Federal immigration officials scout warehouses as they eye more detention space

Federal immigration officials are scouting warehouses and beginning to purchase some of them to transform into detention and processing facilities.

Associated Press

Some warehouse owners have decided not to sell to Immigration and Customs Enforcement under pressure from elected officials and advocates. Some cities are issuing statements urging ICE to look elsewhere, and Kansas City has passed a moratorium on non-city-run detention facilities.

ICE has offered few specifics, even to the cities, but said in a statement that the sites wouldn't be warehouses but "well structured detention facilities" and said it should come as no surprise that the agency is working to expand detention space.

Here is a look at what's happening:

ICE paid $70 million last month for a vast warehouse facility on the northwestern outskirts of Phoenix, according to a deed filed with Maricopa County.

The city of Surprise said in astatementreleased Friday that it was not aware that there were efforts underway to purchase the building, was not notified of the transaction by any of the parties involved and has not been contacted by the Department of Homeland Security or any federal agency about the intended use of the building.

The statement said federal projects are not subject to local regulations, such as zoning.

In Orlando, Mayor Buddy Dyer said in a statement last month that the city was advised that it has no legal options to halt a possible ICE facility from opening.

The statement said the city has not been informed by the federal government of potential plans, but aTV reporterspotted a group of private contractors and federal officials touring a 439,945-square-foot industrial warehouse last month. ICE senior advisor David Venturella told a reporter with WFTV at the time that the tour was "exploratory" and that nothing had been decided yet.

City attorney Mayanne Downs said in a letter that "ICE is immune from any local regulation that interferes in any way with its federal mandate."

The town council in Merrillville passed aresolutionlast week in opposition of ICE converting a warehouse into a processing or detention facility.

The city said it was aware of a tour of the newly constructed, 275,000-square-foot warehouse. But it said it had received no notice or communication from ICE, the Department of Homeland Security or any federal agency about any possible plans.

An earlier statement said that the town was reviewing zoning, land use and occupancy requirements.

ICE purchased a warehouse in a county about 60 miles (96 kilometers) northwest of Baltimore for $102.4 million, a deed signed last month shows. The deed was unearthed byProject Salt Box, a Maryland ICE watchdog.

Officials in Washington County said in a Facebookpostthat the Department of Homeland Security sent a letter beforehand that it was considering purchasing the warehouse for use as a "new ICE Baltimore Processing Facility." Cafeterias, bathrooms, health care spaces, tents and guard shacks could be part of the project, according to the letter that was addressed to historic and planning officials in the county.

The county said there wasn't much they could do because the federal government generally does not need to respect local zoning regulations that conflict with federal mandates.

"Washington County is not able to legally restrict the federal government's ability to proceed," the post said.

In the suburbs of Minneapolis, the owners of two warehouses have pulled out of possible ICE deals amid a public outcry.

In Woodbury, Mayor Anne Burt said in a Facebookpostlast month that city staff had confirmed that a warehouse in the city isn't being sold or leased to the federal government. She also confirmed at a council meeting that ICE had been interested in the property.

Owners of another warehouse in Shakopee also decided not to move forward, state Rep. Brad Tabke announced last month in a Facebookpost.

"They heard you, they listened," Tabke said.

Mississippi

Federal officials were spotted last month scouting a building in Marshall County, the county's board vice president, Neil Bennett, toldThe Commercial Appeal.

Bennett said he was not aware of the visit beforehand because it is a privately owned building, but he heard about it "later on." The building islisted as available for sale and lease on the website of JLL Properties, a purveyor of commercial real estate.

Bennett told The Associated Press that he didn't have time to discuss the situation when contacted Tuesday because he was dealing with ongoing power outages in the area. A woman who answered the phone at the county government building said the county isn't commenting at this time.

In Kansas City, the city council passed a five-year moratorium on non-city-run detention facilities on the very day that ICE officials were spotted touring a warehouse.

Manny Abarca, a Jackson County lawmaker, was initially threatened with trespassing when he showed up Jan. 15 at the nearly 1-million-square-foot (92,903 square meters) building on the outskirts of Kansas City.

He said he was eventually allowed inside where Shawn Byers, the deputy field office director for ICE in Chicago, told him that they were scouting for a 7,500-bed site.

Abarca announced last week he was introducing a similar detention moratorium at the county level.

"When federal power is putting communities on edge, local government has a responsibility to act where we have authority," he said in a statement.

