At least 32 people lost their lives while detained by ICE — a horrific outcome of our government repeatedly failing to provide humane, safe conditions in these facilities. It’s not just the conditions of facilities that are a threat — it's the culture of violence and cruelty that pervades the entire system. Last month, a guard choked Geraldo Lunas Campos to death while in custody at Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas. His death, ruled a homicide in an autopsy report, is one of three at this facility alone. And this crisis will only continue to worsen. With ICE's exorbitant detention budget and lack of accountability, more preventable deaths are all but inevitable. Congress is currently considering continuing to give more funding to ICE and CBP, including hundreds of millions specifically for detention. Instead of expanding funding for an abusive, deadly system, lawmakers should be focused on ending the use of for-profit prisons. Passing the Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act is a critical first step — this bill would work to end family detention, ban private for-profit prisons, and ensure immigrants have a fair opportunity to seek release from detention on bond. Email your members of Congress today and urge them to pass the Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act.
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