logo
Trump joked migrants would need to know 'how to run away from an alligator' to flee Florida facility

Trump joked migrants would need to know 'how to run away from an alligator' to flee Florida facility

Article content
President Donald Trump will turn a new immigration detention center in a remote area of the Florida Everglades into a symbol of his border crackdown when he visits on Tuesday.
The facility, assembled on a remote airstrip with tents and trailers that are normally used after a natural disaster, has been given the nickname 'Alligator Alcatraz,' a moniker that has alarmed immigrant activists but appeals to the Republican president's aggressive approach to deportations.
Article content
Article content
Trump will 'take a look' at deporting Musk: 'We might have to put DOGE on Elon'
'This is not a nice business,' Trump said while leaving the White House in the morning. Then he joked that 'we're going to teach them how to run away from an alligator if they escape prison.'
'Don't run in a straight line. Run like this,' he said, as he moved his hand in a zigzag motion. 'And you know what? Your chances go up about 1%.'
That doesn't seem to be sound advice, though. It's best to dash in one direction in the rare situation when an alligator gives chase, according to a website run by the University of Florida.
Ahead of Trump's arrival, local authorities were positioned by the entrance of the airstrip. Media vans and other vehicles were parked along the highway lined by cypress trees.
Protestors have often gathered near the facility, which is about 50 miles (80.47 kilometers) west of Miami and could house 5,000 detainees. They've criticized the potential impact on a delicate ecosystem and say Trump is trying to send a cruel message to immigrants — while some Native American leaders have also opposed construction, saying the land is sacred.
Article content
Article content
'I have a lot of immigrants I have been working with. They are fine people. They do not deserve to be incarcerated here,' said Phyllis Andrews, a retired teacher who drove from Naples, Florida, to protest Trump's visit on Tuesday. 'It's terrible that there's a bounty on their head.'
The president's supporters showed up as well. One wore a hat saying, 'Trump was right about everything.'
A key selling point for the Trump administration is the site's remoteness — and the fact that it is in swampland filled with mosquitoes, pythons and alligators. The White House hopes that conveys a message to detainees and the rest of the world that repercussions will be severe if the immigration laws of the United States are not followed.
'There's only one road leading in, and the only way out is a one-way flight,' press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday. 'It is isolated, and it is surrounded by dangerous wildlife and unforgiving terrain.'
Article content
Crackdowns on the U.S.-Mexico border and harsh immigration policies have long been a centerpiece of Trump's political brand.
During his first term in 2019, Trump denied reports that he floated the idea of building a moat filled with alligators at the southern border. 'I may be tough on Border Security, but not that tough,' he said at the time.
In his second term, Trump has suggested that his administration could move to reopen Alcatraz, the notorious and hard-to-reach island prison off San Francisco. The White House has similarly promoted the political shock value of sending some immigrants awaiting deportation from the U.S. to a detention lockup in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and others to a megaprison in El Salvador.
Some of the ideas have been impractical. For example, transforming Alcatraz from a tourist attraction into a prison would be very costly, and Guantanamo Bay is being used less often than administration officials originally envisioned.
Article content
However, the new detention center in the Everglades came together very quickly. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem recently told the Associated Press that she felt some contractors were charging the government too much to run facilities, 'so I went directly to states and to ask them if they could do a better job providing this service.'
Florida officials 'were willing to build it and do it much quicker than what some of the other vendors were,' she said. 'And it was a real solution that we'll be able to utilize if we need to.'
Former U.S. Rep. David Jolly of Florida, a former Republican who is now running for governor as a Democrat, called the facility a 'callous political stunt.'
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees are generally held for reasons like entering the country illegally or overstaying a visa. They are either waiting for ICE to put them on the next flight or bus ride home, or they're fighting their removal in immigration court.
Article content
If an immigrant is accused of or has committed a violent crime, he or she is tried and held in state or federal criminal jurisdiction, separate from the immigration system. In those cases, they may be transferred to ICE for deportation after completing their criminal sentences.
State officials are spearheading construction of the Florida facility, but much of the cost is being covered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is best known for responding to hurricanes and other natural disasters.
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, whom Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has credited as the architect of the Everglades plan, first debuted the proposal with a slickly produced video, complete with custom graphics featuring red-eyed alligators and a hard rock soundtrack.
The Department of Homeland Security posted an image of alligators wearing ICE hats and sitting in front of a fenced-in compound ringed with barbed wire.
Latest National Stories
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'
New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'

Vancouver Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • Vancouver Sun

New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'

