Friday, February 13, 2026

‘I Just Want to Get Out of Here’: ICE Is Detaining Hundreds of Children

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/13/us/migrant-children-ice-detention.html 

A father’s hands, holding his son’s soccer medal and a photo of him and his son standing on a soccer field
As of mid-January, about 1,400 people were detained at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas, including Edison, a 13-year-old from Chicago.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

‘I Just Want to Get Out of Here’: ICE Is Detaining Hundreds of Children

The number of children in immigration detention has spiked since last year. Families describe poor conditions and little education.

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A 7-year-old in Oregon was seeking treatment for a nosebleed last month when immigration agents detained her and her parents outside a hospital emergency room. They were taken to a federal detention center in Texas for three weeks.

In Chicago, a 5-year-old was at a laundromat with her mother last fall when they were surrounded by agents and flown to Texas.

And a teenager who had been living in the United States for a decade was getting ready for school one morning last year when the police showed up at his family’s door. He, too, ended up confined in Texas with his mother, even though she had begged for him to be allowed to stay with family members who are American citizens, according to court records.

The number of children in federal custody has climbed sharply since President Trump revived the practice of detaining families last year, as part of his promise to deport immigrants who are in the country illegally. The most prominent example came last month, when 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos, still wearing his Spider-Man backpack, was detained along with his father on their way home from school in suburban Minneapolis.

Under the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign, hundreds of children have been detained, usually with a parent. Nearly all pass through one place: a sprawling detention center in Dilley, Texas, that is a jumble of trailers and soft-sided tents in a desolate expanse about 70 miles south of San Antonio.

Known as the Dilley Immigration Processing Center — or just Dilley — it has been the main site for family detentions since it was built in 2014 during the Obama administration, which at one point held more than 1,000 children there during a surge of migrants fleeing Central America.

The Biden administration stopped using the facility to detain families in 2021 and closed it in 2024. The Trump administration reopened it last year.

ImageA family is seen walking from behind amid trailers that sit amid grass patches and sidewalks
The Dilley Immigration Processing Center, formerly known as the South Texas Family Residential Center, in 2019. About 3,500 adults and children have been detained at the facility since it reopened last year.Credit...Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

In the past, Dilley was used mainly to hold women and children who had just crossed the border. But now, many of the children sent there had been living in the United States and attending American schools, sometimes for years.

“There are many, many Liams,” said Elora Mukherjee, a professor at Columbia Law School who runs the school’s immigration clinic.

The children who end up at Dilley are generally immigrants themselves, brought to the United States by a parent. It is unclear if any American citizens, such as babies born recently to immigrant parents, have been detained there.

All told, about 3,500 adults and children have passed through Dilley since it reopened, according to lawyers and legal aid organizations that represent families. Some are held for only a few days, others for months. Some are deported, voluntarily or not. Accounts of their stays come from court affidavits written by parents and children, recent interviews with families and reports from lawyers and members of Congress who have spoken with them.

Trump resumes family detention

Population at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center, which includes children, their parents and some single adult women.

Note: Data is calculated weekly using the average daily population through Dec. 18, 2025, and biweekly through Jan. 22, 2026.

Source: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The Biden administration allowed hundreds of thousands of migrants to enter the country seeking asylum. Trump officials have said that migrants took advantage of a system where asylum cases could take years to be decided.

The Trump administration says that migrant families can avoid confinement by voluntarily leaving the country.

“Being in detention is a choice,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement, adding that the administration was offering $2,600 and a free flight to people who leave voluntarily.

Many families have refused that offer. They may have pending cases in immigration court, giving them hope that they might be allowed to stay. Some have built lives in the United States, and some fear returning to their home countries.

Federal officials say parents can choose whether to be detained with their children. However, it’s unknown how many parents have been allowed to leave their children with another adult caregiver.

Many families say immigration agents have given them no choice but to bring their children with them.

Image
Photos on a black background. One shows a little boy in a backpack standing in front of a colorful sign that says “Welcome Back.”
Ricardo said his son cries during their nearly daily calls and asks when he can return to Chicago and go back to school.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

Until two months ago, Edison, a 13-year-old Guatemalan boy, was a thriving seventh grader in Chicago. He excelled at math, his favorite subject, played on his school’s soccer team and translated for his immigrant parents.

