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The Surge Inside

The Surge Inside — Cal DOJ’s Fifth Detention Report — Artivist.Media
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Immigration Detention / State Oversight Filed under: The Machine We’re Inside

The Surge Inside

California’s fifth state inspection of ICE detention finds a population that nearly tripled in two years, conditions that worsened at every facility, and six deaths in seven months. A reading of the data behind Attorney General Bonta’s May 2026 report, and the human rights it places at stake.

6,028
Detainees at the time of 2025 site visits, across 7 facilities
+162%
Growth in the detained population since the 2023 inspections
6
Detainee deaths, Sept 2025 – March 2026 — highest since reviews began
194
Detained people interviewed by Cal DOJ across the 7 sites
67%
Classified low or medium-low security; most had no criminal history
7→8
Facilities operating in California; an 8th opened in April 2026
§ 01  —  What the report is

A state report card on federal detention

Assembly Bill 103, passed in 2017, requires the California Department of Justice to inspect and publicly report on every civil immigration detention facility operating in the state. The mandate runs through 1 July 2027. The document released on 14 May 2026 is the fifth such report, following reviews published in 2019, 2021, 2022, and 2025.

For this round, Cal DOJ inspected all seven facilities active in 2025, supported by a medical expert and an immigration-detention expert. Staff toured each site, reviewed rosters, logs, policies and detainee records, and interviewed facility staff plus 194 detained people. The headline finding is blunt: conditions largely worsened as a federal mass-deportation campaign drove overcrowding and strained resources, and the facilities are failing to meet ICE’s own detention standards.

§ 02  —  The surge

A population that nearly tripled

Between the 2023 and 2025 site visits, the detained population statewide grew roughly 162%, from 2,303 to 6,028. Cal DOJ attributes the jump in part to the federal government’s refusal to release detainees on bond, layered onto an aggressive detention and deportation campaign. The growth was not evenly distributed: some facilities saw modest increases while others multiplied many times over.

Detained population by facility — 2023 vs. 2025 site visits Fig. 1
0 400 800 1,200 1,600 Adelanto 7 1,570 Desert View 417 517 Golden State 159 569 Mesa Verde 41 370 Imperial 492 627 Otay Mesa 1,187 1,433 California City not operating in 2023 942
2023 site visit 2025 site visit
Adelanto rose from 7 detainees to 1,570 after a court approved a settlement that had capped its population; Mesa Verde grew roughly 802% (41 to 370). Otay Mesa, in San Diego, was holding 1,433 people against a contracted capacity of 1,142. Source: Cal DOJ (2026), Table 1.
A second surge inside the surge
The number of women detained rose +268% — from 170 in 2023 to 626 in 2025.

In 2023, only two of six active facilities held women. By 2025, five of seven did. Mesa Verde and Imperial began housing female detainees again; women made up 13.6% of the statewide population.

§ 03  —  Who is held

Most are low-security, with no criminal history

The federal government has framed the campaign as targeting “criminals.” The roster data does not bear that out. Synthesizing the facilities’ own classification systems, Cal DOJ found that 62% of detainees were classified “Low” security, and a further 5% “Medium Low.” The report states plainly that most detained people had no criminal history.

Security classification, all facilities — 2025 Fig. 2
62.0% 15.4% LOW — 3,721 people HIGH — 925 people
Low 62.0% Med-Low 5.1% Medium 5.1% Med-High 11.7% High 15.4% Unclear 0.7%
“Low” was the largest category at every facility. Adelanto and Golden State were the only sites where low-security detainees fell below half the population. Source: Cal DOJ (2026), Table 4.

The 6,028 people came from more than 120 countries. The borderlands shape is visible in the data: Mexico alone accounted for 1,225 detainees, more than the next two countries combined.

Top 10 countries of origin — all facilities, 2025 Fig. 3
0 500 1,000 Mexico 1,225 India 476 Guatemala 419 El Salvador 338 China 328 Russia 254 Cuba 244 Colombia 209 Venezuela 193 Honduras 173
Detainees were interviewed in 21 languages, from Arabic and Armenian to Pashto, Punjabi and Vietnamese. Source: Cal DOJ (2026), Fig. 4.
§ 04  —  The cost

Six deaths in seven months

Between September 2025 and March 2026, six detained people died in California’s ICE facilities. It is the highest count since Cal DOJ began conducting AB 103 reviews in 2017. Four deaths occurred at Adelanto, reportedly linked to substandard medical care; two occurred at Imperial, reported as a seizure and a heart condition.

Detainee deaths, Sept 2025 – March 2026 Fig. 4
6 DEATHS IN STATE ICE DETENTION Highest since AB 103 reviews began in 2017 ADELANTO 4 deaths — medical care IMPERIAL 2 deaths — seizure, heart
Cal DOJ learned of the four Adelanto deaths after its July 2025 site visit. Source: Cal DOJ (2026), Executive Summary & facility chapters.