A presidential portrait with Donald Trump's approval now hangs in the Colorado Capitol after his complaints got a previous one of him taken down. The new portrait by Tempe, Arizona, artist Vanessa Horabuena is a sterner, crisper image than Sarah Boardman's painting of Trump that had hung since 2019. Last spring, Trump posted on social media that Boardman 'must have lost her talent as she got older' and 'purposely distorted' him, criticisms the Colorado Springs artist denied. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. The next day, lawmakers announced they would remove the portrait from a wall of past presidents. By the day after that, Boardman's painting was gone, put into museum storage. The Horabuena portrait donated by the White House a month or so ago went up this week after a Thursday decision by Lois Court, a former state lawmaker who chairs the Capitol Building Advisory Committee that helps select artwork for the Capitol in downtown Denver. 'There was a blank on the wall. It seemed inappropriate. We knew that the White House had sent us this replacement and it simply made sense to put it up,' Court said. The White House donated the Horabuena portrait a month or so ago, said Court. Horabuena is a 'Christian worship artist' who has done several other depictions of Trump as well as Abraham Lincoln, Mount Rushmore and Jesus Christ, according to her website. On Tuesday, the Colorado statehouse was sleepy with lawmakers out of session and no schoolchildren visiting the historic building. A smattering of tourists took photos of the new portrait. Horabuena did not return a phone message Tuesday seeking comment. ( @realDonaldTrump - Truth Social Post ) ( Donald J. Trump - Jul 01, 2025, 3:06 PM ET ) Thank you to the Highly Talented Artist, Vanessa Horabuena, and the incredible people of Colorado — Now on display in the Colorado State Capitol! 'Thank you to the Highly Talented Artist, Vanessa Horabuena, and the incredible people of Colorado,' Trump posted Tuesday on his social media platform, Truth Social. The portrait and others of past presidents might not remain up for long. The advisory committee is considering whether to replace them with portraits of past governors to mark the 150th anniversary of Colorado statehood next year. ___ AP videojournalist Thomas Peipert in Denver contributed to this report. Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

Trump administration escalates feud with judges on immigration policy
Trump administration escalates feud with judges on immigration policy

Canada News.Net

time38 minutes ago

  • Canada News.Net

Trump administration escalates feud with judges on immigration policy

WASHINGTON, D.C.: In a striking escalation of tensions between the executive and judicial branches, the Trump administration has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland and all 15 of its federal judges, challenging a recent order that temporarily blocks migrant deportations in the state. The lawsuit, filed late June 24 by the Justice Department in a Baltimore federal court, targets a standing court order issued last month that imposes an automatic two-business-day delay on deporting any migrant in Maryland who files a new habeas corpus petition challenging their detention. The Justice Department argues that the order exceeds judicial authority and violates Supreme Court precedent on injunctions. It contends that under the Immigration and Nationality Act, federal courts are barred from interfering with active deportation proceedings. Calling the Maryland court's action an "egregious example of judicial overreach," the administration is seeking a ruling to invalidate the order and an injunction to prevent its enforcement. The lawsuit also requests that all Maryland judges recuse themselves and ask that a judge from another jurisdiction handle the case instead. A representative for the Maryland court declined to comment. Chief U.S. District Judge George Russell, an appointee of a Democratic president, signed the court's order. It cited a "recent influx of habeas petitions" involving detained migrants at risk of imminent removal. It noted that many of these filings occurred during evenings, weekends, or holidays, resulting in rushed hearings where judges struggled to get clear information on detainees' locations and legal status. The two-day pause was intended to give judges time to review such cases before deportations proceeded—an effort at judicial due process amid the Trump administration's aggressive immigration enforcement. The issue gained national attention after the 2023 deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national who had lived in Maryland with his American wife and child. Though an immigration judge ruled in 2019 that Abrego should not be deported due to the risk of gang violence, he was nonetheless removed in March of this year. He was returned to the U.S. on June 6, after a Maryland court ordered his return. That only happened, however, after the Justice Department filed criminal charges against him for migrant smuggling—a charge he has denied. He is now awaiting a court ruling in Tennessee on the conditions of his release. The Justice Department's lawsuit frames the Maryland court's order as part of a broader pattern of judicial resistance to the president's immigration policies. "Every unlawful order entered by the district courts robs the Executive Branch of its most scarce resource: time to put its policies into effect," the lawsuit stated. "In the process, such orders diminish the votes of the citizens who elected the head of the Executive Branch." While the Maryland judges have not responded publicly, the legal battle could have major implications for how courts nationwide handle emergency immigration filings and how far the executive branch is willing to go to counter them.

New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'
New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'

Edmonton Journal

time39 minutes ago

  • Edmonton Journal

New Trump portrait hangs in Colorado Capitol after he called previous one 'the worst'

Article content A presidential portrait with Donald Trump's approval now hangs in the Colorado Capitol after his complaints got a previous one of him taken down. The new portrait by Tempe, Arizona, artist Vanessa Horabuena is a sterner, crisper image than Sarah Boardman's painting of Trump that had hung since 2019. Last spring, Trump posted on social media that Boardman 'must have lost her talent as she got older' and 'purposely distorted' him, criticisms the Colorado Springs artist denied. Article content Trump portrait that he called 'truly the worst' is being taken down 'immediately' The next day, lawmakers announced they would remove the portrait from a wall of past presidents. By the day after that, Boardman's painting was gone, put into museum storage. The Horabuena portrait donated by the White House a month or so ago went up this week after a Thursday decision by Lois Court, a former state lawmaker who chairs the Capitol Building Advisory Committee that helps select artwork for the Capitol in downtown Denver. 'There was a blank on the wall. It seemed inappropriate. We knew that the White House had sent us this replacement and it simply made sense to put it up,' Court said. The White House donated the Horabuena portrait a month or so ago, said Court. Horabuena is a 'Christian worship artist' who has done several other depictions of Trump as well as Abraham Lincoln, Mount Rushmore and Jesus Christ, according to her website. On Tuesday, the Colorado statehouse was sleepy with lawmakers out of session and no schoolchildren visiting the historic building. A smattering of tourists took photos of the new portrait. Horabuena did not return a phone message Tuesday seeking comment. Article content Latest National Stories

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store