A humanitarian crisis is unfolding within the Department of Homeland Security’s expanded detention network, according to the latest figures from ICE, 17 immigrants have died in custody since January 2026. This surge in fatalities follows 31 deaths in 2025, the highest number in two decades, prompting accusations that the administration’s focus on “speed of removal” is coming at the cost of human life.
The “Fort Bliss” Controversy
The most scrutinized facility in this new system is Camp East Montana, a high-capacity detention site built on the grounds of Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. Originally reported as “medical distress” and later a “suicide,” eyewitness reports and local coroners suggest a much darker reality. Allegations have surfaced that security staff choked Lunas when he resisted solitary confinement.

A Pattern of “Presumed Suicide”
At least three of the 17 deaths this year have been labeled as “presumed suicides” by ICE, raising questions about the mental health support and supervision within these rapidly constructed facilities.
Fatal Medical Failures
The reports detail a harrowing lack of medical intervention for both chronic and acute conditions. In Arizona, 20-year-old Emanuel Cleeford Damas reportedly died from an infection stemming from an untreated toothache, despite family pleas for help.
Delayed Emergency Response
In Los Angeles, council members have accused ICE of denying life-saving care to Alberto Gutierrez Reyes, who died after complaining of chest pains and shortness of breath. One of the most politically damaging deaths is that of Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, an Afghan asylum seeker. Paktiawal had previously served as a translator for the U.S. military in Afghanistan. He died in a Dallas hospital less than 24 hours after being taken into ICE custody, reportedly following a severe allergic reaction that staff were unable to manage in time.
The Expansion of the “Louisiana Model”
Many of these deaths have occurred in a new cluster of processing centers in Louisiana and Indiana, facilities that were fast-tracked under the Trump administration to handle the mass detention of those caught in nationwide sweeps. Detainees like Pejman Karshenas Najafabadi, who was serving time for drug possession, were moved into these centers despite having documented chronic health conditions, where they eventually succumbed to cardiac arrest.
While the Department of Homeland Security maintains that it provides “comprehensive medical care” to all detainees, the mounting list of names and the suspicious circumstances surrounding deaths at sites like Camp East Montana suggest a system pushed far beyond its breaking point.
Is the rising death toll in detention centers an inevitable consequence of mass-enforcement, or is the administration legally and morally liable for the “preventable” deaths of people in its custody?





