The Bureau of Prisons confirmed it is detaining some immigrants arrested under Trump’s latest enforcement efforts, reviving a practice that faced legal challenges during his first term.
President Donald Trump’s administration is using federal prisons to detain some people arrested in its immigration crackdown.
Ippei Mizuhara and his camp were swarmed by members of the Japanese and American media after the disgraced MLB interpreter was sentenced to more than four years behind federal prison. The sentencing ...
The Federal Bureau of Prisons said it is conducting a facility assessment before determining next steps, as most inmates ...
The Department of Defense confirmed the arrival of the first 10 “high threat" migrant criminals to Guantanamo Bay, all of ...
Migrants have previously been held in a lower-security part of the base. Tents are also being constructed near the detention ...
Shares of private prison companies have grown since the election. Those facilities could expand under Trump, despite claims ...
The 9/11 case is at a crossroads in the long running challenge over whether a key confession is tainted by C.I.A. torture ...
If the president behaves the same as last time, all these people will attempt illegal immigration, and they will all drown ...
Japanese Americans held in prison camps were allowed to return home. But much of what they'd left behind was gone: homes, ...
The Chrisley Knows Best star opened up about the situation on the January 28 episode of her Unlocked podcast, where she reminded her listeners that the Federal Prison Camp in Pensacola, where Todd is ...