Florida announces 2nd migrant facility despite another lawsuit over the first one


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Summary

Immigration facilities expansion

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that the state will open a second immigration detention facility, called the "Deportation Depot."

Cost considerations

DeSantis stated that the cost to taxpayers for the new Deportation Depot will be around $6 million, less than the $245 million spent on Alligator Alcatraz.

Legal and health challenges

Alligator Alcatraz, the state's other immigration facility, is facing a lawsuit over an alleged disease outbreak, possibly COVID-19.


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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, R, has announced that his state will open a second immigration detention facility. The “Deportation Depot” will join “Alligator Alcatraz,” which is defending against another lawsuit.

Deportation Depot

The Deportation Depot will open at a state prison called Baker Correctional Institute in Sanderson, about 45 miles west of Jacksonville.

DeSantis said the new facility will hold 1,300 immigration detention beds, but that number could get up to 2,000.

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“We have reached that point where I’m confident that we need additional capacity beyond what we’re already doing down in South Florida,” DeSantis said in a news conference covered by Fox 13 Tampa Bay.

It will take between two and three weeks to get the facility functional, according to Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management.

The prison is currently vacant after closing in 2021 due to staffing shortages.

“This facility is a permanent preexisting structure, meaning that our teams can get in here, get it operational quickly, efficiently and without delay,” Guthrie said. “It is also, again, a permanent structure, meaning that we will not have to look for temporary permits or things like this. We will move into existing infrastructure.”

Cost to taxpayers

Because of that, this facility will come at a lower cost to taxpayers.

DeSantis estimates the cost at around $6 million, a much smaller price tag than the $245 million for Alligator Alcatraz.

That’s because the Deportation Depot comes at a preexisting prison, whereas Alligator Alcatraz was basically built from the ground up in a swamp.

“We would get reimbursed for the state of Florida, but still we want to be as cost-effective as possible,” DeSantis said.

Democrats voiced their opposition to this latest plan.

“These inhumane facilities reward massive, taxpayer-funded no-bid contracts to politically connected businesses and corporate elite donors,” Nikki Fried, chair of the Florida Democratic Party, said in a statement. “DeSantis is funneling millions of tax dollars from the working and middle class to fill the pockets of the wealthy at the expense of immigrants who have come to our State seeking a better life for their families.”

Alligator Alcatraz lawsuit

The announcement comes as Alligator Alcatraz faces yet another lawsuit, this latest one over a reported disease outbreak.

The suit said a respiratory disease, possibly COVID-19, has spread through the facility.

“Migrants with fevers and coughs were left in their bunks without testing or treatment,” the complaint reads.

Among those who reportedly got sick was Luis Manuel Rivas Velasquez.

“We are all sick in this jail. Some are worse than others, it is an emergency,” Rivas Velasquez said in a statement. “They are treating us like dogs, like animals. People are suffering from lack of medicine. Somebody needs to do something to help us.”

This latest lawsuit comes after a federal judge temporarily halted construction at the facility over an environmental lawsuit.

A third lawsuit backed by the ACLU accuses federal and state officials of denying detainees access to legal counsel.

DeSantis and other officials have not commented on this latest lawsuit.

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Why this story matters

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced a new immigration detention facility amid ongoing legal and public health challenges facing similar state-run sites, raising questions about state immigration policy, costs, and detainee welfare. The developments highlight ongoing debates about immigration enforcement and government responsibility.

Immigration policy

The opening of a second detention facility reflects Florida's continued focus on state-led immigration enforcement amid broader national debate over the issue.

Legal and health challenges

Lawsuits regarding disease outbreaks and detainee rights at Alligator Alcatraz spotlight ongoing legal and humanitarian concerns related to detention facility operations.

Public spending

DeSantis emphasized the cost-effectiveness of using a preexisting prison for the Deportation Depot, contrasting it with previous spending and raising discussion about how public funds are allocated for such facilities.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 234 media outlets

Behind the numbers

The new facility, called Deportation Depot, will cost an estimated $6 million to become operational and can hold at least 1,300 detainees, with potential expansion to 2,000. State officials say costs will be reimbursed by the federal government.

Diverging views

Articles categorized as left focus heavily on alleged poor conditions, legal access issues and the motivations behind facility expansion, whereas right-leaning sources emphasize support for strict immigration enforcement and frame the new facility as a public safety measure.

Quote bank

“There is a demand for this,” said Gov. Ron DeSantis. “We want to process, stage and then return illegal aliens to their home country. That is the name of the game,” DeSantis also stated at the press conference.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame Florida’s new immigration facility as a punitive “Deportation Depot,” employing emotionally charged language, “ICE jail,” “vacant prison," to underscore harsh enforcement and humanize detainee hardship.
  • Media outlets in the center remain largely detached, focusing on logistics without ideological framing.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize Florida’s leadership in combating “illegal immigration,” praising the facility’s efficiency and aligning it with Trump-era policies; terms like “leading the way” and “Alligator Alcatraz” convey rugged resolve, while critics’ warnings of “overkill” inject cautious skepticism.

Media landscape

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234 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced plans for a new immigration detention facility in North Florida, described as the "Deportation Depot."
  • The facility will be located at the Baker Correctional Institution, which can hold up to 1,300 migrants and has been closed since 2021 due to staff shortages.
  • DeSantis stated that the facility "will be operational soon," indicating an urgent demand for this capacity.
  • He cited a need for additional capacity to hold and deport more immigrants, referencing President Donald Trump’s administration.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Aug. 14, 2025, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis revealed plans to establish an additional detention center for immigrants within the Baker Correctional Institution located in northern Florida.
  • The new facility responds to demand for more capacity beyond the Everglades site called Alligator Alcatraz, which opened in July 2025 with about 4,000 detainees.
  • DeSantis emphasized this is a priority for the state and country, stated he is confident the facility will be filled, and noted it would open soon though he is "in no rush to do it right this day."

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Key points from the Right

  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the opening of a second immigration detention facility, named the "Deportation Depot," in Baker County, to complement the existing "Alligator Alcatraz" facility in South Florida.
  • The new facility will initially hold 1,300 detainees and can be expanded to 2,000, providing capacity at a lower cost compared to other proposed sites.
  • DeSantis emphasized that there are approximately 50,000 to 100,000 undocumented immigrants in Florida with final orders of removal that have not been deported.

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