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Senator Marsha Blackburn Says ICE Has Ended Plans For Wilson County Illegal Alien Detention Center

Image Credit: Senator Marsha Blackburn / Facebook

***Note from The Tennessee Conservative – this article posted here for informational purposes only. Per The Tennessee Lookout’s republishing guidelines, this article has been edited for style and length.

By Anita Wadhwani [Tennessee Lookout -CC BY-NC-ND 4.0] –

Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn posted on X Tuesday that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement “will not move forward” with plans to build an illegal immigrant detention mega center holding up to 16,000 detainees in Wilson County.

Blackburn’s post marks the fourth public reversal in a little more than a week of on-again, off-again plans to locate a detention center in Lebanon, a suburban Wilson County community of about 51,000 located 30 miles east of Nashville.

ICE on Tuesday announced it had scrapped plans to build a detention center in New Hampshire after Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte intervened. A project in Mississippi was similarly killed after intervention by Republican Congressional leaders.

In other states, community pushback, including pressure on property owners to cancel sales to ICE, have also led to detention center project cancellations.  

Project Saltbox, which tracks ICE purchases of property for detention centers, reported 12 cancelled property sales thus far. In Democrat-led Maryland, Attorney General Anthony  Brown on Monday filed a lawsuit seeking to stop a detention center.

Blackburn, in her post, complimented Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.

“I appreciate (Noem’s) commitment to finding the best possible location for a new detention center to continue ICE’s great work to apprehend, detain, and deport illegal,” she wrote.

In Wilson County, the plans drew nearly-universal opposition from local Republican leaders, including Wilson County Mayor Randall Hutto, Lebanon Mayor Rick Bell, Wilson County Sheriff Robert Bryan, State Sen. Mark Pody and State Rep. Clark Boyd.

The officials were all caught off guard by news of a detention center, first reported by the Tennessee Lookout — a pattern mirrored in other states where local, state and federal elected officials learned of plans only through media reports.

A Wilson County Commission meeting last week drew hundreds of residents who, for more than two hours, lined up to speak in opposition to the plan.

On Tuesday, before Blackburn’s post, 24 of 25 members of the Wilson County Commission — an all-Republican body — signed a resolution to oppose a facility in Lebanon. 

Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to a request Tuesday seeking confirmation the Lebanon plans had been scrapped.

Hutto, the Wilson County Mayor, posted to Facebook that he had “been informed that a formal announcement is expected from the agency tomorrow morning.”

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