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Abuse claims emerge from overcrowded Florida migrant jails
Human rights groups have raised alarm over alleged mistreatment of migrants held in immigration detention facilities across southern Florida. A new report published Monday by Human Rights Watch, Americans for Immigrant Justice, and Sanctuary of the South reveals a disturbing pattern of abuse, unsanitary conditions, and systemic neglect in three federal detention centers.
Among the most shocking allegations: detainees in Miami were forced to kneel with their hands shackled behind their backs and eat from the floor “like dogs,” according to testimonies from former detainees. At the Krome North center in west Miami, female detainees were denied privacy, medical care, and access to basic hygiene products.
Another facility in Pompano Beach, the Broward Transitional Center, reportedly failed to provide proper healthcare, with one detainee, Marie Ange Blaise, a 44-year-old Haitian woman, dying under questionable circumstances.
Overcrowding has pushed facilities to their limits, with some migrants held for over 24 hours on parked buses lacking functional toilets or ventilation. Others described spending days on concrete floors in freezing intake rooms, without blankets or warm clothing.
These conditions have worsened since the return of Donald Trump to the presidency in January 2025, the report asserts, citing a sharp rise in daily detentions—averaging 56,400 in June, compared to 37,500 in 2024. Advocates warn of an escalating humanitarian crisis driven by aggressive immigration policies and a lack of oversight.