The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

After border bill failure, ICE considers mass releases to close budget gap

Updated February 14, 2024 at 6:56 p.m. EST|Published February 14, 2024 at 8:27 a.m. EST
A Border Patrol agent in Lukeville, Ariz., watches migrants walk along the border with Mexico in December. (Eric Thayer for The Washington Post)
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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has drafted plans to release thousands of immigrants and slash its capacity to hold detainees after the failure of a Senate border bill that would have erased a $700 million budget shortfall, according to four officials at ICE and the Department of Homeland Security.

The bipartisan border bill that Republican lawmakers opposed last week would have provided $6 billion in supplemental funding for ICE enforcement operations. The bill’s demise has led ICE officials to begin circulating an internal proposal to save money by releasing thousands of detainees and cutting detention levels from 38,000 beds to 22,000 — the opposite of the enforcement increases Republicans say they want.