US to Close Watchdog Office for Federal Immigration Detention Abuses

WASHINGTON, May 5 (Reuters) – A U.S. ⁠watchdog ⁠office for federal detention abuses ⁠was being closed, President Donald Trump’s administration said on Tuesday.

Here ​are some details:

• The Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman, which was gutted last ‌year when Trump targeted oversight ‌offices, is now being closed, the Department of Homeland Security said.

• “DHS did ⁠not shut ⁠down the Office of Immigration Detention Ombudsman – Congress did.  The House ​passed the DHS appropriations bill without objection, and it was signed into law last week,” the DHS said.

• The bill that ended a long DHS shutdown did not mandate ​the office’s closure, first reported by the HuffPost.

• The office reviewed abuse ⁠and misconduct ⁠in the immigration detention ⁠system. Its ​page on DHS’s website appeared as “Archived Content” on Tuesday.

• Trump has cracked down ​on immigration.

• Trump says ⁠his immigration crackdown aims to improve domestic security and curb illegal immigration.

• Immigration and Customs Enforcement detentions and Trump’s deportation drive have been condemned by human-rights advocates.

• Rights groups say such actions violate due process and free speech and create ⁠an unsafe environment, particularly for minorities.

• Rights advocates have raised concerns about ⁠ICE detention conditions.

• At least 18 deaths have been reported in ICE custody through the first four months of 2026, following 31 deaths last year, a two-decade high.

• Detention cases that sparked criticism from rights groups were the one-year detention of Palestinian American woman Leqaa Kordia, who suffered a seizure in detention and said she was chained during hospitalization.

• Another such case was the detention of Hayam El Gamal and her ⁠five children aged 5 to 18, who each reported health deterioration.

• Kordia, who lost 175 family members during Israel’s assault on Gaza, and the El Gamal family, have been released.

• The government denies mistreatment, saying ​detainees are allowed medical care and due process.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh ​in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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