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Federal immigration authorities have quietly purchased and scouted large industrial warehouses across the United States to convert into detention and processing centres, according to public deeds and reporting from Feb. 2026.
Documents show Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) paid $87.4 million for a 520,000‑square‑foot facility in Upper Bern Township (Hamburg Logistics Centre), Berks County, Pennsylvania, that officials say could be refitted for about 1,500 beds.
Other recent acquisitions and bids include sites in Arizona (about $70 million), Maryland (a $102.4 million deed), Texas (San Antonio) and multiple Pennsylvania locations; reporting suggests the agency is considering at least 23 industrial sites nationwide and planning support for larger “mega” centres in places such as El Paso and Hutchins with capacities reported into the thousands.
The purchases are being advanced under expanded detention funding in the administration’s legislative package called the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” Local officials and residents in several states have pushed back—Kansas City passed a moratorium on non‑city detention sites, some owners have withdrawn from sales, and communities cite loss of local property tax revenue, proximity to schools and daycare centres, and public‑health and humanitarian concerns.
Independent data (TRAC) cited in reporting shows a large share of people in ICE custody have no criminal record, complicating the agency’s stated rationale.




















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