Immigrants’ Rights
Defending the Dignity and Rights of Immigrants in Detention
Case Overview
Our Clients
Our organizational Client
Since early 2025, immigrant communities in the United States have lived under siege. Families have endured unlawful mass raids in their neighborhoods and watched loved ones disappear into a detention system where abusive and illegal conditions are allowed to persist, and accountability has vanished. In Southern California, thousands of people are funneled into the Adelanto ICE Processing Center—one of the largest immigration detention centers in the country—after being apprehended in immigration raids.
Every person—regardless of their background, status, or skin color—deserves to be treated humanely and with dignity. But inside Adelanto, people are subjected to conditions that would be considered abuse in almost any other setting. Detainees are routinely denied urgent medical care: requests for treatment are ignored, delayed, or dismissed as not serious enough to warrant attention. One man lost the top of his finger and went untreated for months. Another, who has epilepsy, is denied consistent access to medication and suffers repeated seizures without timely medical response.
People with disabilities are neglected and abandoned. Elderly detainees with mobility impairments are forced to climb ladders to sleep on top bunks, risking serious injury because basic accommodations are denied. At least two people have died in custody—raising grave questions about whether adequate care was ever provided.
Conditions at Adelanto are unsanitary and dangerous. Mold grows on walls. Dormitories have experienced outbreaks of contagious disease, sending people to the hospital. People are forced to live amid filth, hunger, and cold: food is insufficient and sometimes spoiled, drinking water appears dirty and foul-tasting, and thin blankets are inadequate for warmth. When detainees protest the conditions or speak out, they are met with retaliation and punishment, including isolation. This is cruel and degrading, and it is unlawful.
Adelanto has a long and well-documented history of unsafe and abusive conditions and has been the subject of repeated investigations and public condemnation. Yet in less than a year, the federal government’s mass raids drove the detained population at Adelanto from just three people to nearly two thousand—without sufficient staffing, adequate medical infrastructure, or basic safeguards to protect health and safety. A longtime staff member warned the surge was “dangerous,” and state inspectors confirmed those fears, describing “alarming” conditions and documenting abuse and neglect of detainees with disabilities—comparing the treatment of human beings to “dogs in cages.” Operated by the private for profit prison company GEO Group, Adelanto exemplifies a system where human confinement is monetized, and the incentive is to keep people detained rather than safe.
On January 26, 2026, four people currently detained at Adelanto filed a proposed class action lawsuit on behalf of everyone who is or will be detained there, together with the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA). The lawsuit seeks to end the unlawful and dangerous conditions at Adelanto and to secure enforceable protections, including adequate medical care, disability accommodations, safe and sanitary conditions, and meaningful oversight.
The Constitution does not stop at the doors of a detention center, and being in custody does not strip anyone of the right to basic medical care, humane treatment, or dignity. It protects all “persons”—including immigrants and detained people—from cruel treatment, deliberate indifference to medical needs, and punitive conditions of confinement. Detention cannot mean lawlessness, and no one should be caged, commodified, or forced to endure trauma simply for seeking safety or opportunity.
UPDATE: The District Court will hold a hearing on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, at 10:00 A.M. on Zoom. View the Court’s Zoom instructions here.
Court
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California
Status
Filed
Case No.
5:26-cv-00322
Filed
01/26/2026
Our Co-Counsel
Case Developments
Filing
04/09/2026
Plaintiffs File Motion for Class Certification
Plaintiffs filed a motion for class certification, asking the court to certify a class of all individuals detained Adelanto—now and in the future—and a subclass of persons at Adelanto with disabilities. A hearing on the motion is scheduled for April 28, 2026, at 10:00 A.M. and will take place on Zoom—view the Court’s Zoom instructions here.
PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR CLASS CERTIFICATION
Filing
04/06/2026
Plaintiffs File Reply Brief in Support of Motion For Preliminary Injunction
PLAINTIFFS’ REPLY BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTIOn
Filing
03/06/2026
Plaintiffs File Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Preliminary Injunction asking the District Court to enjoin Defendants’ ongoing violations of the Rehabilitation Act, the Administrative Procedure Act, and the constitutional rights of people detained at Adelanto. A hearing on the motion is scheduled for April 28, 2026, at 10:00 A.M. in Courtroom 2 of the U.S. District Court in Riverside. The hearing will take place on Zoom—view the Court’s Zoom instructions here.
Press Releases
Press Release
03/10/26
Media
- BBC Mundo, What does it mean that the Mexican government is joining the lawsuit against ICE over deaths at a US detention center?, 3/31/26
- La Opinion, Fourth Mexican immigrant dies in ICE custody in Adelanto, 3/31/26
- LA Daily News, Mexican authorities seek answers after reported detainee death at ICE facility in California, officials say, 3/31/26
- Time the Digital News, 14 Mexicans have died in ICE custody, 3/31/26
- El Economista, They seek to have the IACHR analyze deaths caused by ICE, 3/31/26
- Canal News, Mexico pursues legal action over migrant deaths in ICE custody, 3/30/26
- New York Times, Deaths in ICE Custody Are Growing. ‘They Let Him Rot in There.’ 3/29/26
- American Community Media, ‘My Nightmares in ICE Detention’ – Cambodian Grandmother Tearfully Tells Her Story, 3/26/26
- LAW360, Calif. Backs Claims Of ‘Intolerable’ ICE Detention Center, 3/19/26
- LA Daily News, A second recent death connected to Adelanto ICE detention facility is reported, 3/11/26
- Cal Matters, San Diego County sues ICE after it blocked health inspection at detention center, 3/10/26
- San Bernardino Sun, Citing substandard conditions at Adelanto ICE facility, legal coalition asks judge to order immediate improvements, 3/10/26
- CALÓ News, Lawsuit claims Adelanto Detention Center profits from immigrants’ pain, 2/24/26
- Los Angeles Public Press, Immigrants at ICE’s Adelanto detention center denounce lack of medical care and “inhumane” conditions, 2/9/26
- Newsweek, ICE Center Hit With Lawsuit Over Lack of Drinking Water—’Worse Than Prison’, 1/28/26
- NBC 4, Lawsuit filed against Adelanto ICE processing center, 1/27/26
- Ventura County Star, Adelanto ICE detainees sue over alleged inhumane, dangerous conditions, 1/27/26
- Victorville Daily Press, Detainees sue Adelanto ICE facility, alleging inhumane conditions, 1/27/26
- Victor Valley News, Federal Lawsuit Alleges “Cruel, Inhumane” Conditions at Adelanto ICE Processing Center, 1/27/26
- Univision, Demanda federal acusa condiciones inhumanas en el centro de detención de Adelanto, 1/27/26
- The Mercury News, Detainees, nonprofit file suit alleging inhumane conditions in California ICE detention center, 1/27/26
- Beritaja, Lawsuit Alleges Inhumane Conditions At Adelanto Ice Facility, 1/27/26
- Los Angeles Times, Adelanto ICE facility isn’t meant to hold immigrants, it’s meant to break them, lawsuit alleges, 1/26/26
- ABC 7, Federal lawsuit alleges inhumane conditions at Adelanto ICE Processing Center, 1/26/26
- The LA Local, Man’s infected finger burst after Adelanto staff waited months to give him antibiotics: Lawsuit, 1/26/26
- LAist, Lawsuit targets Adelanto, 1/26/26
- La Opinión, Demanda contra ICE por condiciones inhumanas en centro de detención de Adelanto, 1/26/26











