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Maryland sues Trump administration to halt construction of ICE facility

Maryland sues Trump administration to halt construction of ICE facility

By Jasper WardMon, February 23, 2026 at 9:20 PM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: Maryland Governor Wes Moore speaks on the day U.S. President Joe Biden visits to Dundalk Marine Terminal in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., October 29, 2024. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo

By Jasper Ward

WASHINGTON, Feb 23 (Reuters) - Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown said on Monday that the state had filed a lawsuit against the ‌Trump administration to halt construction of a new federal immigration detention center ‌in the state.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which has federal oversight of immigration, spent more than $100 ​million on a 54-acre square-foot warehouse in Maryland's Washington County to convert into a detention center capable of holding 1,500 people at a time, Brown said.

The Trump administration, according to Maryland's attorney general and government, purchased the property without conducting an environmental ‌review or receiving public input.

However, ⁠according to Washington County last month, the federal government did not need to seek local zoning approval for the project. As ⁠a result, it said, the county could not legally restrict the Trump administration's ability to proceed with the detention center.

"Our people must be heard when the federal government makes ​decisions that ​affect their health, their safety, and their ​communities," said Maryland Governor Wes ‌Moore, a Democrat.

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He added: "The State of Maryland is filing this lawsuit because DHS must be held to the same legal standard as every other federal agency."

DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The department plans to spend more than $38 billion in 2026 on detention centers as the Republican Trump administration seeks to ramp ‌up its already aggressive immigration agenda. This would ​increase Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) total bed capacity ​to 92,600 at its detention ​centers.

There are currently more than 200 federal immigration detention centers in ‌the United States.

The move to increase ​detention centers in states ​across the U.S. states has been met with some bipartisan criticism.

Amid the criticism, four Democratic members of Congress on Monday announced a plan to ​introduce a bill requiring DHS ‌to seek written approval from state and local officials before constructing, acquiring ​or operating any ICE processing facility or detention center.

(Reporting by Jasper ​Ward in Washington; Editing by Alistair Bell)

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