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New Hampshire

The town council in Merrimack — population 30,000 — expressed its opposition to an ICE immigration detention and processing center in a January letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, without receiving a direct response.

Council members fear federal acquisition of a commercial warehouse in Merrimack, 45 miles northwest of Boston, would undermine the city's property tax base by more than $500,000 a year, shifting costs to other property owners.

The Department of Homeland Security told New Hampshire's congressional delegation that ICE is "reviewing its detention structure and acquisition strategy to address a historic operational tempo and increasing arrests" and had no new detention centers to announce. The ACLU of New Hampshire said Tuesday that public records show ICE has consulted with state historic preservation officials about development of a 43-acre site at Merrimack.

Democratic state Rep. Rosemarie Rung of Merrimack said her constituents worry about the strain of an immigration detention center on local emergency services and public infrastructure.

"I really suspect that the silent treatment is deliberate so that they can avoid any protests regarding this facility," Rung said. "It makes us all very suspect."

In Roxbury, council members passed a resolution saying that they aren't in support of an ICE facility after township manager J.J. Murphy spotted ICE officials touring a warehouse there last month. The council also pointed out that the township's zoning regulations prohibit using the warehouse as a detention facility.

ICE's plans for the site are unclear. Murphy said in an interview with The Associated Press Monday that the township has received no information from federal officials about their plans for the site despite repeated emails.

That hasn't stopped the township from sharing an internal memo from the city's engineer about water and sewar issues at the site with the owner of the warehouse. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker also has toured the site.

Elected officials are pushing back after the Department of Homeland Security posted anoticeannouncing a proposal to purchase a vacant warehouse in Chester, a town more than an hour north of New York City, for "ICE operations." ICE said the proposed improvements would include a small guard building and outdoor recreation area.

The notice was needed because the former distribution center for the aftermarket automotive chain PepBoys is in a 100-year flood plain.

New York state Sen. Michelle Hinchey, a Democrat, said in a statement that she would support the town and village boards as they use "every legal, zoning, and environmental tool available" to block the facility.

In Oklahoma City, Mayor David HoltannouncedThursday that he has been informed that the Department of Homeland Security is no longer in talks to acquire a warehouse after the city councilurged federal officials to take part in the city's permitting process.

The department had told the city in a letter last month that it intended to purchase a nearly 27-acre warehouse in the city for ICE operations.

But as crowds opposed to the facility packed a city council meeting this week, the council said the city was exploring legal options. Holt said the property owners then informed him that they are no longer engaged with Homeland Security about a potential acquisition or lease of this property.

"I commend the owners for their decision and thank them on behalf of the people of Oklahoma City," Holt said. "As Mayor, I ask that every single property owner in Oklahoma City exhibit the same concern for our community in the days ahead."

Pennsylvania

ICE paid $87.4 million for a nearly 520,000-square-foot (48,309-square-meter) warehouse, according to a deed that was recorded Monday in Berks County.

Real estate developerspromotedit as a "state-of-the art logistics center" located 45 minutes from Allentown, an hour and a half from Philadelphia and two hours from New York City.

The county spokesman, Jonathan Heintzman, said in an email that the county was informed Monday by the recorder of deeds of the purchase. Heintzman said the county had no prior knowledge of the sale and had no information on future plans for the property.

In El Paso County, commissioners on Monday formally expressed opposition to the construction of detention facilities amid reports that ICE is eying a warehouse in the county. Commissioners also said they working with other officials to try to get more details.

Other cities in Texas also have been named in unconfirmed reports, but officials haven't heard any information from federal officials.

In Salt Lake City, Mayor Erin Mendenhall expressed gratitude last week in her State of the Cityaddressthat the owners of a warehouse that ICE was eying as a detention facility had announced plans not to sell or lease the property to the federal government.

The announcement from the Ritchie Group, a Utah real estate developer, came after Mendenhall sent a letter saying that the building would need to address a host of requirements before obtaining an occupancy permit.

"But let me be clear: this isn't just about zoning restrictions," Mendenhall said. "Such a facility has no place in our city. Whether at that site or anywhere else."

In the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia, officials in Hanover County are asking their attorney to evaluate legal options after the Department of Homeland Security sent a letter confirming its intent to purchase and operate an ICE processing facility in an area that includes retail, hotels and restaurants.

Sean Davis, the county's board of supervisors chair, said the facility would cut into tax revenue but acknowledged at a packed meeting last week that there was only so much it could do to oppose it.

