Around 250 immigration detention centers are located in the United States that are detaining men, women, families, and young children totaling to over 400,000 people. The detention facilities need to change their treatment towards the people, and give them better living conditions. The detention centers can be compared to prisons since they must wear uniforms, are guarded by security, and are surrounded by fences with razor blade barbed wire. The country is profiting off every person being held in the detention centers, “The country has more than enough money for catching, imprisoning and deporting immigrants. Private prison companies like the ones that run Karnes and Dilley are profiting richly from the enforcement regime. But there never seems to be enough money for justice and values. (Board).”
Some of the people in the detention centers may actually be American citizens, thus being wrongfully detained. The system that they are put in makes it difficult to stand up for themselves because their status reduces the amount of due process a person may receives. This results in loss of time
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When you compare documented citizens and undocumented immigrants, statistics actually show that “immigrants also are less likely to end up in jail or prison than citizens, according to another study that found that roughly 1.6 percent of immigrant males, ages 18-39, are incarcerated, compared with 3.3 percent of native-born males of the same age range. The researchers said the difference has existed for decades, and that native-born men were two to five times as likely to be in jail as male noncitizens (section 28, Reed CQ Researcher).” This is a case of the availability heuristic and confirmation bias because people only pay attention to stories they hear about undocumented immigrants and ignore what they hear about documented