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ResistMap

@resistmap

America's Civil Watch platform - tracking ICE raids, militarized policing, government overreach and hate crimes across the United States. Anonymous and secure.

United States of America Beigetreten Şubat 2025
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ResistMap
ResistMap@resistmap·
These six warehouses are prospective locations for DHS to retrofit into ICE internment camps. Owners of prospective properties: 📍Port Allen, LA: CAP Industrial Park LLC 📍Starke, FL: BRADFORD COUNTY FLORIDA 📍Durant, OK: No data 📍McAllen, TX: Centennial Park LLC 📍Flowery Branch, GA: CRP/AI Oakwood Owner LLC 📍Orlando, FL: BEACHLINE LOGISTICS CENTER LLC Source: Project Salt Box
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ResistMap@resistmap·
Royer Pérez Jiménez, just 19 years old, was an indigenous Maya youth who traveled over 2,000 miles to come to the U.S. when he was only 15 or 16. The teenager was from San Juan Chamula, a Tzotzil Maya community in Chiapas, Mexico. L.A. Taco and Cielo confirmed that Royer Perez-Jimenez was Tzotzil Maya and native to this continent. The Edgewater police in Florida arrested Royer for riding an electric scooter on the sidewalk in January. In late February, he was transferred into ICE custody and processed at Glades County Detention Center. 18 days later, he was declared dead. Now Mexico is demanding answers.
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Houston Chronicle
Houston Chronicle@HoustonChron·
The Athletic reported in 2025 that the charter airline GlobalX had a $5 million contract with the NCAA for March Madness that year and operated over half of ICE deportation flights in prior months. houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-t…
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ResistMap
ResistMap@resistmap·
CoreCivic is one of the two largest private prison companies contracted by ICE to operate its detention camps. The Chief Financial Officer said on an earnings call earlier this year: "If you took 13,000 beds, an average per diem, I don't know, just say $125 a day, that's 593 million dollars of incremental revenue. And if you assume we're on a 23% margin in the fourth quarter, that's 136 million dollars of incremental EBITDA." A CoreCivic executive implied that ICE pays the company the same daily amount as a nice hotel stay for each person it holds in detention. But being held captive inside a detention camp operated by CoreCivic is nothing like a $125/night hotel stay. At CoreCivic's Dilley internment camp in Texas, families are fed moldy and worm-infested food. Covid-19, the measles, and RSV outbreaks have run rampant. Nothing has been done about them. The water isn't potable, and families have to pay $39 or more to get bottled water. Guards snatch toys from small hands. People have to brace the rain, cold, and wind for hours to get a single pill. Confused children are hitting themselves. Others wake up screaming or wet themselves while asleep. CoreCivic shut off access to video calls with the outside world at Dilley after being the subject of public backlash. A one-year-old was on the 'brink of death' after weeks of deteriorating health before she was given medical attention. She needed to spend ten days in the hospital. An infant, just two-months-old, was left to choke on his own vomit and even went unresponsive. His mother had no clean water to use for baby formula. He went for days without formula while battling bronchitis and RSV. Then, ICE deported him and his family to the middle of nowhere on the other side of the U.S.-Mexico border while he was still gravely ill. Another child recently went ten days without a bowel movement -- a medical emergency. CoreCivic staff did nothing. All the while, CoreCivic is bringing in massive profits. Hundreds of millions of dollars of profits.
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ResistMap
ResistMap@resistmap·
ICE is using two secret locations in Illinois to hold people captive in addition to Broadview, according to a new report from the Colorado Times Recorder. These 'hold rooms' were only meant to hold people for processing for up to 12 hours. The Trump admin bumped that up to 72 hours, a maximum only on paper. In reality, people have spent weeks inside ICE hold rooms. They don't have beds. Some don't have toilets. A man was held captive for five and a half weeks in a hold room in Colorado. Children are often held captive in ICE hold rooms across the country before they are transferred to internment camps like Dilley. The Chicago site on Ida B. Wells Drive is officially labeled as an ICE Field Office, and the Rock Island site is a courthouse. Neither are places meant to house human beings. Source: Colorado Times Recorder Data: Deportation Data Project
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LongTime🤓FirstTime👨‍💻
Leaked video from inside ICE detention shows women trapped in desperate conditions—smuggled out by husband. Used panties, moldy food, broken shoes, clothes that don't fit because made for men—and a toxic mattress made of insulation. Gabriela Sousa came to U.S. legally granted humanitarian parole from Venezuela—and is married to U.S. citizen husband. Her husband helped the women smuggle out this video they made—with testimonials from several women detained together in these inhumane conditions The video was made secretly inside the Baker County ICE Detention Center in Macclenny, Florida.