"The federal government is generally exempt from our zoning regulations," he said.

Dozens of speakers turned out — some in support of the facility and others opposed.

"You want what's happening in Minnesota to go down in our own backyard, build that detention center here and that's exactly what will happen," Kimberly Matthews of Mechanicsville told supervisors.

Federal immigration officials scout warehouses as they eye more detention space

Federal immigration officials are scouting warehouses and beginning to purchase some of them to transform into detention ...
See students across America organize walkouts to protest ICE

Thousands of middle and high school students across the U.S. are taking to the streets to protest the actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after federal agents shot and killedAlex PettiandRenee Goodduring demonstrations in Minneapolis last month.

USA TODAY

A series of nationwide student walkouts occurred on Jan. 30 as part of a "National Shutdown," an organized eventasking Americans to skip school,stay home from work and boycott shopping in protest of ICE's operations across the country. The event, modeled after theone-day shutdown in Minnesota, was organized by a coalition of student groups.

The walkouts and marches have extended beyond shutdown day, with young people leaving classrooms and taking to the streets in subsequent demonstrations − and there are still more of these student-led protests to come, according to local reports.

See here scenes from student marches in cities across the U.S.

<p style=After the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good by federal immigration agents (ICE), communities across the U.S. are protesting against Trump's surge of immigration enforcement actions.

Pictured here, Demonstrators gather for a protest calling for the removal of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Jan. 30, 2026 in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Protests were held across the United States in response to ICE enforcement activity.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Hundreds of people gather to protest ICE at the corner of Palafox and Garden Streets in downtown Pensacola, Florida, on Jan. 30, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A federal agent goes to clear a makeshift shield a protester placed over a gas canister during an anti-ICE protest at the Eugene Federal Building on Jan. 30, 2026, in Eugene, Oregon. People partake in a People partake in a People hold a photo of Alex Pretti, who was shot dead by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, during a People hold a photo of Renee Good, who was shot dead by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, during a Protestors clash with police during a Protestors clash with police during a In an aerial view, demonstrators spell out an SOS signal of distress on a frozen Lake BdeMaka Ska on Jan. 30, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Protesters marched through downtown to protest the deaths of Renee Good on January 7, and Alex Pretti on January 24 by federal immigration agents. LAPD officers attempt to clear protestors during 'National Shutdown Students walked out or skipped school to join others in the student-led ICE Out protest in downtown Knoxville, Tenn., on Jan. 30, 2026. Federal agents drive out protesters from the grounds of the Eugene Federal Building on Jan. 30, 2026, in Eugene, Oregon. Demonstrators march down Walnut Street as Cincinnati Police officers clear traffic during an ICE Out! rally in downtown Cincinnati on Jan. 30, 2026. Demonstrators gather in front of the Hamilton County Courthouse during an ICE Out! rally in downtown Cincinnati on Jan. 30, 2026. Protesters gather at the Rhode Island State House on Jan. 30, 2026 as part of the nationwide 'ICE Out' national strike.

'ICE Out' protests spark marches, confrontations across US

After the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good by federal immigration agents (ICE), communities across the U.S. areprotestingagainst Trump's surge of immigration enforcement actions.Pictured here, Demonstrators gather for a protest calling for the removal of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Jan. 30, 2026 in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Protests were held across the United States in response to ICE enforcement activity.

Indianapolis, IN

Students across the Indianapolismetro area have walked out or plan to this week. Hundreds of students from North Central High School poured out onto the streets on Monday, Feb. 2, prompting police to close northern Indianapolis streets, while a few hundred marched out of Noblesville High School the same day.

"We're feeling powerful," student organizer Emma-Louise Akinleyetold the IndyStar,part of the USA TODAY Network. "We're feeling like our voices — they have a real impact."

More walkouts were planned at several high schools, including Greenfield High School, Mt. Vernon High School in Fortville, Park Tudor High School, Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School and Zionsville High School.

Tallahassee, FL

In Florida, students in Tallahassee and beyond braved the abnormal cold to take to the streets. Nearly 100 students atLincoln High Schoolin Eastern Tallahassee marched off campus in protest of ICE on Feb. 2.

"The hate in the halls is loud, but we want to be louder. We hope to advocate for peace and equality," student organizer Mara Stopyaktold the Tallahassee Democrat,part of the USA TODAY Network. "We want to show Tallahassee that we do not stand with ICE."

