SA国际传

漏 2026 SA国际传谋
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Religious leaders, Amnesty International USA hold vigil to call for Alligator Alcatraz's closure

Clergy members speak to a crowd near Alligator Alcatraz
Philip Cardella
Rev. Kim Robles of Pinecrest Presbyterian Church speaks to a crowd of about 50 people gathered for the eighth weekly prayer vigil across the entrance to Alligator Alcatraz. Rev. Robles is flanked by Rev. Melanie Marsh, the pastor of Riviera Presbyterian Church in Miami and Rev. Tony Fisher of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Greater Naples.

Human rights advocates and religious leaders held a vigil late Sunday outside the Alligator Alcatraz detention camp, demanding the facility be shut down and calling for an end to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement sweeps. A top Amnesty International USA joined the vigil.

The protest, now in its eighth week, comes amid new reports of alleged medical neglect, violations of attorney-client privilege, and that a large number of detainees who have all but disappeared from official federal records.

READ MORE:

The Naples Daily News reported on the records from June to August, which included "desperate calls concerning a heart attack, a suspected stroke, and the alleged refusals of medical care for detainees."

The Miami Herald last week that the whereabouts of 800 of the 1,800 men detained at the facility in July could not be determined. The newspaper reported that some of the individuals who "showed no record in ICE鈥檚 database" were deported, even if they had a legal right to remain in the country.

And allege in the latest court documents that detainees continue to face unconstitutional obstacles in meeting with legal representatives. They say there still are no protocols for attorneys to get in touch with clients at the immigration detention center and that detainees are often transferred just before scheduled lawyer visits,

Amy Fischer, who is Director of Refugee and Migrant Rights at Amnesty International USA, called Alligator Alcatraz 鈥渁 human rights disaster."

"Amnesty International has heard horrific reports that people who have been caged in Alligator Alcatraz have gone through hell,鈥 said Fischer, who joined the activists for Sunday鈥檚 vigil.

鈥淭hese conditions are not isolated failures 鈥 they are part and parcel of the system designed for cruelty and meant to dehumanize our immigrant friends and neighbors,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e are joining Florida communities to show that Amnesty International and our members and activists across the world have a clear and united call for President Trump and Governor DeSantis:  Alligator Alcatraz must be shut down," she added.

The Rev. Kim Robles of Pinecrest Presbyterian Church, who leads the vigil, calls the situation at the immigration detention center as "inhumane and inexcusable."

"People who are being detained and their families and attorneys are children of God, like every one of us, and must receive the medical care they need,鈥 Robles said. 鈥淭he government must not leave them in anguish and without aid."

Noelle Damico, Director of Social Justice at the Workers Circle, which has been organizing the weekly vigils, referred to the facility as a "US blacksite" where "people are being disappeared."

"We must shut Alligator Alcatraz down and stop the replication of this model immediately," Damico said.

This month, a federal appellate court panel, in a separate environmental lawsuit, allowed operations to continue at Alligator Alcatraz by putting on hold a lower court鈥檚 preliminary injunction ordering the facility  by the end of October. 

 challenging practices at the facility claims immigration is a federal issue and Florida agencies and the private contractors hired by the state have no authority to operate the facility.

DeSantis鈥 administration in late June the facility on an isolated airstrip surrounded by wetlands to aid Trump鈥檚 efforts to deport people living in the U.S. illegally. Trump toured the facility in July and for future lockups around the nation as his administration pushes to expand the infrastructure needed to increase deportations.

The religious leaders and other activists said their weekly vigils will continue as long as people are being detained at the facility under these conditions.

The weekly Sunday vigils are held across from entrance to Alligator Alcatraz on Route 41, 54585 Tamiami Trail East, Ochopee, FL 34141.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Sergio Bustos is SA国际传谋's Vice President for News. He's been an editor at the Miami Herald and POLITICO Florida. Most recently, Bustos was Enterprise/Politics Editor for the USA Today Network-Florida鈥檚 18 newsrooms. Reach him at sbustos@wlrnnews.org
More On This Topic