Guantanamo Bay Immigrant Detention: Solitary Confinement and Torture Conditions

Immigrants transferred to Guantanamo Bay face conditions amounting to torture: 23+ hour solitary confinement, punishment chairs, physical abuse, and incommunicado detention. ACLU and CCR lawsuits challenge the offshore detention as unconstitutional and beyond the authority of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

Approximately 500 immigrants have been transferred to the Guantanamo Bay Migrant Operations Center since January 2025, where they are held in solitary confinement for 23+ hours per day in windowless cells, subjected to a 'punishment chair,' strip searches, physical abuse, and denied contact with families or attorneys. Multiple federal lawsuits by ACLU, CCR, and IRAP challenge the detention as unlawful.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • Approximately 500 immigrants transferred to Guantanamo Bay Migrant Operations Center since January 2025, with executive order calling for expansion to 30,000-person capacity.
  • Detainees held in solitary, windowless cells for 23+ hours per day, constantly shackled, subjected to invasive strip searches and a 'punishment chair' for hours as punishment.
  • Reports of physical abuse including guards fracturing a detainee's hand by slamming a radio onto it, withholding water as retaliation, and threats to shoot detainees.
  • Multiple suicide attempts reported due to conditions. Detainees denied all contact with family members and face extreme barriers to legal representation.
  • ACLU, CCR, and IRAP filed federal lawsuits arguing the INA does not authorize detention of noncitizens outside US territory and that conditions violate the Fifth Amendment.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Executive order to expand Guantanamo migrant detention

    Trump issues executive order directing expansion of the Guantanamo Migrant Operations Center to 'full capacity,' with a target of 30,000 detainees.

  2. First migrant transfer flight to Guantanamo

    The first flight transferring immigrants from the US mainland to Guantanamo Bay detention arrives. Military tents are erected for housing.

  3. ACLU and advocates sue for access to Guantanamo detainees

    Immigrants' rights advocates file federal lawsuit for access to immigrants transferred to Guantanamo Bay, citing complete lack of legal counsel and family contact.

  4. Federal lawsuit challenges Guantanamo detention as unconstitutional

    ACLU, CCR, IRAP, and ACLU-DC file Gutierrez v. Noem challenging the transfer policy as violating the Immigration and Nationality Act and the Fifth Amendment.

  5. Court temporarily protects 10 immigrants from Guantanamo transfer

    An immigration court rules that 10 immigrants who are plaintiffs in the ACLU lawsuit will not be transferred to Guantanamo Bay pending litigation.

  6. CCR files FOIA lawsuit for detention information

    Center for Constitutional Rights sues the Trump administration to compel release of information about conditions and policies at the Guantanamo immigrant detention facility.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

Beginning in late January 2025, the Trump administration began transferring immigrants from the US mainland to the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba for detention at the newly designated Migrant Operations Center (GMOC). On January 29, 2025, Trump issued an executive order directing expansion of the facility to "full capacity," with a stated target of holding up to 30,000 detainees. The first transfer flight arrived on February 4, 2025.

By mid-2025, approximately 500 immigrants had been transferred to the facility. Reports from detainees and their legal representatives describe conditions that human rights organizations characterize as amounting to torture under international law.

Conditions of Detention

Detainees are held in solitary, windowless cells for at least 23 hours per day. They are constantly shackled when outside their cells and subjected to invasive strip searches. Guards employ a "punishment chair" — a restraint device in which detainees are immobilized for hours — as a disciplinary measure for minor infractions or for requesting medical assistance.

Reports document systematic physical and verbal abuse by guards, including: fracturing a detainee's hand by slamming a radio onto it, withholding water as retaliation, and threatening to shoot detainees. Detainees are denied all contact with family members and face extreme barriers to accessing legal counsel. Several detainees have attempted suicide.

The conditions described — particularly prolonged solitary confinement exceeding 15 consecutive days — meet the definition of torture or cruel treatment under the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Mandela Rules).

Legal Challenges

Multiple federal lawsuits challenge the Guantanamo detention program:

Gutierrez v. Noem (filed March 1, 2025): The ACLU, Center for Constitutional Rights, International Refugee Assistance Project, and ACLU of the District of Columbia filed a class action on behalf of noncitizens detained at Guantanamo. The lawsuit argues that the Immigration and Nationality Act does not authorize the detention of noncitizens outside US territory, and that the transfer policy violates the Fifth Amendment's due process protections.

CCR FOIA Lawsuit (filed June 2025): The Center for Constitutional Rights, Haitian Bridge Alliance, and Detention Watch Network sued to compel release of information about detention conditions and policies after the administration failed to comply with a February 2025 FOIA request.

On March 5, 2025, a court temporarily protected 10 immigrants who are plaintiffs in the ACLU lawsuit from being transferred to Guantanamo, but the broader program continues unabated.

Why This Is Classified Extreme

This incident receives an extreme severity classification because:

  • Conditions constitute torture: Prolonged solitary confinement exceeding 15 days in windowless cells, physical abuse, restraint in a "punishment chair," and denial of basic necessities meet international legal definitions of torture under the UN Convention Against Torture and the Mandela Rules.
  • Scale and expansion: Approximately 500 people detained with an executive order calling for expansion to 30,000 — a systematic program, not isolated incidents.
  • Deliberate isolation from legal process: Offshore detention at a facility historically chosen precisely to evade legal oversight, combined with denial of attorney access and family contact.
  • Suicide attempts: The severity of conditions has driven multiple detainees to attempt suicide.
  • Symbolic and legal significance: The use of Guantanamo Bay — a facility synonymous with post-9/11 torture and indefinite detention — for immigration enforcement represents a deliberate escalation.

International Law Violations

  1. UN Convention Against Torture (Article 1): The documented conditions — prolonged solitary confinement, physical abuse, punishment chair, denial of medical care — constitute torture as defined by the Convention.
  2. ICCPR Article 7: Prohibition on cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment.
  3. ICCPR Article 10: Requirement that all persons deprived of liberty be treated with humanity and dignity.
  4. Mandela Rules (Rule 44): Prolonged solitary confinement exceeding 15 consecutive days is classified as torture or cruel treatment.
  5. Fifth Amendment (US Constitution): Due process protections apply to all persons on US-controlled territory, including Guantanamo Bay.

Source documents

Primary records

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

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