In Port Orange, anestimated 100 Atlantic High School studentsskipped afternoon classes on Friday, Jan. 30, to protest, defying threats of disciplinary action from school officials.

Fort Collins and Denver, CO

In Fort Collins, Colorado, nearly half of the 766 students at Lesher Middle School participated in a student-led walkout on Feb. 2,reported the Fort Collins Coloradoan, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Businesses in Fort Collins, about 60 miles north of Denver,previously closed on Jan. 30in solidarity with a nationwide shutdown to protest the actions of ICE.

Several Denver-area school districts closed or changed their schedules on Jan. 30 to accommodate large student walkouts,reported The Denver Gazette, as thousands marched to the state capitol.

Reno, NV

In Reno, Nevada, hundreds of middle and high school students across Washoe County walked out in force on Jan. 30. Young people came from schools across the Reno area, including Reno, McQueen, Sparks, Wooster and Damonte high schools.

"We are sick of seeing on the news how ICE is shooting and killing and how the budget is going crazy and how everything is out of control," 18-year-old student James Fraziertold the Reno Gazette Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network.

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Milwaukee, WI

In the Milwaukee metro area, hundreds of students from several high and middle schools marched and chanted during a walkout, with Whitefish Bay High School student Rain Rosenberg calling ICE's actions "un-American."

"I care about this a lot. I think that kids here at (Whitefish) Bay have a lot of privilege and we need to speak out," shetold the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

The Milwaukee area and Wisconsin at large have seen several student protests in recent weeks.On Jan. 20, students at Rufus King International High School,Reagan High School, Dominican High School and West Allis Central High School walked out.

The same day, in the Fox Cities area in east central Wisconsin,about 100 Menasha High School students walked out. Those were preceded by walkouts atShorewood High School on Jan. 16andWauwatosa East High School on Jan. 12.

Phoenix, AZ

Students from high schools and colleges in the Phoenix area protested on Jan. 30, prompting more than 20 schools in the Tucson Unified School District to close for the day.

The protests came after demonstrations on Jan. 28 at area schools, including Arcadia High School, Tolleson Union High School and Camelback High School, among others.

Hundreds of students ultimately took to the streets,reported the Arizona Republic,a part of the USA TODAY Network.

Knoxville, TN

Students in Knoxville, TN, also participated in large walkouts on Jan. 30, gathering downtown to march to the City-County Building. Of the hundreds that participated in the march, a large portion − about 40% − were estimated to be students,according to the Knoxville News Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

"Our country is built from immigrants from the ground up," Powell High School sophomore Emma Noe told the Sentinel. "Our ancestors would be disappointed."

Elected officials, including Knoxville City Councilmember Denzel Grant and State Rep. Gloria Johnson, also attended to show their support for students.

Asheville, NC

Over 200 students walked out of Asheville High School on Feb. 2, taking signs and chants to the streets outside. At least one local official, Asheville City Council member Kim Roney, also attended in a show of support.

"We want to show that the youth aren't backing down," Cora, a student and lifelong Asheville resident,told the Asheville Citizen Times, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Palm Springs, CA

Hundreds of students across the Coachella Valley in California walked out of class on Jan. 30,reported the Palm Springs Desert Sun, part of the USA TODAY Network.

"I think we're headed toward a period of fascism in America, and I think it's important for young people who have a voice to speak up against things they think are important," Chloe Freeman, a junior at La Quinta High School, told the Desert Sun.

Middle and high school students from Desert Sands Unified School District, Coachella Valley Unified School District and other area schools participated in the hundreds, with Palm Springs Unified School District students planning to hold their own march on Feb. 9

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:ICE protests continue as US students stage school walkouts

See students across America organize walkouts to protest ICE

Thousands of middle and high school students across the U.S. are taking to the streets to protest the actions of Immigrat...
Trump accused of distorting history of Mexican-American War to justify heavy hand in Latin America

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Historians and observers accused the Trump administration of trying to rewrite American history to justify its ownforeign policy decisionstoward Latin America by posting a "historically inaccurate" version of the Mexican-American war.

Associated Press President Donald Trump listens to a question from a reporter as he speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 2, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 2, 2026, in Washington, as Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, right, listen. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Trump

The Monday statement from the White House commemorating the anniversary of the war described the conflict as a "legendary victory that secured the American Southwest, reasserted American sovereignty, and expanded the promise of American independence across our majestic continent." The statement drew parallels between the period in U.S. history and its ownincreasingly aggressive policies toward Latin America, which it said would "ensure the Hemisphere remains safe."