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ResistMap
ResistMap@resistmap·
Some of the March Madness teams competing today may have gotten to their games on planes that have flown their classmates and neighbors on ICE deportation flights -- in shackles. Other planes have taken children to internment camps. These are the planes carrying our athletes. #dontflywithice
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ResistMap@resistmap·
Royer Perez-Jimenez was just 19 years old. He had his whole life ahead of him. Until he was detained by ICE. Royer Perez-Jimenez had only been in ICE custody for 18 days when he was found 'unconscious and unresponsive' in the early morning of March 16th at Glades County Detention Center in Moore Haven, Florida. This site had been closed due to concerns of medical neglect until Trump opened it back up in 2025 to hold people detained by ICE. ICE alleges that the cause of death was suicide, despite Royer Perez-Jimenez answering "no" to all suicide screening questions when he was taken into ICE custody. His cause of death is now under investigation. It is unclear if the investigation is being conducted outside of ICE's purview. Royer is the youngest person to die in ICE custody since Trump took office last year. His death also marks the sixth death in ICE custody that ICE alleged was suicide since Trump took office. One of those deaths was ruled a homicide by the El Paso County Medical Examiner's Office. Royer Perez-Jimenez should be alive today, growing and experiencing new things and discovering his passions. Instead, his life was cut cruelly short, and his family is left to face unthinkable grief. Sources: L.A. Taco, Izzy Ramirez, Aisha Wallace-Palomares, and Memo Torres
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ResistMap@resistmap·
At the Dilley internment camp in Texas, more than half of the 3,500 people detained there have been children. At Dilley, children are denied medical care even when extremely sick. The food is infested with worms and mold. Lights are on 24/7, and you have to wait outside in the cold and wind for hours to receive a single pill. The center recently restricted children's access to video calls from the outside world after public backlash about the conditions reported inside. Children burning up, struggling to breathe, waking up screaming, bedwetting, facing anxiety and depression they'd never had before. Guards yelling at children, snatching toys. RSV, the measles, and Covid-19 spread unchecked inside Dilley. Dilley is just one of at least ten ICE detention centers operated by CoreCivic. The company made $2.2 billion in revenue in 2025, a 13% increase from the year before. Juan Nicolás, a two-month-old infant detained at Dilley who had choked on his own vomit and became unresponsive due to bronchitis and RSV, was denied medical care. ICE later cruelly dropped him and his family off on the other side of the U.S.-Mexico border-- while he was still gravely ill. A five-year-old went ten days without a bowel movement. CoreCivic staff did nothing. Another girl, just one-year-old, nearly died from untreated pneumonia, Covid-19, RSV and respiratory distress that had worsened over the course of several weeks. She needed to spend 10 days in a hospital, where she was only taken after being on 'the brink of death.' A family of Russian asylum seekers who were held captive at Dilley for four months said, 'Even in Russia, they don't treat children like this.' 'We left one tyranny and came to another kind of tyranny.'
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ResistMap@resistmap·
"Daddy, why are you behind that glass?" That is what Damien Chavez Velasco asked his father, sitting on the other side of a detention center barrier. His father Juan came to the United States from Colombia at 8 years old, earned 2 bachelor's degrees, and worked on the front lines of emergency rooms during COVID. His family is part of the Weslaco, Texas community. Juan had enrolled in DACA and renewed it faithfully for over a decade. He has no criminal history. 12 days after his youngest daughter was born prematurely and placed in the NICU, he was on his way to deliver milk to her hospital room. ICE agents pulled in front of his car. He told them he had a newborn in intensive care and was a DACA recipient. They said, "That doesn't matter." Juan Chavez Velasco has a valid work permit and a pending renewal sitting unanswered in a government inbox. He was on his way to deliver milk to his premature baby, Elianna, in intensive care. They took him anyway. “I never got to hold her,” he said in a phone interview from the Webb County Detention Center. After ICE detained him, his daughter needed to undergo a blood transfusion, as her bone marrow was not producing enough red blood cells. But Juan can't be with her. And on March 10th, while in ICE custody, his DACA status expired. Even though he applied to renew it last November.
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ResistMap@resistmap·
The CEO of CoreCivic said on an investor call: "We are confident that the detention beds that we provide are the most humane, most efficient logistically, most compliant, most secure, are readily available and provide the best value to the government." This is the company that runs the Dilley internment camp in Texas. At Dilley, they denied medical care to a two-month-old with RSV and bronchitis who became unresponsive, a child who hadn't had a bowel movement in 10 days, and a one-year-old who almost died from RSV and Covid-19.
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ResistMap@resistmap·
UT Austin may have flown to their First Four game in Dayton, Ohio on GlobalX. This is the airline that ICE uses to deport people, including children, in "handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons," conditions a former GlobalX pilot described as what “you would see in a POW camp" (The Athletic). #dontflywithice
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Trans Liberty
Trans Liberty@translibertypac·
Three weeks ago Kansas passed the most extreme anti-trans law in American history. Not a bathroom bill - a purge. The state voided trans Kansans' driver's licenses and birth certificates without warning, then authorized $1,000 bounties for private citizens to sue trans people caught using a public restroom. Think about what that means. Without a valid ID you can't drive to work, board a plane, cash a check, or vote. Thousands of American citizens just became undocumented in their own country. So we launched Operation Lifeboat - a full emergency evacuation and support operation for trans Kansans who need to get out or need help surviving in place, supported by a professional team with decades of refugee & disaster response experience. In just the first day, we opened 20 cases from folks who need support to evacuate or survive in place. But we expect at least 2,000 people will need to leave. We've mobilized 53 volunteers in Kansas and our support team is ready to help. If you're trans and in Kansas, you can request assistance at translifeboat.org. That's also the spot to go if you're interested in volunteering-- from Kansas or anywhere in the country. We refuse to let anyone face this alone.
