Auschwitz in the Everglades? No, But It’s Closer Than You Think
The $450 Million Swamp Facility Built to Disappear Witnesses, Silence Testimony, and Feed a Profiteering Machine
The United States is now spending nearly half a billion dollars a year to hold 5,000 people inside a remote tent city surrounded by a swamp. There are no courtrooms on-site, no scheduled trials, just flood-prone runway strips, portable fencing, and a network of private contractors paid to contain human beings indefinitely and often invisibly.
At the edge of the Florida Everglades, on the ghostly asphalt of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, 45 miles west of Miami, a new kind of American detention center is taking shape. It has no permanent foundation, no public access, and no oversight strong enough to expose what’s really happening inside. It was built fast, funded quietly, and designed with a singular goal: to make people and their testimony disappear.
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Its unofficial nickname is Alligator Alcatraz, but that may understate the truth.
What’s being built here isn’t just a detention facility. It’s an engine of erasure, a $450 million machine that turns asylum seekers into flight manifests, evidence into silence, and bodies into budget line items. And if that sounds familiar, it should.
No, this is not Auschwitz. There are no crematoria, no gas chambers. Still, we must be brave enough to ask: how close do we come to moral collapse when our own government builds a system designed to detain the voiceless and deport the inconvenient?
This facility is not an anomaly. It is the next logical step in a pattern that spans two decades of privatized detention, militarized immigration enforcement, and political regimes that benefit from silence more than truth.
The swamp is not the backdrop. It’s the metaphor. In this place, silence isn’t an accident. It’s the policy.
What Is Alligator Alcatraz?
To understand what this facility is doing, we have to look at what it is.
Alligator Alcatraz is the unofficial name for the massive detention complex under construction at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, a defunct Cold War–era airstrip in the middle of the Florida Everglades.
Tents and trailers stretch across the abandoned tarmac. Military-grade fencing carves up zones. Floodlights and watch towers rise from land that’s more swamp than soil. Designed to hold up to 5,000 detainees, the site is largely hidden from public view, not by accident, but by location.
The facility’s projected budget is $450 million per year, or $90,000 per person annually.
Compare that to:
Angola Prison: ~$26,000/year
Federal Prison Avg.: ~$39,000/year
ICE Detention Avg.: ~$52,500/year
Yet this is not a prison. It’s a temporary tent complex where detainees often lack access to lawyers, courts, and their families.
The operation is fully privatized, run by contractors, and shielded from FOIA and public audits.
It’s not a facility. It’s a ghost system. The tents are temporary. The paperwork is sealed. The silence is permanent.
See our previous reporting on this facility here:
Built to Vanish: The Case of the Missing Witnesses
This isn’t about border control. It’s about erasure.
In May 2025, a federal case involving suspected MS-13 members collapsed, not because the evidence disappeared but because the witnesses did.
These men allegedly had direct knowledge of political negotiations between El Salvador’s Bukele regime and gang leaders, testimony that could have exposed Trump administration complicity.
Instead of being protected, they were deported within days. Terrorism charges were dropped. Legal proceedings halted. The result? Critical testimony vanished.
This was not immigration enforcement. This was political witness tampering.
This is what Alligator Alcatraz is for: swift, quiet, irreversible deportation of inconvenient truths.
Legal on Paper, Lawless in Practice
But how does a system this corrupt operate in plain sight? It’s not by breaking the law. It’s by bending it until justice breaks.
From the outside, Alligator Alcatraz is defensible by statute. Every piece of it — the construction contracts, the deportation orders, the surveillance protocols — is technically legal. But that’s the brilliance of bureaucratic repression: when law is bent into a weapon, even the most unethical actions wear a mask of legitimacy.
The Dade-Collier facility operates under DHS authority with funds marked “immigration enforcement.” That means as long as Congress signs the check, the executive branch decides how it’s spent and who vanishes.
The state of Florida Department of Emergency Management is operating the facility. However, like most detention centers, contractors play a significant role.