"Guided by our victory on the fields of Mexico 178 years ago, I have spared no effort in defending our southern border against invasion, upholding the rule of law, and protecting our homeland from forces of evil, violence, and destruction," the statement said, though it was unsigned.

In the post, the White House makes no mention of the key role slavery played in the war and glorifies the wider"Manifest Destiny" period,which resulted in the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Native Americans from their land.

Sparking criticism

Alexander Aviña, Latin American history professor at Arizona State University, said the White House statement "underplays the massive amounts of violence that it took to expand" the U.S. to the Pacific shore at a time when the Trump administration has stuck its hand in Latin American affairs in a way not seen in decades,deposing Venezuela's president,meddling in electionsandthreatening military action in Mexicoand other countries.

"U.S. political leaders since then have seen this as an ugly aspect of U.S. history, this is a pretty clear instance of U.S. imperialism against its southern neighbor," Aviña said. "The Trump administration is actually embracing this as a positive in U.S. history and framing it – inaccurately historically – as some sort of defensive measure to prevent the Mexico from invading them."

On Tuesday, criticisms of the White House statement quickly rippled across social media.

Asked about the statement in her morning news briefing, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum guffawed, quipping and noting "we have to defend sovereignty." Sheinbaum, who has walked a tight rope with the Trump administration, has responded to Trump with a balanced tone and occasionally with sarcasm, like when Trump changed the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.

Historical sticking point

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TheMexican-American war (1846–1848)was triggered by long-running border disputes between the U.S. and Mexico and the United States' annexation of Texas in 1845. For years leading up to the war, Americans had gradually moved into the then-Mexican territory. Mexico had banned slavery and U.S. abolitionists feared the U.S. land grab was in part an attempt to add slave states.

After fighting broke out and successive U.S. victories, Mexico ceded more than 525,000 square miles of territory — including what now comprises Arizona, California, western Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Utah — to the U.S.

The moment turned Texas into a key chess piece during the U.S. Civil War and led former President Ulysses S. Grant to write later that the conflict with Mexico was "one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation."

The Associated Press was formed when five New York City newspapers funded a pony express route through Alabama to bring news of the Mexican War — as it is sometimes known in the U.S. — north faster than the U.S. Post Office could deliver it.

The war continues to be a historical sticking point between the two countries, particularly asSheinbaumrepeatedlyreminds Trump that her country is a sovereign nationwhenever Trump openly weighs taking military action against Mexican cartels andpressures Mexico to bend to its will.

Rewriting history

The White House statement falls in line with wider actions taken by the Trump administration to mold the federal government's language around its own creed, said Albert Camarillo, history professor at Stanford University, who described the statement as a "distorted, ahistorical, imperialist version" of the war.

Aviña said the statement serves "to assert rhetorically that the U.S. is justified in establishing its so-called 'America First' policy throughout the Americas," regardless of the historical accuracy.

The Trump administration has ordered the rewriting ofhistory on display at the Smithsonian Institution, saying it was "restoring truth and sanity to American history."

The administration hasscrubbed government websitesof history, legal records and data it finds disagreeable. Trump also ordered the government to remove any signs that "inappropriately disparage Americans past or living," including thosemaking reference to slavery, destruction of Native American cultures and climate change.

"This statement is consistent with so many others that attempt to whitewash and reframe U.S. history and erase generations of historical scholarship," Camarillo said.

Trump accused of distorting history of Mexican-American War to justify heavy hand in Latin America

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Historians and observers accused the Trump administration of trying to rewrite American history to jus...
Marilyn Monroe's Brentwood home

A Brentwood couple is suing the city of Los Angeles and Mayor Karen Bass, claiming their constitutional rights were violated when city officials blocked them from demolishing the home where Marilyn Monroe died in 1962.

In a 37-page complaint that accuses the city of collusion and bias,the lawsuitfiled by homeowners Brinah Milstein and Roy Bank claims L.A. "deprived Plaintiffs of their intended demolition of the house and the use and enjoyment of their Property without any actual benefit to the public."

It's yet another chapter in a saga surrounding the fate ofthe famous property, which began in 2023 when Milstein, a wealthy real estate heiress, and Bank, a reality TV producer with credits including "The Apprentice" and "Survivor," bought the home for $8.35 million. They own the property next door and hoped to tear down Monroe's place to expand their estate.

