A new ICE facility could speed up deportations for families and kids
[July 06, 2026]
By JACK BROOK
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Trump administration plans to open a 528-bed
holding facility for migrant families and unaccompanied children next to
an airport hub, positioning itself to speed up deportations.
The location in Alexandria, Louisiana, would remove logistical headaches
caused by wrangling children from foster homes and shelters across the
country and not having anywhere to put them during final preparations
for flight. Those obstacles were apparent last year when Guatemalan
children were awoken at night and given almost no time to get to
Harlingen, Texas, where they waited on an airport tarmac for hours.
A federal judge prevented their deportation, but the chaotic episode
illustrated the challenges authorities face because they don't have
anywhere to put families and children near the airport. U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement is calling the Alexandria facility a “staging
area,” not a detention center, and says people would only be there a few
days at most.
However, several immigration advocates expressed concern that children
could be held at the new facility for weeks or months, which happened at
other federal immigration holding sites. These advocates are also
concerned about oversight, and say the facility represents a departure
from how the government manages those children.

“It’s an expansion of the deportation system in ways we haven’t seen
before,” said Leecia Welch, chief legal counsel at the nonprofit
Children’s Rights. “There’s just so much that could go wrong with this
facility.”
ICE has tapped a private prison company to run the deportation
facility
Unaccompanied children who are in the U.S. without parents or close
relatives are not taken to facilities overseen by ICE. Instead, the law
says they must be swiftly placed in the care of state-licensed shelters
and foster care programs.
Those are run by the Office of Refugee Resettlement in the Department of
Health and Human Services. However, that agency isn't involved in the
Alexandria facility’s operation, according to a spokesperson at the
airfield where it's being built.
Instead, the facility would be run by a nonprofit arm of LaSalle
Corrections, a private prison contractor, according to Ralph Hennessy,
executive director of the England Airpark Authority. He said it could be
operational as early as August.
ICE officials signed a contract late last month to build the facility at
the former military base near Alexandria International Airport, roughly
175 miles (280 kilometers) northwest of New Orleans, Hennessy said.
It would operate as a 72-hour holding center for migrants awaiting
deportation, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.
Compass Connections, a Texas-based nonprofit that runs shelters for
unaccompanied immigrant children, had originally been tapped to help
operate the facility and laid out plans during a public presentation in
February.
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But the company’s president, Sonya Thompson, told the AP last week
that it was no longer involved. She did not elaborate.
Officials have said the facility is for ‘self-deporting’ families
In public board meetings, airpark officials said the facility is a
“humanitarian effort” for families that are “self-deporting.”
Immigration advocates say families and unaccompanied children
sometimes make that decision under pressure or because they don't
understand their options.
“These are people that are volunteering to go back home and they’re
going back home as a family unit,” Hennessy told the AP.
The facility would sit next to the nation's largest hub for
deportations. More than 4,400 immigration enforcement flights came
into and out of the Alexandria International Airport in 2025,
according to data from the ICE Flight Monitor, an initiative of
Human Rights First. ICE planning documents say families and children
at the facility “are in the legal custody of ICE and can only be
released at the direction of ICE.”
The agency has instructed contractors that families at the facility
cannot be referred to as prisoners, detainees or inmates, records
show. The agency ordered contractors to not use bars or cages when
transporting families and unaccompanied children. The facility will
not be required to engage in headcounts and should allow families to
“wear their own clothes,” the agency added.
The private prison company runs other ICE detention centers
Louisiana-based LaSalle Corrections runs a range of private prisons
and federal immigration detention centers throughout the South,
including the “Louisiana Lockup” inside the state’s maximum-security
prison in Angola.
The official contractor for the new ICE holding facility will be the
company's nonprofit arm, the LaSalle Family Foundation. According to
its tax records, the nonprofit provides chaplain services and
educational programming in correctional facilities.
However, LaSalle Corrections itself will be involved in operating
the holding facility and ensuring compliance, the company’s chief
financial officer, Tim Kurpiewski, wrote in an email reviewed by the
AP.
LaSalle spokesperson Scott Sutterfield declined to comment.

The deaths of two detainees have been reported since April at a
LaSalle-run ICE facility in the state.
Winn Correctional Center was also found in June to have violated
standards governing environmental health and safety, food service,
use-of-force, medical care and other subjects, according to the
Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General.
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