Trump administration using no-bid contracts, boosting big firms, to get more ICE detention beds [View all]
Source: PBS News/AP
Jun 16, 2025 11:07 AM EDT
LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) Leavenworth, Kansas, occupies a mythic space in American crime, its name alone evoking a short hand for serving hard time. The federal penitentiary housed gangsters Al Capone and Machine Gun Kelly in a building so storied that it inspired the term the big house.
Now Kansas oldest city could soon be detaining far less famous people, migrants swept up in President Donald Trumps promise of mass deportations of those living in the U.S. illegally. The federal government has signed a deal with the private prison firm CoreCivic Corp. to reopen a 1,033-bed prison in Leavenworth as part of a surge of contracts U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has issued without seeking competitive bids.
ICE has cited a compelling urgency for thousands more detention beds, and its efforts have sent profit estimates soaring for politically connected private companies, including CoreCivic, based in the Nashville, Tennessee, area and another giant firm, The Geo Group Inc., headquartered in southern Florida.
That push faces resistance. Leavenworth filed a lawsuit against CoreCivic after it tried to reopen without city officials signing off on the deal, quoting a federal judges past description of the now-shuttered prison as a hell hole. The case in Leavenworth serves as another test of the limits of the Republican presidents unusually aggressive tactics to force migrant removals.
Read more: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/trump-administration-using-no-bid-contracts-boosting-big-firms-to-get-more-ice-detention-beds