The pair quickly obtained demolition permits from the Department of Building and Safety, but once their plans became public, an outcry erupted. A legion of historians, Angelenos and Monroe fans claimed the 1920s haunt, where the actor died in 1962, is an indelible piece of the city's history.

Councilmember Traci Park, who represents L.A.'s 11th Council District where the home is located, said she received hundreds of calls and emails urging her to protect it. In September 2023, sheheld a news conferencedressed as Monroe — bright red lipstick, bobbing blond hair — urging the City Council to declare it a landmark.

The Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commissionstarted the landmark application processin January 2024, barring the owners from destroying the house in the meantime. L.A. City Council unanimously voted to designate it as a historic cultural monument a few months later, officially saving it from destruction.

It's not the first legal challenge brought by Milstein and Bank. The pairsued the cityin 2024, accusing the city of "backdoor machinations" in preserving a house that doesn't deserve to be a historic cultural monument.

An L.A. Superior Court Judge threw out the suit in September 2025, calling it "an ill-disguised motion to win so they can demolish the home."

The latest lawsuit includes a variety of damages, claiming the property's monument status has turned it into a tourist attraction, bringing trespassers who leap over the walls surrounding the property. In November, burglars broke into the home searching for memorabilia, the suit alleges.

The lawsuit accuses the city of taking no efforts to stop trespassers and failing to compensate the owners for their loss of use and enjoyment of the property. It also notes that the homeowners offered to pay to relocate the home, but the city ignored them.

An aerial view of two houses, each with a pool and lush greenery

The feud has stirred up a larger conversation on what exactly is worth protecting in Southern California, a region loaded with architectural marvels and Old Hollywood haunts swirling with celebrity legend and gossip.

Fans claim the house, located on 5th Helena Drive, is too iconic to be torn down. Monroe bought it for $75,000 in 1962 and died there six months later, the only home she ever owned by herself. The phrase "Cursum Perficio" — Latin for "The journey ends here" — adorns tile on the front porch, adding to the property's lore.

Milstein and Bank claim it has been remodeled so many times over the years, with 14 different owners and more than a dozen renovation permits issued over the last 60 years, that it bears no resemblance to its former self. Some Brentwood locals consider it a nuisance because fans and tour buses flock to the address for pictures, even though the only thing visible from the street is the privacy wall.

"There is not a single piece of the house that includes any physical evidence that Ms. Monroe ever spent a day at the house, not a piece of furniture, not a paint chip, not a carpet, nothing," their previous lawsuit claimed.

With their latest lawsuit, Milstein and Bank are seeking a court order allowing them to demolish the house and compensation for the decline in property value after the city's decision to declare it a monument.

Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

L.A. stopped a couple from demolishing Marilyn Monroe's home. Now, they're suing

A Brentwood couple is suing the city of Los Angeles and Mayor Karen Bass, claiming their constitutional rights were violated when city offi...
Collision between migrant speedboat, Greek coast guard vessel leaves at least 15 dead

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A collision between a speedboat carrying migrants and a Greek coast guard patrol vessel off the eastern Aegean island of Chios has killed at least 15 people, the coast guard said late Tuesday, while a search and rescue operation involving patrol boats, a helicopter and divers was underway for potentially missing people.

Associated Press

The bodies of 14 people — 11 men and three women — were recovered from the sea, the coast guard said, while another 25 migrants, including about 11 children, were rescued and transported to a hospital on Chios, as were two coast guard officers who were injured in the incident.

One of the injured women later died in hospital, the coast guard added, bringing the total death toll to at least 15.

The total number of people who had been on board the speedboat was not immediately clear, and a search and rescue operation involving four patrol vessels, an air force helicopter and a private boat carrying divers was underway for potentially missing passengers.

Video footage by a local news site showed at least one person being carried in a blanket from a boat moored on the side of a jetty into a waiting coast guard vehicle with blue flashing lights, as others appear to lead two children, one of them limping, toward the car.

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The coast guard did not immediately have further information on exactly how the collision occurred.

Michalis Giannakos, the head of Greece's public hospital workers' union, said staff at the hospital in Chios were all on alert to handle the sudden influx of injured and were on standby for potentially more people. Speaking on Greece's Open TV channel, Giannakos said several of the injured required surgery.

