Alexandria

Alexandria Staging Facility

Status

In use

2026

Type: Transit centre (Administrative)

Custodial Authority: Immigration and Customs Enforcement

Management: GEO Group (Private For-Profit)

Detains: Adult men, Undocumented migrants (administrative)

Capacity Reported population Deaths at facility
400
No Data
No Data
United States

277,913

Migration Detainee Entries

37,722

Average Daily Migrant Detainee Population

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ABOUT

"The isolated, Ice staging facility in rural central Louisiana has emerged as a hub of the Trump administration’s deportation machine. The center, which has operated since 2014, is run by the private corrections giant Geo Group. It is considered a “black hole”, by many lawyers, advocates and former detainees interviewed by the Guardian. Living conditions are deplorable, many former detainees have alleged, and there is almost no legal access to the center." (The Guardian, September 2025)


NEWS & TESTIMONY
2025

"He arrived in Alexandria exhausted and sick. It was early April, and Amilcar Lisser-Posadas – shackled at his hands and feet – had been transferred from a nearby immigration detention center to this remote US immigr [...]

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FACILITY NAMES
Alexandria Staging Facility
Location

Country: United States

City & Region: Alexandria, Americas

Contact Information
96 George Thompson Drive
Alexandria, LA 71303
Tel. +1 318-483-1600

MANAGEMENT & BUDGET

Center Status
Status
Year
In use
2026
Last documented use
2022
In use
2022
Facility type
Category
Type
Year
Administrative
Transit centre
2022
National typology
Official Typology
Year
Staging Facility
2026
Management
Management
Type
Year
GEO Group
Private For-Profit
2026
Custodial Authorities
Agency
Ministry
Ministry type
Year
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Department of Homeland Security
2026
Outsourced services and non-state actors
Provider
Service
Year
GEO Group
Management
2026

DETAINEES

Demographics

Adult men

2026

Adult men

2022
Categories of detainees

Undocumented migrants (administrative)

2026

SIZE & POPULATION

Capacity (specialised migration-related facility)

Type Standard capacity

Capacity 400

2025

Type Not Available

2022
Facility Average Daily Population (year)

Number 145

2022

LENGTH OF DETENTION

Detention Timeframe (long, medium, short)

Length Short-term (3 days or less)

2026
Average Days in Detention

Number of Days 4

2022
Overstays

Reported Overstays Yes

2025
Maximum Legal Length of Detention (days)
Days
Year
3
2026
Average Days in Detention (Immigration Procedure)
Average Days
Year
10
2025

OUTCOMES

CONDITIONS

Overall Inspection Score

Score Not Available

2022

CARCERAL INDICATORS

STAFF

SEGREGATION

CELLS

COMMUNAL SPACE & ACTIVITIES

HEALTH

MONITORING & ACCESS

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

NEWS & TESTIMONY

2025

"He arrived in Alexandria exhausted and sick. It was early April, and Amilcar Lisser-Posadas – shackled at his hands and feet – had been transferred from a nearby immigration detention center to this remote US immigration facility in Louisiana. He feared it would be his last stop before deportation. He remembered the stench of the place. The packed jail rooms where hundreds of men were warehoused together with little access to showers, which sometimes spouted brown, rusty water – when they worked. The 29-year-old, a father of two young daughters who are US citizens, had come to the US from Honduras and had previously been protected under the Obama-era program known as Daca (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals), which halted deportation for many undocumented people who arrived in the US as children. He had entered as a nine-year-old but his Daca protection had lapsed. A collage of a chain-link fence overlaying several images. In one panel a hand holds a phone displaying repeated call log entries labeled “Call failed.” In multiple panels, maps are shown with location markers and a plane's path connects them with dotted lines. In the lower right, a group of people, handcuffed, descend airplane stairs in a single-file line. Plane to purgatory: how Trump’s deportation program shuttles immigrants into lawless limbo Read more In March, Lisser-Posadas was apprehended by police in Shelby county, Tennessee, for driving with an expired license and was turned over to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice). He had no prior criminal record. For four weeks he was moved around various Ice detention centers. He filed a legal request to Ice for permission to remain in the country, citing fears of targeted violence in Honduras. He received no response. The Alexandria Staging Facility – as it is formally called – was “just not a place for human beings”, he said in a phone interview. The isolated, Ice staging facility in rural central Louisiana has emerged as a hub of the Trump administration’s deportation machine. The center, which has operated since 2014, is run by the private corrections giant Geo Group. It is considered a “black hole”, by many lawyers, advocates and former detainees interviewed by the Guardian. Living conditions are deplorable, many former detainees have alleged, and there is almost no legal access to the center. A four-month Guardian US investigation into the Alexandria facility has revealed a pattern of alleged due process violations, previously unreported accounts of neglect and abuse, documented health emergencies and long stays, despite the center’s intended use as a short-term detention facility. It also found that the facility adopted a temporary and unexplained change to normal medical standards earlier this year that protect detainees’ welfare. Reporters relied on court documents, public records, internal Department of Homeland Security (DHS) statistics, 911 calls and interviews with 10 people either formerly detained or deported from the Alexandria facility, or those with loved ones held there." (The Guardian, 12 September 2025)