Politics February 4, 2026

Senator Wicker Opposes Plan to Convert Mississippi Warehouse into Large ICE Detention Center

Senator cites insufficient local services and potential loss of economic development as administration moves to acquire Byhalia site

By Maya Rios
Senator Wicker Opposes Plan to Convert Mississippi Warehouse into Large ICE Detention Center

Republican U.S. Senator Roger Wicker has formally objected to the Trump administration's plan to acquire a warehouse in Byhalia, Mississippi, and convert it into an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center with capacity for more than 8,500 beds. In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Wicker said he supports immigration enforcement but opposed the acquisition on grounds that the town lacks necessary medical and human services infrastructure and that the site is better suited for economic development that would create jobs and attract private investment. The Department of Homeland Security had not immediately responded to requests for comment. As of last month, ICE held more than 70,000 detainees across over 200 facilities; the Byhalia project would align with President Donald Trump’s stated goal to expand immigration detentions in his second year in office.

Key Points

  • Senator Roger Wicker formally opposed the Trump administration’s plan to acquire a Byhalia, Mississippi warehouse for conversion into an ICE detention center.
  • Wicker cited the proposed facility’s capacity of more than 8,500 beds and said Byhalia lacks adequate medical and human services infrastructure to support that detainee population.
  • The senator argued the site is primed for alternative economic development that could deliver private investment and job creation, and that proceeding without addressing community concerns would disregard local input.

Republican U.S. Senator Roger Wicker has told Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem he opposes the federal government’s plan to acquire a warehouse in Byhalia, Mississippi, and convert it into a large immigration detention center.

In a letter to Secretary Noem, Wicker said that although he supports enforcement of immigration laws, he objects to the proposed acquisition and the planned detention facility. The administration, Wicker wrote, is in the final stages of acquiring the Byhalia property with the intention of turning it into a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center.

Wicker noted that the proposed facility would hold more than 8,500 beds. He warned that the town of Byhalia does not possess the medical and human services infrastructure necessary to support a detainee population of that size.

The senator also said the site under consideration is already positioned for another form of economic development that could bring private investment and local job creation. Opening a detention center at that location, he argued, would foreclose those growth opportunities.

Wicker, the senior Mississippi member of the U.S. Senate, said his constituents have raised concerns about the potential impacts of a detention center on public safety, local medical capacity, and the broader economy.

"Many of my constituents have voiced concerns regarding the public safety, medical capacity, and economic impacts this center would impose on their communities," he wrote. "Proceeding with this acquisition without adequately addressing these issues disregards community input."

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees federal immigration matters, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Federal immigration enforcement currently places more than 70,000 detainees in over 200 facilities, the senator’s letter said. The planned Byhalia site would support President Donald Trump’s objective to increase immigration detentions during his second year in office.


Context and implications

  • The proposed conversion of the Byhalia warehouse would create one of the larger single-site detention capacities cited by the senator, at more than 8,500 beds.
  • Local medical and human services capacity is a central concern raised by Wicker, who framed the issue as both a public health and public safety matter.
  • Wicker emphasized an economic trade-off: the site could attract private investment and create jobs if used for other development instead of a detention facility.

The letter puts pressure on the administration’s final steps in the acquisition process by highlighting constituent opposition and potential strain on local services. It also underscores a broader federal policy objective to expand detention capacity, as referenced by the senator.

Risks

  • Strain on local medical and human services - impacts healthcare providers and local public budgets.
  • Public safety and community concerns - potential effects on municipal services and community relations.
  • Economic opportunity loss - using the site for a detention center could foreclose private investment and job-creation prospects in the area, affecting local economic development.

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