Immigration and Customs Enforcement brokers stand close to a gate at Delaney Corridor, an immigrant detention heart in Newark, N.J., in Could 2025.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP through Getty Pictures
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Timothy A. Clary/AFP through Getty Pictures
The inner Division of Homeland Safety workplace that oversees detention services and situations is winding down its operations — even because the administration locations extra folks in detention, and for longer stints.
Congress created the Workplace of Immigration Detention Ombudsman (OIDO) in 2019 to analyze detainee deaths, detainee entry to medical care, and worker misconduct, amongst different points.
In an announcement to NPR, DHS mentioned the workplace shut down due to the present funding lapse in Congress focusing on immigration enforcement.
Congress final week lastly ended the longest company shutdown in U.S. historical past, agreeing to fund most components of DHS — however excluding some immigration enforcement features.

“DHS didn’t shut down the Workplace of Immigration Detention Ombudsman—Congress did,” DHS mentioned in an announcement to NPR. “The Home handed the DHS appropriations invoice with out objection, and it was signed into legislation final week.”
DHS has already archived a number of pages on its web site concerning OIDO.
However the measure handed by Congress and signed by President Trump to fund most components of DHS didn’t mandate the closing of the workplace.
Republicans are individually a partisan course of often known as reconciliation to fund all of DHS, together with ICE and Border Patrol, for the rest of Trump’s time period with none Democratic assist. It isn’t clear if OIDO would reopen if ICE and Border Patrol are funded.
Even earlier than the shutdown, the Trump administration had been stripping down the workplace’s features and shedding workers in civil rights areas. That comes because the quantity of people that have died in immigration custody has reached an all-time excessive for the fiscal yr.

DHS officers have argued the rising dying rely is because of the increased variety of folks in custody.
Immigration advocates say that oversight is especially wanted to stop abuses and deaths. They usually say the funding lapse should not have affected the ombudsman’s workplace because it’s separate from ICE and Customs and Border Safety.
“Congress established OIDO to deal with the systematic document of abuse and medical mistreatment folks have suffered in immigration detention,” mentioned Jennifer Ibañez Whitlock, senior coverage council on the Nationwide Immigration Regulation Heart, a authorized advocacy group.
“Congress was clear that this workplace was established to be unbiased from ICE and CBP and to supply redress to folks in detention when DHS officers or contractors engaged in misconduct or violated their rights.”

The Trump administration had earlier lower a whole lot of workers in some congressionally mandated oversight places of work, together with OIDO, with the intention to lower your expenses and since DHS argued they had been “inside adversaries that decelerate operations.”
The truth is, OIDO solely had 5 staff initially of the yr — down from over 100 initially of 2025. Ronald Sartini, appearing deputy immigration detention ombudsman for OIDO, shared these figures in a declaration filed in courtroom.
Democrats say such inside oversight is especially wanted to stop overcrowding in detention services, and delays in reporting detention deaths — particularly throughout company shutdowns. Throughout the federal government shutdown in fall of final yr, DHS mentioned that immigration oversight officers weren’t working.

OIDO had reviewed each report on deaths in custody and inspected detention services. With out it, ICE detention violations might go unreported and unresolved as places of work, former staff have warned.
The closing of the workplace comes because the administration continues to scale up its detention capability, and likewise carried out a coverage that mandates the detention of anybody who entered the nation illegally whereas they combat their deportation in courtroom.
The coverage has resulted in circumstances of extended detention: Within the final six months, for instance, the quantity of people that have been in ICE detention for greater than a yr has almost doubled, to over 2,100 folks.