Today, Edison is being held with his mother in Dilley, where his schooling has been reduced to an hour a day.

His father, Ricardo, who spoke on the condition that he and his family be identified only by their first names, said that he came to the United States first, and that Edison and his mother arrived in 2023 and applied for asylum together.

In December, he said, Edison’s mother complied with instructions to visit an ICE office for their case and was told to bring the boy back with her the next day. The two were taken into custody while Ricardo was waiting outside, a moment that has left him in agony, he said.

He said that his wife was not given the option to leave their child behind.

On average, about 175 children a day were held in ICE detention last year, up from about 25 children a day at the end of the Biden administration, according to data from the Deportation Data Project, which is current as of October. (Under President Biden, families taken into custody after entering the United States were sometimes kept temporarily in hold rooms or other facilities for processing.)

As of mid-January, there were about 1,400 people at Dilley, including about 500 children and 450 parents, according to RAICES, a nonprofit organization that provides legal services to families inside Dilley. (About 450 single women are being held there in a separate part of the facility.)

A promotional video by CoreCivic, a private prison company that runs Dilley, depicts a dormlike setting, with bunk beds, an outdoor playground, a volleyball court, a no-frills library and a pantry with animal crackers and other snacks.

Families describe a different reality: inadequate medical care, lights kept on all night, scant drinking water and little education.

Image
A pair of bunkbeds with blue covers and drawers underneath.
A dorm-style bedroom where women and children were housed at the facility in 2019.Credit...Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

The detention center is surrounded by barbed wire, and most families sleep in rooms shared with other families. Children often lose weight and get sick. Recently, there were two confirmed cases of measles. Some children have become suicidal and had panic attacks, families and lawyers say.

“There is a lot of desperation,” said Javier Hidalgo, a legal director with RAICES, who has visited the facility many times.

Christian Rubi, 16, said in a phone interview from Dilley that he has “a lot of anxiety attacks.”

“I start crying, shaking,” said Christian, who arrived in the United States from Mexico when he was 7 and had been living in San Antonio, where he was detained with his mother during a check-in with ICE. They have been held for more than four months. “I just want to get out of here,” he said. “It’s hell.”

A mother seeking asylum from Colombia who spent two months at Dilley this fall wrote that her daughter, 6, had previously been an engaged first grader in New York City. Art was her favorite subject. But she regressed at Dilley.

“She has started to wet her pants again since coming here,” the mother, Kelly Vargas, wrote in an affidavit in October. “She is also asking at night to drink milk from my breasts. She hasn’t had breast milk in four years.”

The Department of Homeland Security said, “Detainees are provided with three meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, soap and toiletries.”

“Children have access to teachers, classrooms and curriculum booklets for math, reading, and spelling,” the agency added. “All of this is generously funded by the U.S. taxpayer.”

The government has struggled for many years with the question of how to handle children who enter the country unlawfully with their parents. Many of the complaints about conditions, including extended stays and the emotional distress of children in detention, stretch back to the Obama administration.

During Mr. Trump’s first term, his administration separated children from their parents at the southern border as a way to deter unauthorized entries. His administration also kept children, including infants, in fetid, overcrowded Border Patrol facilities for weeks. Border crossings are now low, and the Trump administration has not used such tactics during his second term.

But lawyers for families say that under President Trump, federal agencies are breaking the terms of a 1997 settlement agreement, which requires the government to provide basic care and education to undocumented children in their custody. It requires age-appropriate instruction in subjects like science, math and reading in a classroom setting.

The agreement has its origins in a class-action lawsuit filed in 1985 against the government over its treatment of detained migrant children. The Clinton administration agreed to settle the lawsuit, establishing standards for the detention of minors.

Under the settlement, children are supposed to be transferred out of immigrant detention within about 20 days. The Trump administration is fighting in court to end the settlement, arguing that it incentivizes unlawful border crossings and undermines immigration enforcement.

Another issue raised by the Trump administration’s enforcement efforts is what happens to children left behind when their parents are detained. Many remain with family and friends; some have ended up in state custody.

