moved their conferences to his golf clubs, and made sure the profits circled back. Every new detention bed is revenue. Every arrest, a transaction.
“This isn’t law enforcement. It’s logistics. It’s capacity. It’s throughput.”
And for detainees, it’s danger.
Delaney isn’t an outlier. It’s part of a system where cost-cutting is the business model. Where guards ignore assaults, where suicide watch lasts days, and where families vanish into facilities that exist in legal gray zones. The worse the conditions, the better the margins.
Baraka didn’t just call it out. He got in the way.
ICE says protestors stormed the gate. They didn’t. Members of Congress say they were shoved. They were. The mayor? He got five hours in custody, a misdemeanor charge, and a media circus. Delaney got to keep operating.
“A city raised the alarm. The federal government sent cuffs.”
The story isn’t over. Lawsuits are pending. Baraka’s campaign for governor just got national attention. But Delaney’s gates are still open. The buses are still running. The business of detention continues—bigger, richer, more brazen than ever.
And if they’re willing to cuff a sitting mayor in broad daylight, what exactly are they doing inside?