Trump's 'Alligator Alcatraz' construction temporarily halted by US judge
Jack Queen
, Reuters
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (L), US President President Donald Trump (C) and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem (R) tour a medical facility during a visit to a migrant detention center, dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz," located at the site of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport in Ochopee, Florida on 1 July, 2025.
Photo:
AFP / Andrew Caballero-Reynolds
A federal judge has temporarily halted new construction at an immigration detention facility in Florida dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" while a lawsuit over its environmental impact plays out.
At a hearing in Miami, US District Judge Kathleen Williams blocked new construction at the site in the Florida Everglades through 12 August but did not suspend operations or otherwise interfere with the work of immigration officials there. Williams was expected to issue a written order later on Thursday (Friday NZ time).
The ruling is a setback for US President Donald Trump as he seeks to ramp up deportations of migrants and others living in the US illegally.
US Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said the lawsuit ignores the fact that the land at issue has already been developed for a decade.
"It is another attempt to prevent the President from fulfilling the American people's mandate for mass deportations," McLaughlin said in a statement.
Trump has made Alligator Alcatraz emblematic of his hardline immigration policies, boasting of its location in a vast tropical wetland teeming with alligators, crocodiles and pythons.
Officials have estimated the facility could cost $450 million annually and house some 5000 people.
In their lawsuit seeking to block construction at the site, environmental and tribal groups say it threatens sensitive wetland ecosystems, endangered species and essential waterways.
"It's a relief that the court stepped in to protect the Everglades' sensitive waters, starry skies and vulnerable creatures from further harm while we continue our case, said Elise Bennett, an attorney representing the Center for Biological Diversity in the lawsuit, in a statement.
An aerial view of a migrant detention center, dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz".
Photo:
Chandan Khanna / AFP
Other critics of Alligator Alcatraz have condemned the facility as inhumane and dangerous to detainees.
The American Civil Liberties Union is separately seeking to block deportations from the facility, saying detainees are being held without charges and denied their constitutional rights to speak to their lawyers.
Trump, a Republican who maintains a home in Florida, pledged during his campaign to deport as many as one million people from the US per year, but his efforts have run up against mass protests, legal challenges and employer demands for cheap labor.
Trump's landmark tax-and-spending bill signed into law on July 4 provides roughly $170 billion in funding for immigration and border enforcement over four years.
- Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
16 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Trump and Putin to meet in Alaska amid Ukraine conflict tensions
US President Donald Trump said he would meet Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in one week in Alaska, and suggested an eventual deal between Moscow and Kyiv to end the war in Ukraine could involve swapping territory. The Kremlin later confirmed the summit, calling the location 'quite logical'. 'The Presidents themselves

RNZ News
16 hours ago
- RNZ News
California escalates Texas redistricting fight with November ballot measure
By Joseph Ax and Steve Gorman , Reuters California's governor Gavin Newsom. Photo: AFP California's governor has said he will ask voters to approve a ballot measure in November redrawing the state's congressional map in a way likely to create five more Democratic seats, escalating a redistricting war with the Republican-led state of Texas and President Donald Trump. Texas Republicans have drawn a new congressional map aimed at flipping five Democratic seats in the November 2026 midterm election, with the battle for control of the US House of Representatives expected to be closely fought. Governor Gavin Newsom and other California Democrats characterised their latest effort as an "emergency," a temporary strategy to neutralise Republican moves they see aimed at gaming the system. "We are trying to defend democracy, as opposed to seeing it destroyed district by district," Newsom said during a news conference in Sacramento. He was flanked by Democratic leaders of the California legislature and members of the state's congressional district, including former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The Democrats said they expected to have a newly agreed-upon map, based on previous plans reviewed by the state's independent redistricting commission, ready for public scrutiny next week, three months before it would go to voters. The Democratic-majority legislature would first have to vote in favour of a special election, to be set for the first week of November 2025. Newsom was joined by half a dozen of the more than 50 Democratic Texas lawmakers who collectively left their home state to prevent the legislative quorum required for Republicans there to win adoption of a Texas redistricting plan championed by Trump. Newsom and California's Democrats insisted they remain committed to the independent redistricting process enacted by state voters more than 15 years ago. Republican leaders sought on Friday (local time) to ramp up pressure seeking to force the wayward Texas Democrats, holed up in such Democratic-led states as California, Illinois and New York, to return to the legislature and punish those who refuse. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit with the Texas Supreme Court seeking a declaration that the seats of 13 absent Democratic lawmakers are vacant. In another tactic, Texas House of Representatives Speaker Dustin Burrows put the absent Democratic lawmakers on notice that they can only collect their paycheques by appearing in person at the capitol in Austin. Republicans now hold a narrow 219-212 majority US House of Representatives. Texas Republicans' new redistricting map was the first salvo in trying to secure their party's majority on Capitol Hill. Trump has that with the redrawing of congressional district lines Republicans can expect to pick up as many as five additional US House seats. Friday's response by Newsom and his fellow California Democrats may not be the last move in the redistricting game. Other Democratic governors have threatened to follow suit, while Republican leaders in other states have said they may do likewise. Texas state Representative Ann Johnson, one of the Democrats appearing in California on Friday, said she and other legislators staging the walkout were employing rare but legitimate tactics to keep Republicans from "rigging" the next election. "We are running from nothing," she said. "We see the danger that is coming and we are running straight for it." Speaking on the Texas House floor on Friday, Burrows also said the legislature would withhold 30% of absent members' paycheques to ensure that daily fines will eventually be covered. He said missing lawmakers would not be allowed to send newsletters to their constituents or seek travel reimbursement. "Each one of you knows that eventually, you will come back, and we will pass the priorities of the special session," he told Democrats. Burrows previously signed civil warrants for the Democrats and said the Texas Department of Public Safety was "working to track down absent members." Those warrants are not enforceable beyond Texas' borders. Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott has threatened to seek to remove the missing Democrats from office, though legal experts have expressed scepticism about such a manoeuvre. Republican US Senator John Cornyn of Texas said on Thursday (local time) that the FBI had agreed to his request to assist in tracking down absent Democrats, but it was unclear precisely how, or whether, federal agents would become involved. - Reuters


NZ Herald
16 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Intel CEO urged to quit by Trump after senator's China ties warning
President Donald Trump yesterday demanded that the new boss of US chip maker Intel resign 'immediately', after a Republican senator raised national security concerns over his links to firms in China. 'The CEO of INTEL is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately. There is no other solution to this problem,'