Image
A classroom with long tables, blue chairs and a wall lined with several computers has a bulletin board decorated with cartoon cut-outs of children around a globe. Above it letters spell “Welcome students.”
A classroom inside the Dilley facility in 2019.Credit...Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

At Dilley, children of different ages and grades are grouped together for one-hour classes, which often consist of basic work sheets or coloring. After several weeks, the lessons are repeated, according to families and lawyers.

“In high school, I was taking chemistry, geometry, history and English,” said Christian, the 16-year-old who had been living in San Antonio. At Dilley, he said, “they don’t teach you anything.”

Christian said that high school students were handed a sheet to color in the American flag and another to search for the 50 states. He has quit attending class.

Sometimes, children are turned away, because the class size is limited to 12 to 15 students.

Aury, a Venezuelan mother who was detained along with her three children, 10, 8 and 7, during a scheduled ICE check-in in San Antonio in December and held at Dilley until late January, said her children became upset when they were not allowed into the classroom. There was little stimulation otherwise.

She said they repeatedly asked her whether they had done something wrong to be confined.

The government had seemed to be making plans to set up an in-person school at Dilley by hiring Stride Inc., a for-profit company that primarily offers virtual education, according to public records and job postings.

But that did not happen.

In a statement, Stride said “we are not providing education services at this facility.” The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to questions about Stride, or who is currently providing education at Dilley.

Leecia Welch, who is chief legal counsel at Children’s Rights and represents detained children in a class-action legal case, said that the offerings at Dilley were “not really education at all.”

Image
A group of people are seen from behind holding up signs. In front of them, a man in a brown uniform stands with his hands at his waist. A line of uniformed men stand on a field nearby.
Protesters demonstrated outside Dilley in January. Credit...Jordan Vonderhaar for The New York Times

As more children have been detained, their American schools often must piece together where they have gone.

In Columbia Heights, Minn., a suburb of Minneapolis, several children were taken to Dilley, including 5-year-old Liam, whose release was ordered by a judge. Two brothers were sent there with their mother and later released. While there, school officials said, the brothers recognized another child in the cafeteria: a fifth-grade girl, who had been missing from their school for weeks.

ICE has sporadically released families, sometimes without explanation. In late January, several dozen families were allowed to go free.

Hundreds remain. Edison, the 13-year-old, has now been at Dilley for 58 days. He has been having recurring episodes during which he feels despondent, his father said. He crawls under a bunk bed and weeps uncontrollably.

“You can make all sorts of improvements to Dilley, but it’s still going to be a prison,” said Ms. Welch, the class-action lawyer, who regularly visits Dilley to assess conditions.

“You can improve education, and they should,” she added, but “it will still be a place with sick, sad children.”

Edgar Sandoval, Pooja Salhotra, Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Katie Thomas contributed reporting. Susan C. Beachy contributed research.

Miriam Jordan reports from a grass roots perspective on immigrants and their impact on the demographics, society and economy of the United States.

Sarah Mervosh covers education for The Times, focusing on K-12 schools.

Allison McCann is a reporter and graphics editor at The Times who covers immigration.

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Is Warner Bros. sidelining an anti-ICE wrestler?

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/2/13/2368447/-Is-Warner-Bros-sidelining-an-anti-ICE-wrestler?pm_campaign=front_page&pm_source=top_news_slot_1&pm_medium=web 

 

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Professional wrestler Brody King on the ramp during AEW Collision in October 2024.

Professional wrestler Brody King, who has inspired supporters to chant “Fuck ICE” at events, has reportedly been sidelined by the All Elite Wrestling promotion at the behest of Warner Bros. Discovery, the promotion’s TV partner.

Clips of wrestling fans chanting “Fuck ICE” during last week’s edition of “AEW Dynamite,” the promotion’s signature broadcast, went viral. And King did not appear on Wednesday night’s broadcast.

Longtime wrestling reporter and pundit Dave Meltzer reported the development on Thursday’s edition of the Wrestling Observer podcast. Meltzer claimed the demand came down from “above” Tony Khan, president and CEO of All Elite Wrestling.

“Nobody wants to get on Trump's bad side. If it wasn't for that, nobody would care, it's just a chant, but unfortunately, they've [Warner Bros.] got a company they're trying to sell and get regulatory approval from a guy who is going to take that stuff personal,” he added.

