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A National Model for Detention?

Florida’s (FL) decision to open two new immigration detention facilities, colloquially dubbed “Deportation Depot” and “Alligator Alcatraz,” is the latest and most visceral manifestation of a national trend. Across the country, states are stepping into a role traditionally reserved for the federal government, constructing their own border security and immigration enforcement infrastructure.

“Alligator Alcatraz,” the first of these sites drew national attention for its remote location in the Everglades, a strategic choice that officials say serves as a deterrent while critics argue it isolates detainees. The subsequent announcement of “Deportation Depot,” a converted prison in the state’s interior, further solidifies a new model of state-led enforcement. Florida (FL) officials have framed these sites as a necessary “force multiplier” to aid federal efforts and have sought federal reimbursement for their costs, a move that blurs the lines of jurisdiction.

This approach is not unique to Florida (FL). States like Texas (TX) have long invested in their own border operations, deploying National Guard troops and constructing physical barriers. Other states have passed legislation aimed at empowering local law enforcement to act as immigration agents. What Florida’s (FL) new facilities represent is a physical and symbolic escalation of this trend. They are a tangible declaration that states will no longer wait for Washington (DC) to act but will instead build their own infrastructure to detain and deport migrants.

The debate over these facilities and the broader trend they represent, is more than a legal or logistical one. It is a political statement about the role of states in a federal system and a humanitarian question about the conditions of detention. Whether or not these new centers prove to be a “model” for other states, as some officials have suggested, their existence makes one thing clear: The issue of immigration has become a de facto state responsibility, with policies being forged not just on Capitol Hill but in repurposed prisons and remote swamplands across the nation.

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