12 members of Congress sue Trump administration to ensure access to ICE
detention centers
[July 31, 2025]
By MARTHA BELLISLE
A dozen Democratic members of Congress who have been blocked from making
oversight visits at immigration detention centers filed a federal
lawsuit Wednesday against the Trump administration that seeks to ensure
they are granted entry into the facilities, even without prior notice.
The lawsuit, filed in the District of Columbia’s federal court, said the
Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement are obstructing Congressional oversight of the centers at a
time when there's been an increase in ICE arrests, with reports of raids
across the country and people taken into custody at immigration courts.
By law, members of Congress are allowed to visit ICE facilities and
don’t have to give any notice, but increasingly, the members have been
stopped at the door. ICE officials have said a new rule requires a
seven-day waiting period and they prohibit entry to the ICE field
offices. The lawsuit asks the court for full and immediate access to all
ICE facilities.
ICE Director Todd Lyons told a congressional committee in May that he
recognized the right of members of Congress to visit detention
facilities, even unannounced. But DHS Secretary Kristi Noem told a
different committee that members of Congress should have requested a
tour of an immigration detention facility in New Jersey where a skirmish
broke out in May.
As President Donald Trump's immigration agenda plays out, detention
facilities have become overcrowded and there have been reports of
mistreatment, food shortages, a lack of medical care and unsanitary
conditions, the lawsuit said. Congress has a duty to make sure the
administration is complying with the law while operating the facilities,
the lawsuit said.

The recently passed budget bill allocates $45 billion for ICE detention
— more than 13 times ICE’s current annual detention budget, the lawsuit
said. Members of Congress must ensure those funds are spent efficiently
and legally, the suit said.
But recent attempts by House members to visit facilities were blocked,
the lawsuit said.
“These members of Congress could have just scheduled a tour; instead,
they’re running to court to drive clicks and fundraising emails," DHS
Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin told the AP in
an email.
Requests for visits to detention centers should be made “with sufficient
time to prevent interference with the President’s Article II authority
to oversee executive department functions—a week is sufficient to ensure
no intrusion on the President’s constitutional authority,” she said.
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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks during a roundtable
at, the so -called Alligator Alcatraz," a new migrant detention
facility at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility, July 1,
2025, in Ochopee, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

Also, ICE has seen a surge in assaults, disruptions and obstructions
to law enforcement so any requests for tours of ICE processing
centers and field offices must be approved by Secretary Noem,
McLaughlin said.
The Congressmembers said the law doesn't require prior approval, and
said they've been blocked outright from the field offices, according
to the lawsuit.
When Rep. Veronica Escobar tried to visit the El Paso center on July
9, ICE told her that they could not accommodate her attendance and
said it is “now requiring requests to be made seven calendar days in
advance,” the lawsuit said. When the Democrat arrived at the center,
she was denied entry.
Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colorado, met a similar fate when he tried to
visit the ICE Aurora Facility on July 20.
While ICE is demanding a week's notice for detention center visits,
it said it's prohibiting members of Congress from inspecting ICE
field offices, where some detainees are being held.
When Rep. Daniel Goldman, D-New York, tried to tour the ICE New York
Field Office in June, he was told his oversight authority doesn't
apply there, because it's not a "detention facility." When Goldman
went to the office, the deputy director barred his entry, but
confirmed that people were being held overnight, sometimes for
several days, but the facility did not have beds or showers.
Reps. Joe Neguse, D-Colorado; Bennie Thompson, D-Mississippi; and
Jamie Raskin, D-Maryland, made a similar attempt to enter the ICE
Washington Field Office in Chantilly, Virginia, on July 21 after
learning that people were being detained there, according to the
lawsuit. But they also were turned away without being able to view
the conditions at the site.
The other House members who are fighting for ICE access include:
California Democratic Representatives Norma Torres, Raul Ruiz, Jimmy
Gomez, Jose Luis Correa and Robert Garcia. Also suing is Adriano
Espaillat, D-New York.
“No child should be sleeping on concrete, and no sick person should
be denied care, yet that’s exactly what we keep hearing is happening
inside Trump’s detention centers," Gomez said in a statement. "This
lawsuit is our message: We as Members of Congress will do our job,
and we will not let these agencies operate in the shadows.”
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