Florida Everglades detainees continue to face obstacles to meet with lawyers, court papers allege

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By MIKE SCHNEIDER, Associated Press

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — There still are no protocols for attorneys to get in touch with clients at the immigration detention center in the Florida Everglades, and detainees are often transferred just before scheduled lawyer visits, according to new court papers alleging continued unconstitutional obstacles for meeting with legal representatives.

Thursday’s court papers were filed in response to a transfer from Miami to Fort Myers of the federal lawsuit claiming detainees have been denied private meetings with immigration attorneys while being held at the facility built by the state of Florida in the Everglades wilderness.

It also comes a week after a federal appellate court panel, in a separate environmental lawsuit, allowed operations to continue at the detention center by putting on hold a lower court’s preliminary injunction ordering the facility to wind down by the end of October. A third federal lawsuit challenging practices at the facility claims immigration is a federal issue and Florida agencies and the private contractors hired by the state have no authority to operate the facility.

“Detained individuals have a First Amendment right to communicate with their attorneys in confidence,” lawyers said Thursday in the legal rights case.

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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement continues to omit information about detainees at the facility from its online locator system “so attorneys cannot confirm whether detained clients are held at the facility.” During videoconferences with their lawyers, detainees are placed in cages that aren’t soundproof with staff in earshot, and documents for clients are subject to review by staff, the attorneys said.

Unlike other detention facilities which don’t require prior appointments, at the Everglades facility, if lawyers want to meet in-person with their clients, they must schedule a meeting three days in advance. That gives the facility the opportunity to transfer out detainees, denying them legal access, they lawyers said.

Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration in late June raced to build the facility on an isolated airstrip surrounded by wetlands to aid President Donald Trump’s efforts to deport people living in the U.S. illegally. Trump toured the facility in July and suggested it could be a model for future lockups around the nation as his administration pushes to expand the infrastructure needed to increase deportations.

The center has been plagued by reports of unsanitary conditions and detainees being cut off from the legal system. Other states have since announced plans to open their own immigration detention centers.

As part of the legal rights lawsuit, the attorneys for the detainees want to make a visit to the facility in mid-October, but the federal and state government defendants said it wasn’t necessary. The detainees’ attorneys also asked for permission to keep their clients anonymous in public court filings and to use pseudonyms instead.

Follow Mike Schneider on the social platform Bluesky: @mikeysid.bsky.social

Wealth, jobs sparked local anger in Georgia before Hyundai raid

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By Brett Pulley, Michael Sasso and Gabrielle Coppola, Bloomberg News

Before the immigration raid on the battery plant in Georgia that’s upended relations between the U.S. and South Korea, there was growing resentment from locals who felt left out of the jobs, economic opportunities and wealth created by the factory, part of a massive $7.6 billion manufacturing complex anchored by Hyundai Motor Co.

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In the nearby port city of Savannah, where over half the population is Black and most elected officials are Democrats, leaders questioned how jobs were being filled at the battery plant, a joint venture by the Korean companies Hyundai and LG Energy Solution Ltd., and other nearby factories. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, and local politicians had touted the development as a boon to the entire region, eventually offering more than $2 billion in taxpayer-subsidized incentives.

“First we’re told to support this because it will create jobs — then we’re told, ‘Because you’re not trained, I’ve got to bring these other people in,’ ” said Jamal Toure, an adjunct professor at Savannah State University and host of a radio show and podcast, where the topic has been discussed. “How do we benefit from this? For the average citizen, the average African American here, they don’t see the impact.”

Some 25 miles west of the city, the sprawling industrial complex that Hyundai calls Metaplant sits in once rural Bryan County, where over 70% of residents are white and President Donald Trump and other Republicans have received strong support. The politics and demographics are different, but the concern over who wins from the surge in economic development is similar.

“They said Hyundai is coming, and we’re just going to make you all bigger. We’re getting new everything,” Megan Lee, a 26-year-old who grew up here, said as the sound of bulldozers and backhoes rumbled at nearby construction sites. Lee said the truck stop where she works booms with business as a result of the plant, but she’s not sure that she and her neighbors directly benefit. “I liked us being a small town.”

Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant America employees watch as a pre-production IONIQ 9 makes its way through General Assembly in Ellabell, Georgia, in November 2024. (Hyundai/Hyundai/TNS)

The fallout from the raid last week that saw 475 people, mostly Koreans, rounded up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and accused of working illegally is still playing out in Washington, Seoul and in corporate boardrooms around the world. The Korean workers are flying home on Thursday after the countries’ top diplomats met in Washington in a bid to alleviate the tension between the governments.

