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ICE detainees are dying by suicide at an 'alarming' rate, an AP investigation finds

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ICE detainees are dying by suicide at an 'alarming' rate, an AP investigation finds
News

News

ICE detainees are dying by suicide at an 'alarming' rate, an AP investigation finds

2026-05-27 12:04 Last Updated At:12:41

Brayan Rayo Garzon was distraught. Detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, he was on his fourth day of isolation in a Missouri jail as he battled the fevers and chills of COVID-19.

His request for mental health treatment had been put off, records show, and staff had forbidden Rayo from making his nightly call to his mother as a precaution intended to prevent the spread of illness.

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FILE - People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody as well as those affected by mass deportations. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

FILE - People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody as well as those affected by mass deportations. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

A photo of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, is displayed in his mother's apartment in St. Louis, on Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

A photo of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, is displayed in his mother's apartment in St. Louis, on Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, sits in front of a collection of family photos in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, sits in front of a collection of family photos in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel" in Spanish in Garzon's home in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel" in Spanish in Garzon's home in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

He pleaded with his jailers in handwritten notes to arrange a conversation with her. “I feel in my heart that she’s very worried about me,” he wrote in Spanish.

A guard collected the note and walked away. Within an hour, jail records show, he was found unconscious in his cell. An autopsy determined he killed himself.

Rayo’s April 2025 death was the first suicide in a spike among ICE detainees that has alarmed public health officials and jail experts. They said the unprecedented number of suicide deaths is an indication that authorities are failing to properly oversee the detention of tens of thousands of immigrants swept up in the Trump administration’s aggressive deportation strategy.

An Associated Press investigation found that at least 10 detainees, all men, have died by suicide since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025, a pace that far exceeds the growth in the detainee population, according to a review of ICE data, autopsy reports, coroner’s rulings, and police records. Since October, seven deaths have been classified as suicides, a number that is already the most for any fiscal year in the agency’s history. ICE has usually recorded one or no such deaths annually.

“Something is going profoundly wrong from any kind of public health or mental health perspective,” said Dr. Sanjay Basu, a University of California-San Francisco epidemiologist who cowrote a study documenting the increase in mortality and suicide rates among ICE detainees. “This is one of those alarming, sudden increases.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

Nine of the deaths were of Hispanic men who had arrived in the U.S. from four countries, the AP found. One man was a Chinese citizen. Their average age was 32. While Trump has characterized those facing deportation as the “worst of the worst,” seven of the 10 had no record of violent crimes in the U.S.

The suicides account for nearly a fifth of the 51 deaths in ICE custody since January 2025. The majority of those deaths were from natural causes and experts say many of them would have been preventable with timely medical care.

Department of Homeland Security acting assistant secretary Lauren Bies said suicide deaths in ICE custody remain “extremely rare.”

Bies said detention staff follow protocols to protect detainees who show signs of self-harming and that ICE requires annual suicide prevention training. She said detainees receive comprehensive healthcare, including mental health services.

The reasons behind any suicide are complex, and each death often has multiple contributing factors, according to experts. ICE detainees report intense stress after being detained, fear of being returned to countries where their safety may be jeopardized, and frustration and loneliness over the inability to communicate due to language barriers.

Detainees can also feel helplessness because of the complexity surrounding immigration law. Unlike those in the criminal justice system, most detainees do not have lawyers and their detention on immigration violations is not meant to be punitive.

ICE becomes responsible for their well-being when they enter detention, and experts say well-run lockups should have few, if any, suicides. That’s because staff can take steps to mitigate the chances that detainees harm themselves by identifying those at risk, getting them care and monitoring them closely, the experts said.

AP’s investigation found that ICE detention centers have repeatedly fallen short in ways that violate ICE’s own standards.

An examination of the 10 suicide deaths found the men died across ICE's detention network, including at centers long run by private contractors and county jails who recently became ICE partners. The AP found that staff in the facilities ignored signs of distress, delayed mental health treatment and failed to monitor detainees who were already deemed at risk. They also permitted detainees to have access to materials that could be used for self-harm, according to AP's review of ICE inspection reports and death records.

