Families and attorneys barred from an immigration detention center amid DHS shutdown, as a lawmaker addresses oversight concerns to reporters.
Families and attorneys barred from an immigration detention center amid DHS shutdown, as a lawmaker addresses oversight concerns to reporters.
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DHS shutdown complicates oversight of immigration detention, lawmakers and advocates warn

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With the Department of Homeland Security operating under a funding lapse, a Texas Democrat says families and attorneys are encountering new hurdles in trying to find people held by immigration authorities, while questions persist about how Congress can conduct detention oversight during the shutdown.

The Department of Homeland Security has been operating under a lapse in appropriations, and a Democratic lawmaker from Texas says the disruption is making it harder for families to determine where relatives are being held by immigration authorities and to obtain timely information about detainees’ medical needs.

Rep. Julie Johnson, a Dallas-area Democrat, said her office has heard from constituents who could not locate family members after they were taken into immigration custody, or who struggled to get information about medical treatment. Johnson argued that detainees’ families should be able to obtain basic custody and location information regardless of a funding lapse and that members of Congress must be able to carry out oversight of federal detention operations.

Johnson’s concerns follow scrutiny of Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention practices after the death of Mohammad Nazeer Paktyawal, a 41-year-old Afghan immigrant whose family and a veterans’ resettlement group said had worked alongside U.S. forces before being evacuated to the United States. Paktyawal died at Parkland Hospital in Dallas after being detained by ICE, and the Dallas County medical examiner had not publicly reported a cause of death as of mid-March, according to the Associated Press.

The Department of Homeland Security said Paktyawal complained of shortness of breath and chest pain during an intake exam at a Dallas ICE field office and was transported to the hospital, where he later died. DHS has said that people in ICE custody are not denied access to medical care. ICE also said Paktyawal had been arrested previously on allegations including SNAP benefits fraud and theft; prosecutors in Dallas County said a SNAP-fraud case was pending, the AP reported.

Separately, coverage of the shutdown has highlighted concerns that some DHS oversight functions may be curtailed during a funding lapse even as immigration enforcement continues. During a previous shutdown in the fall, DHS said ICE’s Office of Detention Oversight was shut down, and reporting at the time said the unit was furloughed.

Advocates and former officials have also warned that internal civil-rights oversight inside DHS has been reduced in recent months, potentially limiting the department’s ability to investigate complaints related to immigration enforcement and detention conditions.

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Reactions on X to the DHS shutdown's impact on immigration detention oversight include concerns about families and attorneys facing access hurdles, calls for transparency amid fears of government hiding information, and partisan blame on Democrats for the shutdown risking national security. Shares come from diverse users including immigration attorneys, Trump supporters, and progressive accounts.

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Illustration of government shutdown impacts: long airport lines from unpaid TSA workers, Congress divided on DHS bill, Trump signing pay order.
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House Republicans oppose Senate DHS funding bill amid shutdown

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The Senate passed a bipartisan bill early Friday to fund most Department of Homeland Security operations except ICE and Border Patrol, but House Republicans signaled they will reject it. President Donald Trump signed an executive order the same day to pay TSA agents affected by the ongoing partial shutdown. The move came as airport security lines lengthened due to unpaid workers calling out or quitting.

The House of Representatives on April 30 passed a measure funding most Department of Homeland Security operations, ending a 76-day agency shutdown—the longest in U.S. history—that began in mid-February. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) remain unfunded amid ongoing partisan fights over immigration reforms.

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Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin warned on Tuesday that the agency will exhaust its emergency funds by the first week of May amid an ongoing shutdown. He urged Democrats to fund the department or explain their stance on border security. The Senate is set to vote this week on a funding blueprint for key immigration agencies.

Five months after the Trump administration paused immigration processing from high-risk countries following a deadly D.C. shooting, the policy—now covering 39 nations—has stranded thousands already in the U.S. in legal limbo, facing job losses, stalled careers, and deportation fears. Personal stories highlight hardship, while lawsuits yield court orders for relief.

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