Central California ICE detainee population up by 164% since June, new data shows
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- Kern County ICE population rose 164% since June to about 1,694 detainees.
- California City facility drove most growth; two Kern sites now near full.
- Advocates filed lawsuits and report visitation and supply delays amid surge.
The number of people detained at three Kern County ICE detention facilities has risen by 164% percent since late June, coinciding with the federal government’s escalating deportation crackdown, according to data released by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Much of this growth was driven by the opening of California’s largest ICE detention facility in California City in late August, the mass arrests of people with no prior criminal record, as well as the lifting of a pandemic-era population cap on the ICE facility in Bakersfield.
As of Nov. 20, 1,694 individuals are detained at three ICE detention centers in Kern County.
This is nearly triple the number of individuals detained as of late June, when there were 641 people detained at two privately-operated ICE detention facilities, according to ICE detention statistics data. Data on detention statistics had not been updated since September due to the government shutdown.
A record 65,000 people are in ICE custody nationwide as of mid-November as the Trump administration carries out its immigration crackdown and deportation campaign. The number of immigration-related arrests, detentions and deportations is expected to grow after Congress approved in July an unprecedented $170 billion for immigration- and border enforcement-related funding over the next four fiscal years.
Three of California’s seven ICE detention facilities are located in Kern County, which has broader implications for the entire central San Joaquin Valley. Research by Immigrant Legal Resource Center found people are more likely to be arrested and detained by ICE in counties with more detention beds.
And while it’s not immediately clear where detainees at the three Kern County facilities were arrested from, the Central Valley has experienced a 58% uptick in ICE arrests under the first seven months of the Trump administration compared to the same time period last year, according to an analysis of federal data.
Representatives from Geo Group and CoreCivic, the two companies that run the three ICE detention facilities in Kern County, referred The Bee to ICE for comment on the detention statistics. ICE could not be immediately reached for comment.
New California City facility accounts for most growth
Kern County is home to three of California’s seven ICE processing facilities: Golden State Annex in McFarland, Mesa Verde ICE Processing Center in Bakersfield and California City Immigration Processing Center in California City.
The 2,650-bed California City facility, operated by Tennessee-based private prison company CoreCivic, has 711 detained individuals as of Nov. 20 — 566 men and 145 women.
A majority, or 469, of those at California City are classified as “No ICE Threat Level,” meaning they have no criminal convictions.
Meanwhile, the two Geo Group-run ICE detention facilities, Mesa Verde and Golden State Annex, are almost full.
The 700-bed capacity Golden State Annex has 623 detainees. More than half, or 389, are classified as “No ICE Threat Level,” meaning they have no criminal convictions.
Mesa Verde in Bakersfield, meanwhile, has 360 detainees and a total capacity of 400. The center’s detainee population swelled after a court-ordered population cap was lifted on June 9.
Advocates and detained individuals have sounded the alarm over conditions in the ICE detention facilities. In mid-November, seven people detained at the immigration processing facility in California City filed a federal lawsuit against ICE, alleging serious failures in the facility’s operations that infringe on the basic rights and wellbeing of the detainees.
Lourdes Medina, a Central Valley-based organizer with Services, Immigrant Rights and Education Network, an immigrants rights nonprofit, said in an interview Wednesday most people picked up by ICE in Fresno are being taken to the Golden State Annex ICE facility in McFarland for processing.
Medina is concerned that the increased in detainee population at the Kern County facilities is causing delays in family visits as well as delays in securing goods clothing, backpacks and other goods for detained individuals.
“We feel it’s because they can’t manage the numbers they have,” Medina said.
California City Warden Christopher Chestnut said in a court declaration that many of the allegations about the facility’s conditions are “not accurate.”