A new immigrant detention partnership nicknamed after Indiana’s iconic racetrack inspires backlash


Top Trump administration officials boast that a new state partnership to expand immigrant detention in Indiana will be the next so-called โ€œ Alligator Alcatraz.โ€

However, the agreement is already prompting backlash in the Midwest state, starting with its splashy โ€œSpeedway Slammerโ€ moniker.

Hereโ€™s a closer look at the agreement, the pushback and Indianaโ€™s role in the Trump agenda to aggressively detain and deport people in the country illegally.

More beds, not new construction

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem trumpeted the deal late Tuesday, saying Indiana would add 1,000 detention beds for immigrants facing deportation under a revived federal program.

On social media, DHS also posted an altered image of a race car emblazoned with โ€œICE,โ€ short for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The IndyCar-style vehicle is shown rolling past a barbed-wire prison wall.

โ€œIf you are in America illegally, you could find yourself in Indianaโ€™s Speedway Slammer,โ€ Noem said, likening it to the controversial facility built in the Florida Everglades. She added the new partnership will โ€œhelp remove the worst of the worst out of our country.โ€

However, the Indiana deal doesnโ€™t involve construction.

Federal funds will be used for space at the Miami Correctional Facility in Bunker Hill, roughly 75 miles (120.7 kilometers) north of Indianapolis. The prisonโ€™s total capacity is 3,100 beds, of which 1,200 are not filled, according to Indiana Department of Correction spokeswoman Annie Goeller.

Officials did not say when the detentions would start. โ€œDetails about the partnership and how IDOC can best support those efforts are being determined,โ€ Geoller said.

The deal is part of the decades-old 287(g) program, which Trump has revived and expanded. It delegates immigration enforcement powers to state and local law enforcement agencies. Immigrants, attorneys and advocates have raised a number of concerns about the program, including a lack of oversight.

The Florida detention facility has prompted lawsuits and complaints about poor conditions and violations of detainees’ rights. Authorities have disputed the claims.

Republican Gov. Mike Braun first announced the federal partnership on Friday.

โ€œIndiana is not a safe haven for illegal immigration,” he said. “Indiana will fully partner with federal immigration authorities as they enforce the most fundamental laws of our country.โ€

Pushback to a borrowed name

The outlandish name quickly drew backlash, notably from the town of Speedway, an Indianapolis suburb which is home to the iconic racetrack that hosts the Indianapolis 500.

โ€œThis designation was developed and released independently by the federal agency, without the Townโ€™s involvement or prior notice regarding the use of the name โ€˜Speedway,โ€™ โ€ officials with the Indiana town of roughly 14,000 said in a statement. โ€œOur primary focus remains the well-being of our residents, businesses, and visitors.โ€

IndyCar officials were also caught off guard.

โ€œWe were unaware of plans to incorporate our imagery as part of announcement,โ€ IndyCar said, asking that its intellectual property โ€œnot be utilized moving forward in relation to this matter.โ€

The altered image used by DHS featured an IndyCar with the No. 5, the same number as the only Mexican driver in the series.

โ€œI was just a little bit shocked at the coincidences of that and, you know, of what it means,โ€ IndyCar driver Pato Oโ€™Ward said Wednesday. โ€œI donโ€™t think it made a lot of people proud, to say the least.โ€

President Donald Trumpโ€™s border czar Tom Homan said Wednesday that he didnโ€™t name the facility.

โ€œBut Iโ€™ll say this, the work of ICE, the men and women of ICE, are trying to do their job with integrity and honor,โ€ he told reporters at the White House. โ€œI donโ€™t want these names to detract from that.โ€

Indiana embraces immigration enforcement

Leaders in the Trump administration have already singled out Indiana as key to their immigration agenda.

Braun, a first-term governor and former U.S. senator, has been a strong Trump supporter. In January, Braun signed an executive order directing law enforcement agencies to โ€œfully cooperateโ€ on immigration enforcement.

The nationโ€™s newest immigration court opened in Indianapolis earlier this year as a way to address the backlog and divert cases from the busy courthouse in Chicago.

Federal and state leaders are also working on plans to use a central Indiana military base, Camp Atterbury, to temporarily house detainees.

โ€œIndiana is taking a comprehensive and collaborative approach to combating illegal immigration and will continue to lead the way among states,โ€ Braun said in a statement Tuesday.

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Associated Press writer Will Weissert in Washington contributed to this report.

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