Among local opponents, who run the gamut from activists focused on jobs for underserved communities to anti-development forces who broadly oppose change, there’s often confusion about how the various factories operate and the difference between temporary jobs needed to set up a plant and longer-term roles once operations begin. But as Trump pushes for more foreign investment to fuel a manufacturing renaissance in the U.S., tensions like those seen around the EV battery plant outside Savannah are a risk for his ambitions.

And indeed, Hyundai Chief Executive Officer José Muñoz said in an interview that construction work at the battery plant is being delayed at least two months as the companies involved grapple with worker shortages.

South Korean firms from LG Energy to SK On Co. are building some 22 plants in the U.S., but the companies say the projects hinge on moving trained engineers quickly across international borders — a practice being undermined by visa bottlenecks and heightened immigration scrutiny.

Asian companies dominate the market for EV batteries, having developed the technology in their home countries for decades. Automakers looking to bring the expertise to the U.S. have formed joint ventures to build new plants, and it’s common for tensions over language, workplace culture or intellectual property concerns to arise during the process, according to two U.S. battery manufacturing executives who asked not to be identified discussing sensitive issues.

The manufacturers typically hire American companies for construction of the buildings that house production lines. But when it comes to installing specialized equipment, they rely on employees of the companies that sell it — typically Korean, Japanese or Chinese — to work in the U.S. temporarily to install the equipment at the plants. That’s because they are trying to replicate a finely tuned system where tiny flaws like a leak or loose pipe can contaminate an entire line, causing defective batteries. Once the equipment is up and running, local people are trained on the technology to fulfill permanent jobs, the executives said.

Other Asian manufacturers with plants in the U.S. have tapped their overseas personnel for some technical roles during construction, but those specialists typically numbered in the dozens not in the hundreds, according to people familiar with their operations.

The manufacturing complex in Georgia stretches along Interstate 16 in the town of Ellabell, with pristine new streets bearing names like Genesis Drive and Kia Drive cut through pine forests. Hyundai’s vehicle assembly plant is already producing the Ioniq 5 and Ioniq 9 EV models and has plans to expand output.

A spokeswoman for the Hyundai Metaplant, Bianca Johnson, said the immigration action didn’t affect the main auto manufacturing plant. She directed questions about hiring and the immigration raids to a spokeswoman at its battery factory partner, LG Energy Solution, who declined to comment on its hiring practices.

Angela Hendrix, a spokeswoman for the Savannah Economic Development Authority, which played a large role in luring Hyundai to the region, said the detained workers weren’t full-time permanent employees. Instead, they were a mix of people working on construction, installing equipment or training people how to use that equipment.

She added that the Hyundai assembly plant and onsite affiliates have more than 2,800 employees. A Hyundai spokesman said more than 50% of the workforce at the factory is Black.

Some Savannah-area firms that supply labor to Korean-owned parts makers said the suppliers have shown a preference for employing Korean workers or contracting with Korean-owned personnel companies, creating some friction in the community.

One agency owner said he provided about 60 temporary workers to a Hyundai supplier in Rincon, Georgia, northwest of Savannah, about a year ago. The company ended the contract and hired replacements from Korea, the agency owner said, asking not to be identified to avoid upsetting companies he hopes to work with in the future. The workers were in assembly roles and wouldn’t ordinarily be considered skilled labor, the owner said.

An executive at a second Savannah-area staffing firm, who asked not to be identified for fear of disrupting her business, said Hyundai’s suppliers largely draw labor from area firms owned by fellow Koreans. To cope, the owner, who isn’t Korean, began partnering with a staffing agency owned by Koreans, supplying workers to the firm which otherwise didn’t have its own pipeline of talent, she said.

She added that many workers in Savannah have soured on Hyundai and its suppliers because of strict work rules that can lead to quick dismissal for minor infractions.

From the north Georgia mountains, Michael Aubrecht runs a boutique recruiting firm specializing in battery and energy-storage professionals. He said he approached the battery JV in the past, only to be told the company wasn’t interested in his services and had its own network of people to tap for the hard-to-find roles.

Aubrecht said he was glad to see last week’s enforcement action. “They wouldn’t consider U.S. citizens for those roles,” he lamented. “They said, ‘No, we’ve got our own group of people.’ ”

Kemp, Georgia’s governor, said that his state is committed to its relationship with South Korea and Hyundai, and appreciated their commitment to adhere to state and federal laws. “As President Trump has also noted, our relationships with the government and businesses of Korea stand on a firm foundation,” he said.

Since the ICE raid, there’s been a slowdown at many of the new businesses catering to the influx of Korean workers. “They are scared to come out,” explained Savannah native J. Brown, who said employees at his landscaping company are also fearful of ICE confrontations. “Would you come to work now?”

At 912 Korean BBQ & Hot Pot, Hyundai workers had almost disappeared in the past week, according to a server named Lulu.