In some cases, they jailed distressed detainees in isolation, which can exacerbate feelings of humiliation and helplessness, according to experts.

ICE has repeatedly asserted that it screens detainees within 12 hours of arrival for medical, dental and mental health conditions.

At least three of the nine facilities where ICE detainees died by suicide have struggled to meet that standard, according to ICE inspection reports and jail records.

Dr. Homer Venters, former chief medical officer of New York City jails who previously consulted with ICE on preventing detainee deaths, called the rise in suicides terrifying.

The increase “reflects failures in how the system’s being operated, and particularly failures in how the first stages of coming into detention are happening so that people aren’t being assessed adequately,” Venters said. “And then if that receiving screening picks up red flags, they’re not acted on in a way that reduces the risk of them having preventable death.”

Among those who took their own lives was a 19-year-old from Mexico who had been detained following a misdemeanor traffic stop while riding his scooter.

Another was a 36-year-old restaurant worker who lost contact with his relatives in Nicaragua after ICE detained him in Minnesota and sent him to a crowded camp in Texas. A third was a 45-year-old who had repeatedly crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally and had a long criminal record.

Rayo, who took his own life after pleading to talk to his mother, was a veteran of the Colombian military who had worked as a street vendor in his home country. A week after he turned 26 in 2023, his family crossed the U.S. border in California. He was detained for three months before being permitted to settle with family in St. Louis, records and interviews show.

His mother, Adriana Garzon, said Rayo caught on quickly to life in the U.S., making friends easily and working as a housepainter and food delivery driver. He wanted to save money to hire a lawyer to help him stay in the country after a judge in 2024 ordered that he be sent back to Colombia, she said.

He was arrested in March 2025 by St. Louis police after being caught using a stolen credit card, which he had obtained from a friend, at a Vape shop, court records show. ICE then took him into custody. An ICE record obtained by AP classified Rayo as a laborer who was a low risk to public safety.

ICE placed Rayo in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) from St. Louis.

The deaths have revealed holes in treatment and oversight across ICE’s system, where the detained population has spiked by 50% to 60,000 during Trump’s second term.

Five died in centers run by longtime ICE detention partners, CoreCivic and the GEO Group. A sixth died at a camp operated by an inexperienced contractor that ICE has since replaced. Three died in jails run by sheriffs, and one at a federal prison.

“We are deeply saddened by and take very seriously the passing of any individual in our care,” CoreCivic spokesperson Brian Todd said.

GEO Group spokesperson Christopher Ferreira said the company trains staff on suicide prevention and seeks “to maintain a safe and secure environment in compliance with the standards and requirements set by the federal government.” Officials at the three jails either declined comment or didn't return messages.

Leo Cruz Silva, a 34-year-old who had repeatedly illegally entered the country from Mexico, suffered an acute mental health crisis following his detention after an arrest for public intoxication last fall in a St. Louis suburb, records show.

For two nights in Missouri’s Ste. Genevieve County Jail, Cruz screamed, hid under his bed and reported hallucinations, according to an ICE report on his death. Yet he did not get help quickly.

A nurse ordered antipsychotic medications and planned to get him treatment the next week, the ICE report said.

On the third day, he was found dead in his cell.

Chaofeng Ge arrived in ICE custody last summer at a Pennsylvania facility run by the GEO Group in mental distress, having pleaded guilty to a minor gift card fraud and attempted suicide in state custody, said David Rankin, an attorney representing Ge’s family.

In five days at the facility, he did not get mental health treatment and was unable to communicate because no one spoke Mandarin, Rankin said. Ultimately, Ge went unmonitored before he was found hanged in a shower stall.

“It’s clear that ICE has taken very few steps to ensure the safety of these people,” Rankin said. “They appear to want to make this process as cruel and inhuman as possible. It’s completely unacceptable.”

At Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas, 36-year-old Victor Diaz died by suicide in a medical holding room in January, according to an ICE report. He had been moved into isolation after reporting harassment by fellow detainees, the report said.

Days earlier at the same facility, Geraldo Lunas Campos died of asphyxia after ICE said guards restrained him following a suicide attempt. His death was ruled a homicide by a medical examiner, and Trump administration officials said the FBI was investigating its circumstances.

ICE inspectors visited the facility in February, documenting 49 violations of detention standards at what was then ICE’s largest detention facility, according to their report.

The report found that staff did not record “required checks to prevent significant self-harm and suicide” while inspectors found tools and equipment unsecured and unaccounted for throughout the facility that could be used for harm. Calls to 911 show several other detainees had attempted suicide there.

At the time of the deaths and inspections, Acquisition Logistics was the contractor running the facility. ICE has since replaced Acquisition Logistics with another contractor. Acquisition Logistics did not return messages seeking comment.

The Phelps County Jail had started taking ICE detainees a month before Rayo’s arrival. Sheriff Michael Kirn, a Republican in a county where voters overwhelmingly supported Trump’s reelection, told commissioners his department’s budget was hurting and partnering with ICE could generate millions in revenue.

Records show Rayo’s trouble started immediately. It took the jail 35 hours to conduct the initial medical screening that ICE promises within 12 hours, according to jail records obtained by the AP under the open records law.

Rayo exhibited labored breathing and told a nurse he was anxious and wanted mental health treatment.

A nurse who didn’t speak Spanish used a “handheld translator” to assess Rayo, concluding he denied thoughts of suicide and depression, according to the documents compiled by the Missouri State Highway Patrol during an investigation into Rayo’s death.

She recommended him for the general population, listing his physical and mental condition as stable, records show. And she referred him for a routine mental health appointment.

Two days later, he reported head pain and body aches. Staff learned he was positive for exposure to tuberculosis bacteria. He was sent to a hospital, where he was diagnosed with COVID-19. He was returned to jail the following day.

The mental health appointment was scheduled but canceled due to “mental health clinic time and staff,” a jail record shows. Two days later, they again canceled his appointment, this time citing his coronavirus infection.

The delays violated an ICE standard requiring mental health treatment within a week of a referral.

Bies, the DHS spokesperson, said Rayo received “high-quality medical care during his time in ICE custody.”

To ease his anxiety, Rayo called his mother before bed to share a Catholic blessing. “I gave him strength,” said Garzon, whose first name Adriana was tattooed on her son’s arm.

As Rayo grew sicker with nausea, chills and aches, staff moved him into a cinderblock isolation cell with a surveillance camera overhead for closer monitoring and to prevent the spread of disease. He was not allowed to call his mother.

On his fourth day of isolation, Rayo passed two notes under his door, begging guards to let him talk to his mom. In one, which was reviewed by AP, he appealed to the guard’s humanity. “I know you have family, and you know that they worry about us,” he wrote in Spanish. “God bless you.”

The English-speaking guard used a colleague’s phone to translate the notes, and wrote in a report that he planned to follow up.

Within an hour, guards found Rayo unconscious on his bed with a sheet around his neck.

Emergency responders tried to revive him, transporting him to a hospital. That’s when an official called Rayo’s mother — to let her know her son was in very bad shape and would be flown to a St. Louis medical center. At the hospital, a doctor gave her the devastating news: Her son was dead.

FILE - People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody as well as those affected by mass deportations. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

FILE - People place flowers on a fence outside Krome Detention Center in Miami, Saturday, May 24, 2025, during a vigil to recognize people who have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody as well as those affected by mass deportations. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

A photo of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, is displayed in his mother's apartment in St. Louis, on Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

A photo of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, is displayed in his mother's apartment in St. Louis, on Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol shows a note written in Spanish by Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon asking for a phone call with his mother, while he was in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, sits in front of a collection of family photos in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, sits in front of a collection of family photos in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel" in Spanish in Garzon's home in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Adriana Garzon, mother of Brayan Rayo Garzon who died by suicide while in ICE custody in April 2025, stands next to a photo of Rayo that reads "On earth, my warrior; in heaven, my angel" in Spanish in Garzon's home in St. Louis, Friday, May 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

In this image from video provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee Brayan Rayo Garzon looks towards a surveillance camera in the Phelps County jail in Rolla, Mo., on April 7, 2025, shortly before he died by suicide. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Brandon Nimmo singled for Texas three batters into the bottom of the first inning a night after three Houston pitchers combined for a no-hitter against the Rangers.