Contractor Shell Games
The facility was built and will be maintained almost entirely by private contractors, though Florida DEM will operate it:
CDR Maguire / CDR Health (Miami-based disaster‑response and healthcare): provided emergency management services, healthcare, and site setup. The CEOs donated roughly $1.9 million to DeSantis-aligned PACs
Doodie Calls: portable‑toilet provider
GardaWorld: global security firm (provides correctional/security personnel); donated $5,000 to DeSantis-related PACs
Garner Environmental Services: large-scale disaster-relief firm (up to $1.6 billion prior state contracts), handling earthwork and logistics
SLSCO Ltd. (works on border wall projects): handled the setup of tents/trailers
Gothams LLC: tech/logistics services; founder donated to GOP
Plus IRG Global, multiple trucking companies, rock-mining operations, and more, mostly disaster response/construction outfits
The state involvement is a new wrinkle. Most other facilities are owned and operated by private companies, such as CoreCivic and GEO Group, entities that are shielded from scrutiny.
These companies are:
Not subject to FOIA
Protected by indemnity clauses
Paid millions in no-bid emergency contracts
If a detainee dies or a witness disappears? There’s no paper trail and no liability.
This is repression with receipts, legalized, indemnified, and profitable.
See our previous reporting on these companies here:
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We’ve Seen This Before
The horror of Alligator Alcatraz isn’t that it’s unprecedented. It’s that it’s the inevitable next step in a system we’ve been perfecting for two decades, one built on detention without due process, privatized profit, and the steady erosion of public accountability.
Before tents rose in the Everglades, there were cages in Texas. Before the MS-13 suspects vanished, migrant children were taken from their parents and locked in Walmart-converted shelters under armed guard. Before this $450 million swamp fortress, there was the Tornillo tent city, where thousands of kids were held behind barbed wire for months.
But the pattern didn’t begin with Trump. It began in the shadow of 9/11, when immigration became a counterterrorism issue, and fear was used to rewrite what was legal, who was welcome, and who could be disappeared.
The American Blueprint for Disappearance
2003–2016: ICE detention explodes. Private prisons cash in. Immigrants — many without criminal records — are held in remote facilities with little legal recourse.
2014–2016: Under Obama, family detention is expanded during the Central American migrant crisis. The same contractors running today’s sites cut their teeth here.
2017–2020: Trump accelerates the system. “Zero tolerance” policies often lead to mass family separation. Caliburn International, a company linked to Trump’s inner circle, runs Homestead and Tornillo, child detention camps on U.S. soil.
2025: The swamp site arrives. The model is refined. Silence becomes the policy.
This is not new. It is only more visible if you know where to look.
The Nazi Parallel: Bureaucracy as a Weapon
Here’s the chilling truth. The early Nazi regime also began by targeting immigrants, refugees, and stateless persons long before the death camps.
In the 1930s, the Nazis passed laws revoking the citizenship of Jews, Roma, and political enemies.
They created a legal framework to detain and deport foreigners, labeling them “security threats” or “criminal aliens.”
The first detention centers were not extermination camps. They were internment facilities, holding centers, and often described as “temporary.”
Those sites — Dachau and Oranienburg — were the prototypes, discretionary, outsourced, and far from the public eye.
Sound familiar?
What separates the United States in 2025 from Germany in 1935 is not the brutality of the outcome. It’s where we are in the timeline. We’re at the part where bureaucracy sanitizes cruelty, where contracts hide complicity, and where silence is framed as national interest.
And just like in the 1930s, people are telling themselves, “This isn’t that bad. It’s legal. It’s temporary.”
History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. In the Everglades, we’re no longer rhyming. We’re quoting.
Auschwitz in the Everglades? The Moral Line We’re Crossing
Let’s confront the title.
No, this is not Auschwitz, but that’s the point.
Auschwitz didn’t begin as a death camp. It began with administrative detention, deportation policies, and the belief that certain people didn’t need due process.