But other, less conspicuous locales seemed to be doing better. One spot down the road, Jin Guk, was packed with more than 50 diners as a Korean golf tournament played on the LG flat-panel televisions hanging on the wall.

Workers were expecting business to drop off because of the raids, according to a young man at the cash register, who appeared to be the only worker in the restaurant who spoke English and Korean. But that hadn’t been the case, he said.

One Korean engineer working at the battery plant said that he arrived on a temporary visa to install equipment and train workers. The man, who asked to be identified only by his surname Lee, and who speaks English haltingly, said he had arrived in Georgia just one day after the immigration raid.

“We help with setup and installation, and some supervising,” Lee said outside Jin Guk. “For three to six months, we train and make sure everything is working right. After that, we go back to Korea.”

©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Nebraska plan for an immigrant detention center faces backlash and uncertainty

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By MARGERY A. BECK, Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — No formal agreement has been signed to convert a remote state prison in Nebraska into the latest immigration detention center for President Donald Trump’s sweeping crackdown, more than three weeks since the governor announced the plan and as lawmakers and nearby residents grow increasingly skeptical.

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Corrections officials insist the facility could start housing hundreds of male detainees next month, with classrooms and other spaces at the McCook Work Ethic Camp retrofitted for beds. However, lawmakers briefed last week by state officials said they got few concrete answers about cost, staffing and oversight.

“There was more unanswered questions than answered questions in terms of what they know,” state Sen. Wendy DeBoer said.

Officials in the city of McCook were caught off guard in mid-August when Republican Gov. Jim Pillen announced that the minimum-security prison in rural southwest Nebraska would serve as a Midwest hub for immigration detainees. Pillen and federal officials dubbed it the “Cornhusker Clink,” in line with other alliterative detention centers such as “ Alligator Alcatraz ” in Florida and the “ Speedway Slammer ” in Indiana.

“City leaders were given absolutely no choice in the matter,” said Mike O’Dell, publisher of the local newspaper, the McCook Gazette.

McCook is the seat of Red Willow County where voters favored Trump in the 2024 election by nearly 80%. Most of them likely support the president’s immigration crackdown, O’Dell said. However, the city of around 7,000 has also grown accustomed to the camp’s low-level offenders working on roads, in parks, county and city offices and even local schools.

“People here have gotten to know them in many cases,” O’Dell said. “I think there is a feeling here that people want to know where these folks are going to end up and that they’ll be OK.”

The Work Ethic Camp first opened in 2001 and currently houses around 155 inmates who participate in education, treatment and work programs to help them transition to life outside prison. State leaders often praise it as success story for reducing prisoner recidivism.

FILE – Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Agriculture to rollout the USDA’S National Farm Security Action Plan in Washington, July 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Some lawmakers have complained that Pillen acted rashly in offering up the facility, noting that the state’s prison system is already one of the nation’s most overcrowded and perpetually understaffed. The governor’s office and state prison officials met with members of the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee last week to answer questions about the transfer.

What the lawmakers got, several said, were estimates and speculation.

Lawmakers were told it was the governor’s office that approached federal officials with the offer after Trump “made a generalized, widespread call that we need more room or something for detainees,” said DeBoer, a Democrat in the officially nonpartisan Legislature.

Lawmakers were also told the facility — which was designed to house around 100 but is currently outfitted to hold twice that — would house between 200 and 300 detainees. The prison’s current staff of 97 is to be retrained and stay on.

The costs of the transition would be borne by the state, with the expectation that the federal government would reimburse that cost, DeBoer recalled.

A formal agreement between the state and federal agency had yet to be signed by Friday.

Asked how much the state is anticipated to spend on the conversion, the agency said “that number has not yet been determined,” but that any state expenditures would be reimbursed. The state plans to hire additional staffers for the center, the agency said.

A letter signed by 13 lawmakers called into question whether Pillen had the authority to unilaterally transfer use of a state prison to federal authorities without legislative approval.

To that end, state Sen. Terrell McKinney — chairman of the Legislature’s Urban Affairs Committee and a vocal critic of Nebraska’s overcrowded prison system — convened a public hearing Friday to seek answers from Pillen’s office and state corrections officials, citing concerns over building code violations that fall under the committee’s purview.

“How can you take a facility that was built for 125 people and take that to a capacity of 200 to 300 people without creating, you know, a security risk?” McKinney asked.

Pillen maintains state law gives him the authority to make the move, saying the Department of Correctional Services falls under the umbrella of the executive branch. He and state prison officials declined to show up at Friday’s hearing.

But dozens of Nebraska residents did attend, with most of them opposed to the new ICE detention center.