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ResistMap@resistmap·
After countless sacrifices, Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal’s service to our country was rewarded with his death at the hands of the people he served. Now, his wife, brother, and six children (the youngest being 18 months) are left to grieve this tremendous loss. The future he fought to build for his family was cut short by the very country he risked his life for. "His children adored him, and he worked hard every day to take care of them and build a future for them in the United States... He believed in helping bring stability to his country and protecting the people around him," wrote his family in a statement released by AfghanEvac. "He was a hero to his family, to his people, and to his country," said his brother. Mohommad's death brings ICE custody deaths in Texas alone to at least 7 since December. Nationally there have been at least a dozen this year. You can contribute to support his family at gofundme.com/f/support-for-…
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ResistMap@resistmap·
A plane carries 157 people to an internment camp in chains. Hours later, a college basketball team boards the same plane, buckles into the same seats, and flies to March Madness. Our universities booked one of those flights. But our tuition and our tax dollars paid for both. GlobalX Airline holds the NCAA's $5 million charter contract for March Madness. GlobalX also operates 73% of all ICE deportation flights in America. The Athletic confirmed this last year with specific tail numbers and flight records. More than 1,600 students at universities had their visas revoked or their immigration status terminated in 2025. They were flown out on GlobalX — the same airline our NCAA fees pay for. Over 1,000 children, including at least 22 infants, were deported on GlobalX planes. The airline also profits from ICE sending innocent people to internment camps on domestic trafficking flights. These are the planes carrying our athletes. March Madness should be about celebrating our university communities, the excellence of student athletes, and the joy of basketball. The NCAA's decision to make teams fly on the same planes that deport people goes against all of that. When our universities use airlines that carry out ICE deportation flights, it tells us that the dignity and worth of those communities — our communities — is not a priority. When they allow our athletes to fly with an airline known for safety issues, it tells us we're not a priority. The NCAA calls this a "world class student athlete experience" - we call it a betrayal. The bottom line? Companies that profit from cruelty and human suffering shouldn't make a single dollar from March Madness. Sign your name to tell the NCAA and universities to drop GlobalX and keep ICE off the court: bit.ly/dumpice
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ResistMap@resistmap·
Daphy Michel, 31, was a Haitian asylum seeker living in Washington Country, PA with her brother Carlo. Her life was just beginning. In September 2025, she experienced a mental health emergency, yet rather than provide her mental health care, Washington County incarcerated her for six months. Case after case passed, each one awaiting a mental health evaluation that she was never provided. On February 26th, a judge finally dismissed her misdemeanor counts. Her brother was enthused to know she was coming home. Until she didn’t. Because an ICE detainer was in her jail file, ICE was able to intercept her release from county custody. They took her to an ICE office in Pittsburgh, strapped an ankle monitor to her, and abandoned her on the street in 34° weather, over 30 miles from her home. Neither her brother nor her legal representatives were notified. It is unclear what happened over the next several days, but on March 2nd, she was found dead at a bus shelter on Pittsburgh’s South Side. At the hearing where her case was dismissed, Carlo had said, “she wasn't having any problem.” Four days later, Daphy Michel was dead. Sources: L.A. Taco, Migrant Insider, WTAE
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ResistMap@resistmap·
The oldest public university in the country will send its basketball teams to March Madness on the planes ICE uses to deport people in chains. Let's flood Athletic Director Bubba Cunningham's voicemail box, (919) 962-6000, and let him know it is unacceptable for Tar Heels to fly with ICE Air! Sign the letter: bit.ly/dumpice#dontflywithice #dontflywithiceUNC #unc
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ResistMap@resistmap·
There are nine secret ICE internment camps ("hold rooms") in Colorado in addition to the one ICE actually acknowledges the existence of: Aurora Processing Center. These secret hold rooms have held over 3,000 human beings ages 1-91 captive. They have no beds. Some have no toilets. One man was held in one of these rooms for five and a half weeks. Over 39 children ages 9 or younger were held at the Denver location alone last year. We do not know the address of this site yet. A one-year-old infant who was held there was later transferred to Dilley, an internment camp in Texas where medical needs are ignored, food is scarce and inedible, and the measles and Covid-19 spread unchecked. Source: Colorado Times Recorder Data: Deportation Data Project
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ResistMap@resistmap·
U of I should have no business with any company that works with ICE, especially not the one that operates 73% of ICE's deportation flights. ㅤ Let's flood Athletic Director Josh Whitman's voicemail box, (217) 333-3631, let him know it is unacceptable for Illini to fly with GlobalX! #dontflywithice #dontflywithiceUIUC #uiuc
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Tennessee is introducing a new bill that would let the state incarcerate foster children who have no charges filed against them. To say this is dangerous is a vast understatement. Children who are incarcerated are at extreme risk of sexual abuse. If this bill becomes law, children could also be placed in solitary confinement. which can cause profound psychological damage.
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