Four more hits and eight runs later, the Rangers were on their way to 10-7 victory made a little more interesting by four homers of at least 422 feet from the Astros.

“It doesn't make any sense sometimes,” Texas manager Skip Schumaker said. “You're trying to think about different ways to win games, last night, late at night. Again this morning. And then we come out and walk and slug. It's kind of a crazy game.”

Jake Burger had a two-run single with the bases loaded, Evan Carter drove home two more with a bouncing triple past first baseman Christian Walker into the right-field corner and Joc Pederson capped the eight-run first with a three-run homer off Jason Alexander after the right-hander had struck him out to start the inning.

“I don’t even remember yesterday,” said Burger, who had struck out in his previous three at-bats with runners in scoring position. “But no, when you see Nimmo break it open, get the hit, everybody kind of takes a deep breath. I don't know if there's anything in the history books of somebody scoring eight runs after a no hit."

Actually, there is.

The first eight-run first inning for the Rangers in 14 years was the second-largest for a team that went hitless in its previous game, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The Chicago White Sox had a nine-run first against the Boston Americans in the second game of a doubleheader on Sept. 27, 1905, after getting no-hit by Bill Dinneen in the opener.

Tatsuya Imai, Steven Okert and Alimber Santa, who was making his major league debut, held Texas hitless in a 9-0 victory in the series opener on Monday night.

After Pederson's strikeout, Alejandro Osuna walked before Nimmo pulled a soft single into right. Josh Jung walked to set up Burger, and after Carter's triple, Ezequiel Duran brought him home with a double to the base of the wall in center.

Kyle Higashioka was hit by a pitch from Alexander (1-1) to bring Pederson back to the plate. His 399-foot drive landed about 12 rows deep in the right-field stands.

Carter also homered and had three hits with four RBIs to end a 2-for-24 slide. Burger had the third of nine Texas hits with the bases loaded this season.

Duran's second run-scoring hit came in the eighth and helped make things a little more comfortable for Texas after the fourth Houston homer in the ninth — the first of the season for Jeremy Peña.

“I think we all know we're better than that,” Carter said, referring to Houston's fifth combined no-hitter, including one in the 2022 World Series. “It's not like we're overhauling anything. Everybody knows that we're better than that.”

Yordan Alvarez homered twice for Houston, the first a three-run shot that went 449 feet. Cam Smith and Peña went deeper with solo shots.

Smith's 457-foot drive in the eighth made him the only player with two homers of at least 450 feet this season. Peña sent his 452-footer into the seats above the Houston bullpen in left-center field.

The Rangers had to go to closer Jacob Latz with two outs in the eighth. He finished off his sixth save with a hard grounder from Alvarez two batters after Peña's drive.

“We needed those add-on runs,” Schumaker said. “They did a really good job coming back, got our closer in the game. After being down eight runs, that was a win pretty much on their side.”

Texas' most recent eight-run first at home came in a 9-0 victory over Tampa Bay on May 3, 2004, when the Rangers played at Globe Life Park, across the street from their current home of Globe Life Field.

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Texas Rangers' Jake Burger smiles in the dugout after scoring a run in the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Jake Burger smiles in the dugout after scoring a run in the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Houston Astros' pitcher Jason Alexander sits in the dugout during the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Houston Astros' pitcher Jason Alexander sits in the dugout during the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Brandon Nimmo rounds second base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Brandon Nimmo rounds second base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Ezequiel Duran reacts after hitting a double during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Ezequiel Duran reacts after hitting a double during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

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