BY Brenden AckermanMarch 11, 2026
1 month ago
BY 
 | March 11, 2026
1 month ago

DHS fires back at Biden-appointed judge's injunction over Baltimore ICE facility conditions

The Department of Homeland Security swung back hard Monday at a federal judge who ordered ICE to overhaul conditions at its Baltimore processing facility, calling her key claims about the facility "false" and defending the agency's treatment of detainees.

U.S. District Judge Julie Rubin, a Biden appointee, issued a 67-page preliminary injunction ordering ICE to either drastically improve conditions at the Baltimore holding center or find a new facility to "humanely" and legally hold illegal immigrants before transferring them to longer-term detention. The injunction applies to all current and future detainees at the facility operated by Baltimore's ICE Field Office.

DHS wasn't having it.

A DHS spokesperson told Fox News Digital that illegal immigrants in custody receive food, water, blankets, and hygiene products, and that ICE "has higher detention standards than most U.S. prisons that hold actual U.S. citizens." The spokesperson described ICE's care as "comprehensive," including medical, dental, and mental health services, access to medical appointments, and 24-hour emergency care.

Then came the line that captures the absurdity of this entire debate:

"This is the best healthcare that many aliens have received in their entire lives."

What the judge actually ordered

Rubin ruled that conditions at the Baltimore facility violate the Fifth Amendment and due process protections under the U.S. Constitution, citing Supreme Court precedent under Zadvydas v. Davis. She described the conditions as "unhygienic, unsanitary," and "unlawfully punitive," reflecting a "deliberate indifference to the health, safety, and medical needs" of detainees.

Rubin leaned into the language of constitutional obligation, noting that due process extends to "all 'persons,'" including noncitizens, "whether their presence here is lawful, unlawful, temporary, or permanent."

Her injunction painted a vivid picture:

"Rather, the conditions here are compounded: civilly detained people are stuffed into unclean cells by the dozens, without basic hygiene essentials, while exposed to a virtually open unclean toilet (and those detained making use of same)."

She added that these conditions "woefully fail to comport with 'contemporary standards of decency.'"

Here's what Rubin's own cited records actually show: between February and September 2025, just eight out of 3,250 detainees held at the Baltimore ICE facility were transported to a hospital for medical needs. That's a hospitalization rate so low it would be the envy of most county jails in America. If conditions were truly as dire as Rubin describes, with overcrowding producing "in the worst-case scenario, fatalities," you'd expect the medical transfer numbers to tell a different story.

They don't.

A pattern, not an outlier

The Baltimore case doesn't exist in isolation. It fits neatly into a growing pattern of federal judges inserting themselves into the operational mechanics of immigration enforcement.

Consider the recent trajectory:

  • In August, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan issued an emergency order requiring ICE to address allegations at a processing facility in New York City. The following month, he slapped ICE with a more lasting preliminary injunction seeking to codify those changes.
  • Last month, a federal judge in Minnesota issued a temporary restraining order requiring ICE to provide access to counsel, attorney-client visits, and a 72-hour notice period before transferring detainees out of state.
  • Now, Baltimore, where a judge is effectively dictating facility management down to the level of hygiene product distribution.

Three different jurisdictions. Three different judges. The same playbook: plaintiffs file suit alleging inhumane conditions, a sympathetic judge grants sweeping relief, and ICE is forced to divert resources from enforcement to compliance with court-mandated facility upgrades.

This is not a coincidence. It is a litigation strategy masquerading as civil rights advocacy. The goal isn't better soap distribution. The goal is to make detention so operationally burdensome that the government simply stops detaining people.

DHS makes the obvious point

DHS officials offered the most clarifying statement in this entire saga: being in detention "is a choice."

"We encourage all illegal aliens to take control of their departure with the CBP Home App."

Officials noted that the U.S. is offering illegal immigrants $2,600 and a free flight to self-deport, as former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem highlighted during congressional testimony last week. The alternative was stated plainly: "If not, you will be arrested and deported without a chance to return."

That framing matters. These are not political prisoners. They are not refugees trapped by circumstance with no exit. They are individuals who entered the country illegally, were offered a cash incentive and free transportation home, and declined. The discomfort of a processing facility exists because it chose to remain in a system designed to remove it.

Judge Rubin acknowledged that the government has a "legitimate governmental interest" in detention. But she then spent 67 pages explaining why that interest doesn't entitle the government to actually run its facilities the way operational reality demands. The debated issue, she wrote, "is that defendants apparently dispense with even rudimentary decent, humane treatment of civil detainees, and so too their constitutional rights as a result."

But a processing center is not a long-term prison. It is a waystation. People move through it. The entire premise of the facility is temporary holding before transfer. Applying the constitutional standards of a correctional institution to what is essentially a short-term intake center conflates two fundamentally different things.

What comes next

The administration has not yet indicated whether it will appeal Rubin's ruling. It should.

Not because conditions at any government facility should be ignored, but because allowing a single district judge to dictate the operational parameters of immigration processing sets a precedent that scales. If every holding facility can be subjected to a 67-page injunction based on allegations compiled over ten months by unnamed plaintiffs, enforcement doesn't slow down. It stops.

That's the real stakes here. Not whether detainees get an extra blanket. Whether the judiciary can functionally veto immigration enforcement by micromanaging every facility where illegal immigrants are held before deportation.

DHS called the court's determinations about substandard conditions and overcrowding "false." Rubin, in her order, does not appear to back the government's contention. One side has operational data. The other has a 67-page opinion. The appeals court will eventually decide which carries more weight.

In the meantime, the offer stands: $2,600 and a flight home. The door is open. Nobody is trapped here but by their own refusal to walk through it.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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