ICE will no longer report deaths of detainees who have recently been released from custody
The change follows 33 ICE custody deaths in 2025 and 18 more in the first half of 2026, raising scrutiny over detention conditions.
- U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will stop tracking or disclosing the deaths of immigrants who die shortly after being released from custody.
- The decision eliminates a 2021 Biden-era policy that mandated ICE to report and investigate any detainee deaths occurring within 30 days of release, a rule explicitly designed to stop the agency from releasing terminally ill or severely injured individuals just to avoid having an "in-custody" death on its records.
- Acting ICE Director David Venturella defended the change in an internal memo, stating that the agency is simply returning to its standard practice of only reporting deaths that occur while an individual is physically in federal custody.
- The Department of Homeland Security backed the move as a matter of "common sense," releasing a statement arguing that the government should not be held responsible for monitoring or reviewing the medical outcomes of individuals weeks after they have left ICE facilities.
- Public health experts and immigrant rights advocates heavily condemned the rollback, warning that it will obscure the true human cost of mass detention at a time when 18 detainees have already died in the first five months of 2026—a rate on pace to surpass a two-decade high.
22 Articles
22 Articles
ICE will no longer report deaths of detainees who have recently been released from custody
Immigration and Customs Enforcement will no longer report the deaths of detainees who have been released from custody, in a change that could obscure the human cost of the Trump administration's mass detention policies.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will end its policy of reporting the deaths of recently released detainees, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced Thursday.
The U.S. immigration agency ICE restricts the reporting obligation for deaths that could be related to an arrest.
ICE Ends Reporting of Detainee Deaths After Release as Custody Deaths Rise
Just as fatalities climb to a worrying new high inside its facilities, ICE has quietly redrawn its rulebook behind closed doors. The low-profile operational shift alters how the agency handles the grimmest of statistics, leaving watchdogs furious and critics asking what else is being obscured. The Washington Post reported on Thursday that American authorities are putting an end to public updates regarding individuals who die shortly after leavin…
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