At least 13 immigrants have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody from January through early March 2026, per ICE data reported by Reuters, following a record 31 deaths in 2025—the highest in two decades. This relentless toll spotlights catastrophic gaps in medical care, with cases spanning suicides, untreated infections, and alleged violence, particularly in facilities expanded under the Trump administration.
The surge in custody deaths is not a sudden spike but a alarming escalation. ICE confirmed 13 fatalities in the first 77 days of 2026, a pace that could surpass last year’s two-decade high of 31 deaths, as documented by Reuters. This trend reverses any pretense of improved oversight and instead reveals a system where medical emergencies turn fatal with disturbing regularity.
Historical context underscores the gravity: 2025’s 31 deaths already represented a grim milestone, but 2026’s early tally suggests conditions are worsening. The deaths cut across nationalities—Mexican, Afghan, Haitian, Iranian, Cambodian, Nicaraguan, Guatemalan, Cuban, Honduran—and ages, from teenagers to seniors, indicating no demographic is safe from systemic failures.
The Reuters report details individual tragedies that expose specific vulnerabilities. Royer Perez Jimenez, 19, Mexican, died by presumed suicide at Glades County Detention Center after staff failed to resuscitate him. Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal, 41, Afghan, a former U.S. military ally, died within 24 hours of detention after his tongue swelled during breakfast—a stark failure in initial screening. Emanuel Cleeford Damas, 36, Haitian, was intubated after reporting shortness of breath; his brother told the Associated Press he died from an untreated toothache infection, a claim DHS did not address in its blanket statement about comprehensive care.
Medical neglect emerges as a recurring theme. Parady La, 46, Cambodian, died from brain and organ failure while being treated for severe drug withdrawal at a Philadelphia facility. Luis Gustavo Nunez Caceres, 42, Honduran, suffered multiple heart failure crises before dying in a Houston hospital. Alberto Gutierrez Reyes, 48, Mexican, was allegedly denied care for chest pain, according to Los Angeles City Council member Eunisses Hernandez, highlighting local government scrutiny of ICE practices.
Many deaths occurred in facilities opened under the Trump administration, linking current tragedies to prior policy expansions. Geraldo Lunas Campos, 55, Cuban, died at Camp East Montana on Fort Bliss, Texas—a site inaugurated in the previous administration. The Washington Post reported that a detainee saw guards choking Lunas when he refused solitary confinement, and a local coroner may rule homicide. DHS countered that Lunas attempted suicide and resisted staff, but the conflicting accounts fuel doubts about transparency.
Other facilities, like the Louisiana ICE Processing Center in Angola, where Iranian national Pejman Karshenas Najafabadi, 59, died after cardiac arrest, also reflect the legacy of detention expansion. These sites often house long-term detainees with chronic conditions, raising questions about whether operational priorities override humanitarian standards.
ICE’s standard response—that comprehensive medical care is provided—rings hollow against evidence of botched interventions. From Lorth Sim, 59, Cambodian, found unresponsive in an Indiana cell, to Victor Manuel Diaz, 36, Nicaraguan, deemed a presumed suicide at a Texas camp, investigations remain pending, leaving families and advocates in limbo.
The human cost extends beyond numbers. Afghan veterans like Paktyawal, who risked their lives for U.S. forces, now face lethal neglect in detention. Asylum seekers such as Guatemalan Jairo Garcia Hernandez, 27, immunocompromised and “already in ill health” when detained, died after more than a year in custody, illustrating how prolonged detention exacerbates vulnerabilities.
Public and political backlash is mounting. Local officials, including Hernandez, are publicly questioning ICE’s medical protocols, while advocacy groups amplify detainee testimonies. The death toll has become a flashpoint in broader debates over immigration enforcement’s morality, with critics arguing that civil detention has adopted punitive, life-threatening dynamics.
These deaths are not isolated glitches but symptoms of a broken system. Under-resourced facilities, inadequate staff training, and bureaucratic inertia combine to create a perfect storm where preventable deaths become routine. The Biden administration’s promises to reform detention have yet to stem the tide, and with facilities like Camp East Montana operational, the infrastructure for tragedy remains entrenched.
Looking ahead, every death demands rigorous independent investigation, not just ICE’s internal reviews. Families seek accountability, and lawmakers face growing pressure to legislate enforceable medical standards and reduce detention reliance. The 2026 death count will likely climb, but the real measure is whether systemic change follows—or if the next headline will be another preventable loss.
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