That belief — that some lives are unworthy of protection — is exactly what we’ve institutionalized in the Everglades.
We don’t need gas chambers to vanish people. We have deportation flights, sealed contracts, and plausible deniability.
We don’t need uniforms to enforce it. We have contractors in polos, biometric scanners, and secure “soft-sided” facilities backed by billion-dollar firms.
And we don’t need the masses to cheer it. We only need them not to look.
The line isn’t behind us. It’s under construction.
Who’s Profiting and Who’s Paying the Price
The emergence of mass detention centers has created an economy of high-profile and high-profit entities.
The Players:
CoreCivic – $1.9 billion in 2022 revenue
GEO Group – Over $470 million in ICE contracts in 2024
Caliburn International – Linked to former Trump officials
Deployed Resources – Specializes in military-grade “temporary” detention and security sites
Each of these companies has received millions of dollars in direct, non-competitive contracts from DHS and FEMA in fiscal year 2025 alone. And because they’re private, they’re insulated from FOIA, and civil litigation shields apply to most of their operations.
The Price:
No court oversight
No audit transparency
Testimony erased
Public money, private gain
What’s left behind?
Broken families
Lost cases
A legal system built on secrets
The cruelty isn’t a bug. It’s a billion-dollar feature.
Call to Action: We Can Still Stop This
This facility thrives on shadows. Let’s flood it with light.
This isn’t just a Florida problem. It’s not just about Trump. It’s about the systems we allow and the silence we normalize.
We are not helpless.
Call Congress
U.S. Capitol Switchboard: 202-224-3121
Ask for your House rep and both Senators.
Sample script:
“I’m calling to demand an immediate congressional investigation into the Dade-Collier migrant detention site known as ‘Alligator Alcatraz.’ I want the facility shut down, the contractors audited, and all deportations halted until full transparency is achieved.”
File a FOIA Request
Request flight logs, deportation records, and contractor invoices from May–July 2025.
DHS FOIA Portal: https://www.dhs.gov/freedom-information-act-foia
Support These Organizations:
Make This Viral
Use these hashtags:
#AlligatorAlcatraz
#DeportedTruth
#ShutItDown
#NotOneMore
Post. Share. Organize. Demand action.
If we don’t stop this now, we already know what comes next.
Final Words
This facility won’t stop with immigrants.
It won’t stop in Florida.
It won’t stop unless we stop it.
We’ve been warned by history, warned by whistleblowers, warned by silence.
Do not wait for it to get louder. Make noise now.
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Bibliography
“Trump Says He’d Like to See Facilities Like ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ in ‘Many States.’” ABC News, July 1, 2025.
“First Detainees Arrive at Alligator Alcatraz Facility in Everglades.” CBS‑Miami, July 2025.
“Florida Sprints Ahead with ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ Immigration Detention Center Project.” Politico, June 24, 2025.
“Trump Tours 'Alligator Alcatraz' as He Pushes for More Deportations.” Reuters, July 1, 2025.
“Democratic Lawmakers Denied Entry to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ Immigration Jail.” The Guardian, July 4, 2025.
“Trump’s Latest Move to Deter Migrants: ‘Alligator Alcatraz.’” The Times (UK), July 1, 2025.
“Ice Barbie Is Taking Trump to the Ultimate MAGA Trolling Hotspot.” The Daily Beast, July 2025.
“How Much Do States Spend on Prisons?” USA Facts, 2023.
Louisiana Department of Corrections. “FY25‑26 Budget Request Summary, Louisiana State Penitentiary.” October 2024.
Biotech Law Louisiana (LSU). “Price of Prisons – Louisiana Fact Sheet, 2010.”
“Louisiana State Penitentiary.” Wikipedia.
Thank you for compiling all this data in one place. We definitely must learn from history and stop this madness before it consumes our democratic republic.
For $90,000 a year apiece, the detainees could study at a university.