Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Miami archbishop condemns Florida detention center known as ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ – as it happened

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Miami archbishop condemns Florida detention center known as ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

Florida’s most senior Catholic leader, Archbishop Thomas Wenski, has condemned the new immigration detention center at Dade-Collier airport, officially known as “Alligator Alcatraz”, in an impassioned statement posted on the archdiocese of Miami’s website.

Wenski is a multilingual Florida native, described in an archdiocese biography as “the blond, blue-eyed son of Polish immigrants, he speaks Spanish like a Cuban, Creole like a Haitian and, ironically, only ‘limited’ Polish”.

After expressing sympathy for the goal of removing criminals from the United States, Wenski argued that “most immigrants are hardworking and honest and only want to build a hopeful future for themselves and their families”.

He went on to note that the US faces labor shortages in areas that are staffed by immigrants, including healthcare and agriculture. “Rather than spending billions to deport people who are already contributing positively to our nation’s well-being, it would be more financially sensible and more morally acceptable for Congress, working with the Administration, to expand legal pathways for non-criminal migrants to adjust to a permanent legal status,” the archbishop wrote.

“It is alarming to see enforcement tactics that treat all irregular immigrants as dangerous criminals,” Wenski added. “Masked, heavily armed agents who do not identify themselves during enforcement activities are surprising – so is the apparent lack of due process in deportation proceedings in recent months.”

“Along these lines, much of the current rhetoric is obviously intentionally provocative,” the cleric added. “It is unbecoming of public officials and corrosive of the common good to speak of the deterrence value of ‘alligators and pythons’ at the Collier-Dade facility. Common decency requires that we remember the individuals being detained are fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters of distressed relatives. …

“We also raise concerns about the isolation of the detention facility, which is far from medical care centers, and the precariousness of the temporary ‘tent’ structures in the Florida heat and summer thunderstorms, not to mention the challenge of safely protecting detainees in the event of a hurricane,” Wenski continued.

The archbishop, who once spent a summer in Haiti learning Creole and devoted 18 years of his career to working with Miami’s Haitian community, also wrote in support of Haitians, Cubans, Venezuelans and Nicaraguans who have lived in the US legally with temporary protected status that the administration is now stripping away.

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Key events

Closing summary

This concludes our live coverage of the second Trump administration for the day. Here are some of the day’s major developments:

  • Donald and Melania Trump visited Kerrville, Texas, one week after flooding killed at least 120 people, as more than 170 remain missing. They received a briefing on the recovery effort, and held a campaign-style roundtable event in which the president lavished praise on local, state and federal officials, who in turn praised him. The president reacted with hostility to a question from a reporter who said that grieving families wanted to know why their loved ones had not been alerted to the danger in time. He was more pleased with correspondents from partisan conservative outlets and podcasts who praised him and attacked Democrats.

  • Florida’s most senior Catholic leader, Archbishop Thomas Wenski, condemned the new immigration detention center known as “Alligator Alcatraz”, and called the gleeful rhetoric around it “intentionally provocative” as well as “unbecoming of public officials and corrosive of the common good”.

  • A farm worker “has died of injuries they sustained as a result of yesterday’s immigration enforcement action” in Ventura county, California, the United Farm Workers union said.

  • Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary who oversees Fema, the federal emergency management agency, let call center contracts expire the day after the catastrophic floods and failed to renew the contracts for another five days, the New York Times reported. As a result, two-thirds of calls from survivors were left unanswered.

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