The deaths sit on top of a structural problem in care delivery. Since 3 October 2025, ICE reportedly stopped paying third-party medical providers after terminating its claims-processing arrangement, a disruption the report says has degraded access to outside specialty care across California facilities.

§ 05  —  The findings

Eight categories of failure

Cal DOJ identified violations of ICE’s own detention standards at all seven active facilities. Experiences varied site to site, but the report groups the breakdowns into eight recurring areas.

01

Insufficient staffing

Staffing did not keep pace with the surge. California City opened understaffed and unready; Adelanto’s population went from 7 to 1,570 while medical and detention staffing lagged.

02

Inadequate medical access

At every facility, detainees reported being unable to get timely appointments or treatment, including emergency care, contributing to preventable medical crises.

03

Overcrowded intake

Intake and screening are required within 12 hours of arrival. During the surge, some detainees waited days or weeks, sleeping on floors without water or clothing.

04

Unsafe food & water

Undercooked food, missed dietary accommodations, irregular meals. Murky tap water was witnessed at Adelanto. Some detainees spent $50–$150 a week on commissary to eat.

05

Basic necessities denied

At California City, detainees described extreme cold and rain leaks, improvising sleeves from socks and covering vents with paper, then being written up for it.

06

Due-process barriers

Phone access was withheld for prolonged periods at some sites. Language barriers left detainees unable to understand facility rules and procedures.

07

Use of force

Adelanto and Desert View appeared to over-use discipline and force, with multiple reported incidents of pepper spray deployed against detainees.

08

Strip searches

Otay Mesa is the only California facility that strip-searches detainees after every non-legal contact visit, a practice detainees said degrades mental health and dignity.

§ 06  —  Rights at stake

What law these conditions break

Cal DOJ measures conditions against ICE’s own detention standards and US constitutional minimums. Mapped onto international human rights instruments, the same findings implicate at least nine recognized rights. A note on force: the United States has ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention against Torture (CAT), so those obligations are binding; the ICESCR was signed but never ratified; the UDHR is a declaration; the Nelson Mandela Rules are authoritative UN standards. The strongest legal claims rest on the ICCPR and CAT.

R1

Right to life

UDHR Art. 3 · ICCPR Art. 6

Six deaths in seven months, four reportedly tied to substandard medical care.

R2

Freedom from torture & CIDT

UDHR Art. 5 · ICCPR Art. 7 · CAT Art. 16

Pepper spray, prolonged solitary, routine strip searches, detention in extreme cold.

R3

Right to health

UDHR Art. 25 · ICESCR Art. 12 · Mandela Rules 24–35

Delayed and denied care at every site, worsened by ICE’s suspended payments to outside providers.

R4

Dignity in custody

ICCPR Art. 10

The governing clause for detained people; overcrowding and unsanitary intake implicate it everywhere.

R5

Adequate standard of living

UDHR Art. 25 · ICESCR Art. 11

Undercooked food, unsafe or inaccessible water, inadequate clothing and shelter.

R6

Liberty from arbitrary detention

UDHR Art. 9 · ICCPR Art. 9

No-bond detention of low-security people; civil detainees held in punitive, prison-like conditions.

R7

Fair process & counsel

UDHR Arts. 8, 10, 11 · ICCPR Art. 14

Withheld phones, language barriers, cancelled legal-orientation programs, attorney-severing transfers.

R8

Family & private life

UDHR Arts. 12, 16 · ICCPR Arts. 17, 23

Banned contact visits, constant transfers, remote siting, post-visit strip searches.

R9

Non-discrimination

UDHR Arts. 2, 7 · ICCPR Arts. 2, 26

Rolled-back transgender protections, unequal recreation for women, missed reproductive-health screening.

Documented findings by facility, mapped to rights Rights × Sites
Right at stake AdelantoDesert ViewGolden StateMesa Verde ImperialOtay MesaCal City
R1 · Life
R2 · Torture / CIDT
R3 · Health
R4 · Dignity in custody
R5 · Standard of living
R6 · Liberty
R7 · Process & counsel
R8 · Family & privacy
R9 · Non-discrimination
Concrete finding documented in that facility’s chapter
A filled cell marks a concrete finding in that facility’s chapter of the Cal DOJ report. An empty cell does not mean the right was upheld: systemic failures, notably medical care and the no-bond regime, reach every site, and the matrix flattens severity (Imperial shows few marks but recorded two deaths and 200-day solitary). Source: Cal DOJ (2026), facility chapters 7–12.

Two findings deserve emphasis as the clearest violations of binding standards. Prolonged solitary confinement at Golden State (100 to 200-plus days) and Imperial (over 200 days, including for people receiving mental-health care) exceeds by an order of magnitude the 15-day threshold at which the Nelson Mandela Rules classify solitary as prolonged and prohibited. And the six deaths place the right to life itself in question.

