Halliburton Subsidiary Gets Contract to Add Temporary Immigration Detention Centers
According to the New
York Times, the Army Corps of Engineers has awarded a contract worth up to
$385 million to Kellogg Brown & Root, the Halliburton subsidiary that has
been criticized for overcharging the Pentagon for its work in
KBR would build the centers for the Homeland Security Department to use for housing in the case of an unexpected influx of immigrants, such as during a natural disaster or when new programs arise that require additional detention space. The contract with the Corps of Engineers runs one year, with four optional one-year extensions.
A spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement explained that the centers will only be built if an emergency situation arises. A spokesman for the corps said that the centers could be at unused military sites or temporary structures and that each one would hold up to 5,000 people.
Federal auditors rebuked the
company for unsubstantiated billing in its
In recent months, the Homeland
Security Department has promised to increase bed space in its detention centers
to hold thousands of undocumented immigrants awaiting deportation. In the first
quarter of the 2006 fiscal year, nearly 60 percent of the undocumented
immigrants apprehended from countries other than
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