Why more immigrants are being tracked with ankle monitors – and who profits

为何更多移民被佩戴脚踝监控器追踪——以及谁从中获利

Post Reports

2025-07-31

25 分钟
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ICE is expanding a controversial surveillance program. Today, our reporter shares how he learned about it, and what The Post uncovered about the company that stands to profit. Read more: Last month, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement directed personnel to sharply increase the number of immigrants they shackle with GPS-enabled ankle monitors. ICE is targeting about 183,000 people with the expansion of the policy, all enrolled in the agency’s Alternatives to Detention program.   The move marks a significant expansion of a 20-year-old surveillance practice steeped in controversy. While tracking devices are cheaper and arguably more humane than detention, immigrants and their advocates have long criticized the government’s use of the bulky black ankle bands, which they say are physically uncomfortable and impose a social stigma for the people wearing them, many of whom have no criminal record or history of missed court appointments. Today on “Post Reports,” corporate accountability reporter Douglas MacMillan joins Elahe Izadi to discuss why the agency is expanding this program and who stands to benefit. Today’s show was produced by Rennie Svirnovskiy. It was edited by Maggie Penman and mixed by Sean Carter. Thanks to Silvia Foster-Frau, Tadeo Ruiz Sandoval, Sabby Robinson and Christine Armario. Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
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  • Paola is a mother of two.

  • She's 29 years old and from Honduras.

  • And last month, she was told to report to an ICE contractor's office in Virginia.

  • That's Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

  • She didn't know what to expect.

  • She said they don't tell you why you have to go.

  • She said the majority of people tell you that maybe you shouldn't show up

  • because they could deport you or something.

  • Up until this point, Paola thought she'd been doing everything right.

  • She left Honduras in 2021 to escape an abusive husband.

  • She said he was on drugs, alcohol, and all of that.

  • Last time we saw each other, he tried to kill my boy and me.

  • So, Paola fled to the United States.

  • She crossed the border and filed an asylum claim.

  • And as she's waited, she's gone to all of her court appointments.

  • She's done mandatory mobile app check-ins.

  • Anything the government asked her to do, she did.

  • So that's why, when she was called into this Virginia office, she felt like she had to go.

  • So she was in this office with about 50 other people who were all in a similar position to her.

  • They didn't really know why they were there.