§ 07  —  Held longer

How long people stay

Because the federal government has restricted bond, people are held longer. Average length of detention varied widely by facility, from roughly a month at Mesa Verde to more than four months at Imperial. Individual maximums were far higher: one Adelanto roster recorded a stay of 1,939 days.

Average length of detention by facility — days Fig. 5
0 30 60 90 120 Imperial 133.7 Otay Mesa 126.5 Golden State 82.8 Desert View 64.1 California City 45.6 Adelanto 38.6 Mesa Verde 29.2
Mean stay in days, calculated from facility rosters. Golden State and Imperial showed the widest variation, with some segregation stays exceeding 200 days. Source: Cal DOJ (2026), Table 5.
§ 08  —  The network

Eight facilities, three private operators

Every immigration detention facility in California is privately run, by GEO Group, CoreCivic, or Management & Training Corporation. California City opened in August 2025. While Cal DOJ was finalizing this report, an eighth facility, Central Valley Annex, began receiving ICE detainees in April 2026; it is not reviewed here. Reports suggest the federal government is eyeing further sites.

FacilityOperatorLocation ICE capacity2025 countAvg. stay
Adelanto ICE Processing Ctr.
opened pre-2017
GEO GroupAdelanto1,9401,57038.6
Desert View AnnexGEO GroupAdelanto75051764.1
Golden State AnnexGEO GroupMcFarland70056982.8
Mesa Verde ICE Processing Ctr.GEO GroupBakersfield40037029.2
Imperial Regional DetentionMTCCalexico704627133.7
Otay Mesa Detention Ctr.CoreCivicSan Diego1,1421,433126.5
California City Detention
opened Aug 2025
CoreCivicCalifornia City2,56094245.6
Central Valley Annex
opened Apr 2026 — not reviewed
GEO GroupMcFarland700

Otay Mesa’s 2025 count exceeded its contracted ICE capacity (shown in red); detainees reported cots, or “boats,” added to housing bays during surges. California City’s contractual guaranteed-minimum beds are not public.

§ 09  —  Oversight

The reporting mandate, and the fight to keep it

The reports exist only because of state law, and that law is set to expire. AB 103’s mandate sunsets on 1 July 2027. Senate Bill 1399, sponsored by AG Bonta and authored by Senator María Elena Durazo, would remove the sunset so the reviews continue. A separate bill, SB 941 (Senator Steve Padilla), targets the commissary price markups that force detainees to spend heavily simply to eat.

Five AB 103 reports — and a deadline Fig. 6
2019 No. 1 2021 No. 2 2022 No. 3 2025 No. 4 2026 No. 5 — this report 2027 SUNSET
Without SB 1399, the AB 103 review requirement expires on 1 July 2027. Source: Cal DOJ (2026); OAG press release (2026).
  • AB 103 (2017) — mandates Cal DOJ inspections of immigration detention through 1 July 2027.
  • SB 1399 (Durazo) — would strike the sunset clause so reviews continue past 2027.
  • SB 941 (Padilla) — would bar excessive markups on goods sold inside detention facilities.
  • Amicus briefs — California has co-led six multi-state briefs opposing the federal no-bond policy, and filed a brief in March opposing conditions at Adelanto.

Cal DOJ will hold a public community briefing on the report’s findings on 9 June 2026, 1:00–2:00 PM PT.

Sources

  • California Department of Justice. (2026). Immigration detention in California: A review of conditions of confinement. Office of the Attorney General. https://oag.ca.gov/system/files/media/immigration-detention-2026.pdf
  • Office of the Attorney General. (2026, May 14). “Cruel, inhumane, and unacceptable”: Attorney General Bonta releases fifth report on conditions at immigration detention facilities in California [Press release]. California Department of Justice. https://oag.ca.gov/news/press-releases/%E2%80%9Ccruel-inhumane-and-unacceptable%E2%80%9D-attorney-general-bonta-releases-fifth-report
  • United Nations General Assembly. (1948). Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Res. 217 A). https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-human-rights
  • United Nations. (1966). International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. United Nations Treaty Series, 999, 171.
  • United Nations. (1966). International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. United Nations Treaty Series, 993, 3.
  • United Nations. (1984). Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. United Nations Treaty Series, 1465, 85.
  • United Nations General Assembly. (2015). United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela Rules) (A/RES/70/175).

All quantitative figures are drawn directly from the Cal DOJ report’s tables and figures (Tables 1, 4 and 5; Figures 2 and 4) and the accompanying press release. The rights mapping in § 06 applies international instruments to findings the report itself frames against ICE detention standards and US constitutional law; treaty-ratification status is noted in the section text.

ARTIVIST.MEDIA  —  Research artifacts
This document is a research artifact: a structured visual reading of primary public records, compiled for study and reference. It summarizes and charts a government report and maps its findings to public human rights instruments; it is not original reporting and carries no individual byline. Data current as of the source report’s publication, 14 May 2026. Verify all figures against the primary sources listed above before citation or republication.