Transfers of ICE Detainees from the
Miami Staging Facility
Miami, Florida

Detainees Transferred
Number last 12 months 988
Out of total detained 3,529
Facility ranking on transfers top 18 %

Table 1: Transfers

During the most recent 12 month period for which data are available, a total of 988 detainees were transferred by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from the Miami Staging Facility where they had been temporarily housed to other facilities. The average stay for these individuals before their transfer was less than a day. This is a special ICE holding area or staging location that under current ICE detention standards is allowed to temporarily house aliens for up to 12 or 16 hours. These types of units generally have no sleeping quarters or shower facilities.

Transfers made up 28 percent of the 3,529 detainees who in one way or another left this facility during the last 12 months. This report focuses just on these transfers. The remaining individuals who departed from the Miami Staging Facility last year actually left ICE detention. These individuals were deported from the country, released under supervision while their cases was being decided, or left ICE detention for a variety of other reasons. For more information on this facility please see additional TRAC reports in this series.

This report series is based upon analyses conducted by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University of 1.7 million government records tracking each individual who passed through an ICE detention facility during fiscal year 2015. This most recent 12 month period for which comprehensive data are available covers October 2014 through September 2015. See About the Data.

How This Facility Ranks Nationally

Detainee transfer rankings. The Miami Staging Facility was one of 637 facilities nationwide that housed ICE detainees during the most recent 12 month period. Of these 637, there were 409 facilities that had at least 10 ICE detainee transfers last year. Excluding those facilities with fewer than 10 transfers, the Miami Staging Facility last year ranked in the top 18 percent nationwide in the number of individuals it transferred to other ICE facilities. This means that 18 percent of the locations contributed the same or a larger numbers of transfers, while 82 percent had a smaller number. See Table 1.

Average length of stay before transfer. Once detainees arrived at the Miami Staging Facility their average length of stay before being transferred on to another ICE facility was less than a day last year. Ranking facilities from longest to shortest detention stays for their transfer population, this average of less than a day placed Miami Staging Facility in the top 76 percent of all facilities nationwide. That is, for detainees who are transferred, 76 percent of ICE detention facilities have the same or longer average stays last year, while 24 percent of detention facilities had shorter average stays.

Origins and Destinations

Were these detainees arrested locally? Where did those that ended up being transferred from the Miami Staging Facility last year originate? Information on the place of arrest was not included in the available data ICE released. However, we can examine whether the Miami Staging Facility was the first ICE facility in which these detainees were held. According to ICE records, for some (11 percent) of these detainees, the Miami Staging Facility was the first place they were sent when they were detained by ICE. The remaining 89 percent had been transferred in from another ICE detention facility.

We can also look at how quickly they arrived at this facility after they were first detained. A total of 12 percent arrived at the Miami Staging Facility at some point during the very first day they were detained by ICE. This percentage is also based on an analysis of the most recent 12 months for which data are available.

How soon did transfers occur? Nationally, the median number of days before an ICE detainee is transferred to another facility was 1 days last year. That means that half of all transfers occurred on or before the 1st day, while half had longer stays before they were transferred on to another ICE facility. Note that nationally the average stay at an ICE detention facility before an individual is transferred is longer - 12 days. This is because while most detainees have relatively short stays before ICE transfers them elsewhere, sometimes stays are lengthy and these lengthy stays raise the average to above the median stay.

For the Miami Staging Facility last year, the median stay before a detainee was transferred was less than a day. This is less than the national figure. The average stay before transfers occurred was the same - less than a day - than the median stay. As noted above, this figure placed the facility in the top 76 percent among ICE detention facilities nationwide in the average number of days a detainee spent before he or she was transferred.

Pie chart of diffDCO

Figure 2: Transfer destinations during last 12 months

Where did those transferred get sent? ICE currently has great discretion about where in the United States transferred detainees are sent. For the period covered by these data, ICE divided the country into geographic regions or areas and assigned each to one of 152 document control offices or DCOs for the purpose of keeping track of detainees. Available data allow us to examine whether the transfer occurred within the same DCO or the transfer was to a different DCO. For the nation as a whole during the latest 12 months, 54 percent were within the same DCO, while the remaining 46 percent were to a different DCO.

Transfers Facility Profile U.S Overall
Profile (%)
Number Percent
Within region (DCO) 286 27% 54%
Outside region (DCO) 768 73% 46%
Total 1,054 100% 100%

Table 3: Transfer destinations during last 12 months

Figure 2 and accompanying Table 3 provide some comparative figures for how the Miami Staging Facility stacks up against this national pattern. Last year, 27 percent of the transfers from the Miami Staging Facility were to locations in the same region -- facilities under the control of same ICE docket control office. The majority (73 percent) of the transfers went to detention facilities in a different region (DCO).

Nationalities

Which nationalities predominate? Last year in the United States, individuals from Mexico comprised the largest number of those transferred by ICE. Some 41.3 percent of all transfers recorded Mexico as their country of origin. The Miami Staging Facility had a much smaller proportion of detainees from Mexico - 5 percent - among their transfers. Detainees from Mexico were not the largest single nationality group among the transfers at the facility.

Pie chart of nat

Figure 3: Transfers by nationality

In descending order, the top nationalities that made up transfers from the Miami Staging Facility last year were: El Salvador (20%) , Jamaica (13%), Dominican Republic (10%), Colombia (10%) and Nicaragua (9%).

For the frequency for each of the nationalities within the top 10 among transfers from the Miami Staging Facility last year see Table 4.

Nationalities Ranked in Top 10 Transfers
Total To Diff. DCO % Diff DCO
- ALL 1,054 768 72.9 %
1 El Salvador 206 189 91.7 %
2 Jamaica 139 120 86.3 %
3 Dominican Republic 108 61 56.5 %
4 Colombia 107 93 86.9 %
5 Nicaragua 92 75 81.5 %
6 Honduras 76 53 69.7 %
7 Haiti 72 57 79.2 %
8 Mexico 53 13 24.5 %
9 Guatemala 46 23 50.0 %
10 Bahamas 22 12 54.5 %
India 22 20 90.9 %

Table 4: Transfers by nationality
during the last 12 months

Out-of-region transfers by nationality. Within the nationalities that made up those listed in Table 4, the proportion transferred out of the region varied from 25 percent to 92 percent. As mentioned above, on average 73 percent of detainees transferred from the Miami Staging Facility were sent to detention locations outside the region.

For El Salvador with a total of 206 transfers, 92 percent of transfers were out-of-region transfers. At the other end of the range, 25 percent were out-of-region transfers for the 53 transfers from Mexico.

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