Russian drones force Europe to defend itself, perhaps alone, after Putin ‘put down a marker’ to NATO

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By LORNE COOK

BRUSSELS (AP) — Since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, NATO has focused on trying to deter an attack on its own territory and avoid all-out war with nuclear armed Russia. Now the time has come for NATO to defend itself, and European allies might have to do it alone, experts and leaders say.

As it has attacked Ukraine, Russia has incessantly harassed Kyiv’s European backers. Warplanes and ships have breached NATO airspace and waters. Transport and communications networks have been sabotaged in attacks blamed on Russia. Disinformation campaigns have sought to undermine support and weaken unity. Putin opponents have been poisoned in Europe in the past too.

But the flight of multiple Russian drones over Poland this week marks a clear escalation, experts say. NATO responded with overwhelming force. Cheap drones were shot down with high-tech military kit and top-line F-35 jets were deployed. A costly exercise.

Russia’s armed forces said they weren’t targeting Poland. Belarus suggested the drones veered off course, perhaps due to jamming.

Territorial defense officers clean up debris from the destroyed roof of a house, after multiple Russian drones struck, in Wyryki near Lublin, Poland, Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

France, the Netherlands and the U.K. are sending more equipment to help Poland defend its borders, notably near Belarus where Russia launched military exercises on Friday. NATO’s eastern flank in Europe will be bolstered with more air defenses stationed there.

Europe is alone, for now

It’s “unclear what more – if anything – the U.S. is willing to do to strengthen NATO air defenses. So far, we’ve seen Europeans operating U.S. platforms without a direct American military role,” NATO’s longest-serving spokesperson Oana Lungescu, now an expert at the RUSI think tank, said on social media.

NATO relies on U.S. leadership, but the Trump administration insists that Europe must now take care of its own security, and that of Ukraine.

Europe’s leaders have condemned the drone incident and promised action. President Donald Trump has said that it “could have been a mistake.”

President Donald Trump holds a photo of himself with Russian President Vladimir Putin during an announcement in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Trump’s ambiguity about defending Europe has undermined trust at NATO, despite the alliance’s attempts to project unity at a summit in July.

“We would also wish that the drone attack on Poland was a mistake. But it wasn’t. And we know it,” Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk posted on X on Friday.

After a meeting of the Polish National Security Council on Thursday, Tusk said: “We would all prefer that the biggest ally spoke openly and publicly about this incident, but let’s not be picky, we must also get accustomed to the new situation.”

Russia takes advantage

For Putin, it’s as good a time as any to test NATO’s resolve. To the dismay of Ukraine and European allies, Trump dropped his demands for an immediate ceasefire at his summit with Russia’s leader in Alaska last month, preferring a broader deal to end the war.

Long-threatened U.S. sanctions against Russia have remained just threats and Putin has bought more time to try to seize Ukrainian territory. Winter is approaching and the fighting is likely to grind to a halt within a few months anyway.

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“Putin is really out now to put down a marker to NATO,” Jamie Shea, an expert on international security at the Chatham House think tank in London and a former top NATO official, told The Associated Press.

By provoking the allies to send air defenses to Poland, some of which might otherwise be bound for Ukraine, Putin wants to force the allies to “make the choice between defending NATO and defend Ukraine, which should be the same thing,” Shea said.

Should they be unable to do so, he said, “from Putin’s point of view, this would be a very happy development because then he would be able to take apart Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, cause misery for the Ukrainian population.”

How best to respond

It would not be easy for European allies to defend everyone at once without integrating their air defense systems with Ukraine. One possibility might be for Poland to accept Kyiv’s request to shoot down Russian missiles over western Ukraine should their trajectory take them toward Polish territory. Tusk’s government has never ruled out doing so.

Either way, time is on Russia’s side. While Trump has agreed to sell American weapons to the Europeans to help them arm themselves and Ukraine, many must be manufactured first. Putin understands that these systems take months, if not years, to make.

The drone incident came just before Russia’s joint military exercise with Belarus — dubbed “Zapad 2025,” or “West 2025,” — got underway and could be linked. NATO accused Russia of using the “Zapad” exercises in 2021 to pre-position equipment for its invasion of Ukraine the following year.

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko shake hands during a meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia, Jan. 29, 2024. (Dmitry Astakhov, Sputnik, Government Pool Photo via AP, File)

That the exercises are taking place, even with a smaller Russian presence than usual, is “to demonstrate that (Putin) can invade Ukraine and put pressure on NATO at the same time,” Shea said.

Few experts think NATO will resort to activating Article 5 of its founding treaty over the incident — the three musketeers-like pledge that an attack on one ally will be treated as an attack on them all — and the military alliance has not suggested that it would.

For now, bolstering defenses on NATO’s eastern flank is the order of the day.

Associated Press writers Danica Kirka in London, Jamey Keaten in Geneva and Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.