Warner Bros. denied the story in a statement, saying, “Warner Bros. Discovery did not have any involvement in Brody King’s upcoming AEW schedule. Any speculation to the contrary is categorically false.” The company said King would appear at an AEW event on Saturday.

An alleged attendee at the Wednesday taping of “Dynamite” claimed in a post on his X account that he was turned away from the Toyota Arena, in Ontario, California, where the episode was filmed because of his “Abolish ICE” T-shirt.

The Warner Bros. water tower is seen at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
The Warner Bros. water tower at the company’s studios in Burbank, California.

King is currently selling an “Abolish ICE” T-shirt on his official website, with the note that all proceeds from sales will benefit the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee.

This isn’t the first time AEW has been in the news over Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Last year, wrestler Adam Page complained when ICE recruitment ads were added to “Dynamite” broadcasts.

The controversy is occurring as public sentiment turns against the Trump administration and his use of ICE to enforce a harsh deportation agenda. Multiple celebrities at the Grammys wore pins bashing ICE and spoke out about abuses on stage.

Agents of ICE and other federal law enforcement have harassed families and veterans, abducted children, and killed civilians in pursuit of Trump’s policy goals. Conservatives have recently turned to the use of pro-ICE propaganda campaigns to counter the negative publicity.

Warner Bros. has a financial incentive to please the Trump administration, too. The company is the target of a takeover bid by Netflix, which will need federal approval to proceed. At the same time, CBS parent company Paramount—which is led by the pro-Trump Ellison family—is also mounting a bid for Warner Bros. Discovery. 

Paramount’s CBS News has recently bent its content to please Trump. And ABC News, owned by Disney, settled a lawsuit with Trump for $15 million after he won the 2024 presidential election.

If those organizations are willing to bend like that to satisfy Trump’s ego, massaging a wrestling lineup for the same reason is certainly within the realm of possibility.

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Top Goldman Sachs lawyer Kathy Ruemmler resigns over Epstein ties

https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/2/13/top-goldman-sachs-lawyer-kathy-ruemmler-resigns-over-epstein-ties 

 

Top Goldman Sachs lawyer Kathy Ruemmler resigns over Epstein ties

Ruemmler’s resignation comes after emails revealed her links to the late sex offender.

KR
Kathryn Ruemmler listens as then-US President Barack Obama speaks at the FBI headquarters in Washington, DC, in 2013 [File: Charles Dharapak/AP Photo]

The top lawyer at Goldman Sachs, Kathy Ruemmler, has announced that she will resign following revelations of her links to the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Ruemmler’s resignation comes after the United States Department of Justice’s latest release of investigative files about Epstein showed that she had received gifts from the disgraced financier, offered him advice on managing his reputation, and likened him to an older brother.

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Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon confirmed Ruemmler’s resignation from the investment bank on Thursday, saying that he respected her decision.

“Throughout her tenure, Kathy has been an extraordinary general counsel, and we are grateful for her contributions and sound advice on a wide range of consequential legal matters for the firm,” Solomon said in a statement provided to Al Jazeera.

“As one of the most accomplished professionals in her field, Kathy has also been a mentor and friend to many of our people, and she will be missed,” he said.

In an interview with the Financial Times on Thursday, Ruemmler, who previously served as White House counsel under US President Barack Obama, said that she would step down as chief legal officer and general counsel at the end of June.

Ruemmler told the newspaper that media attention on her relationship with Epstein, who died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, had become a “distraction”.

She had previously expressed regret for knowing Epstein, and denied providing the financier with legal representation or advocating on his behalf to any third party.

Ruemmler is just the latest in a slew of high-profile and powerful figures to exit prominent roles or face legal scrutiny in connection with the Epstein case.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday announced the resignation of his cabinet secretary, Chris Wormald, in his latest effort to quell controversy surrounding his appointment of Peter Mandelson, Britain’s former ambassador to the US, whose ties to Epstein have prompted a police investigation into suspected misconduct in public office.

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Also on Thursday, police in Norway searched properties belonging to former Prime Minister Thorbjorn Jagland as part of a corruption probe focused on the politician’s associations with Epstein.

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