Stock Markets February 2, 2026

Quarantine Enforced at Texas Immigration Center After Two Measles Cases Confirmed

DHS says detainees are receiving care as movement inside the Dilley facility is halted to curb spread amid broader national surge

By Caleb Monroe
Quarantine Enforced at Texas Immigration Center After Two Measles Cases Confirmed

U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials said they have quarantined some migrants and stopped all internal movement at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in south Texas after the state health department confirmed two detainees tested positive for measles. DHS said medical teams are monitoring detainees and taking measures to prevent further infections amid a broader rise in measles cases across the United States.

Key Points

  • DHS has quarantined some migrants and halted all internal movement at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center after two detainees tested positive for measles.
  • Medical teams from the ICE Health Services Corps are monitoring detainees and have quarantined individuals suspected of contact with the infected to control further spread.
  • The cases occur amid a broader national rise in measles, with Texas and South Carolina singled out for significant outbreaks; CoreCivic operates the Dilley facility, which was reopened under an ICE contract last year.

WASHINGTON, Feb 2 - The Department of Homeland Security announced on Monday that U.S. immigration authorities have quarantined certain migrants and suspended "all movement" inside a south Texas detention center after two detainees were confirmed to have measles, the agency said in a statement.

The state health department identified the two cases at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center on Saturday, DHS said. In its statement the department added that "all detainees are being provided with proper medical care."

According to DHS, medical teams from the ICE Health Services Corps moved immediately to isolate infected individuals and to contain potential transmission by stopping internal movements within the facility and quarantining everyone suspected of having been in contact with those infected. The agency said: "Medical staff is continuing to monitor the detainees conditions and will take appropriate and active steps to prevent further infection."

The two confirmed infections at Dilley arrive as measles cases are increasing nationwide, the statement noted, with outbreaks reported elsewhere in Texas and in South Carolina. South Carolina currently accounts for the largest state-level outbreak mentioned in the notice, with 789 infections.

The DHS statement referenced earlier figures for Texas and the nation: Texas led a national surge in measles in 2025 with 762 infections, concentrated mostly in the western part of the state. That nationwide surge produced the largest U.S. outbreak since measles was declared eliminated from the country in 2000. The Texas outbreak was declared over in August, the department said.

Dilley is run by the private company CoreCivic. Opened in 2014 to house migrant families apprehended at the U.S.-Mexico border, the facility had been scheduled to close under the Biden administration but was recontracted by ICE last year under U.S. President Donald Trump as part of his administrations immigration crackdown, the statement noted.


Officials emphasized that medical personnel are actively monitoring conditions at the center and have implemented quarantine and movement restrictions to limit the risk of further spread within the facility. No additional case counts at Dilley were provided in the statement.

Risks

  • Potential for further transmission within detention facilities - affects public health and healthcare provisioning within detention and local community health systems.
  • Operational disruptions at immigration processing centers due to quarantine and movement restrictions - affects facility management and private contractors operating detention centers.
  • Wider regional outbreaks given rising measles case counts nationwide - impacts state public health resources and could strain local healthcare services.

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