Greece is a major entry point into the European Union for people fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.Fatal accidents are a common occurrence. Many undertake the short but often perilous crossing from the Turkish coast to nearby Greek islands in the eastern Aegean. But increased patrols and allegations ofpushbacks— summary deportations without allowing for asylum applications — by Greek authorities have reduced crossing attempts.

Greece, along with several other European Union countries, has been tightening its regulations on migration. In December, the European Union wasoverhauling its migration system, including streamlining deportations and increasing detentions.

There has long been a fierce debate among EU members about migration. Since a surge in asylum-seekers and other migrants to Europe a decade ago, public debate on the issue has shifted and far-right parties have gained political power. EUmigration policies have hardened, and the number of asylum-seekers is down from record levels.

Collision between migrant speedboat, Greek coast guard vessel leaves at least 15 dead

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A collision between a speedboat carrying migrants and a Greek coast guard patrol vessel off the eas...
Federal immigration officials scout warehouses as they eye more detention space

Federal immigration officials are scouting warehouses and beginning to purchase some of them to transform into detention and processing facilities.

Associated Press

Some warehouse owners have decided not to sell to Immigration and Customs Enforcement under pressure from elected officials and advocates. Some cities are issuing statements urging ICE to look elsewhere, and Kansas City has passed a moratorium on non-city-run detention facilities.

ICE has offered few specifics, even to the cities, but said in a statement that the sites wouldn't be warehouses but "well structured detention facilities" and said it should come as no surprise that the agency is working to expand detention space.

Here is a look at what's happening:

ICE paid $70 million last month for a vast warehouse facility on the northwestern outskirts of Phoenix, according to a deed filed with Maricopa County.

The city of Surprise said in astatementreleased Friday that it was not aware that there were efforts underway to purchase the building, was not notified of the transaction by any of the parties involved and has not been contacted by the Department of Homeland Security or any federal agency about the intended use of the building.

The statement said federal projects are not subject to local regulations, such as zoning.

In Orlando, Mayor Buddy Dyer said in a statement last month that the city was advised that it has no legal options to halt a possible ICE facility from opening.

The statement said the city has not been informed by the federal government of potential plans, but aTV reporterspotted a group of private contractors and federal officials touring a 439,945-square-foot industrial warehouse last month. ICE senior advisor David Venturella told a reporter with WFTV at the time that the tour was "exploratory" and that nothing had been decided yet.

City attorney Mayanne Downs said in a letter that "ICE is immune from any local regulation that interferes in any way with its federal mandate."

The town council in Merrillville passed aresolutionlast week in opposition of ICE converting a warehouse into a processing or detention facility.

The city said it was aware of a tour of the newly constructed, 275,000-square-foot warehouse. But it said it had received no notice or communication from ICE, the Department of Homeland Security or any federal agency about any possible plans.

An earlier statement said that the town was reviewing zoning, land use and occupancy requirements.

ICE purchased a warehouse in a county about 60 miles (96 kilometers) northwest of Baltimore for $102.4 million, a deed signed last month shows. The deed was unearthed byProject Salt Box, a Maryland ICE watchdog.

Officials in Washington County said in a Facebookpostthat the Department of Homeland Security sent a letter beforehand that it was considering purchasing the warehouse for use as a "new ICE Baltimore Processing Facility." Cafeterias, bathrooms, health care spaces, tents and guard shacks could be part of the project, according to the letter that was addressed to historic and planning officials in the county.

The county said there wasn't much they could do because the federal government generally does not need to respect local zoning regulations that conflict with federal mandates.

"Washington County is not able to legally restrict the federal government's ability to proceed," the post said.

In the suburbs of Minneapolis, the owners of two warehouses have pulled out of possible ICE deals amid a public outcry.

In Woodbury, Mayor Anne Burt said in a Facebookpostlast month that city staff had confirmed that a warehouse in the city isn't being sold or leased to the federal government. She also confirmed at a council meeting that ICE had been interested in the property.

Owners of another warehouse in Shakopee also decided not to move forward, state Rep. Brad Tabke announced last month in a Facebookpost.

"They heard you, they listened," Tabke said.

Mississippi

Federal officials were spotted last month scouting a building in Marshall County, the county's board vice president, Neil Bennett, toldThe Commercial Appeal.

Bennett said he was not aware of the visit beforehand because it is a privately owned building, but he heard about it "later on." The building islisted as available for sale and lease on the website of JLL Properties, a purveyor of commercial real estate.

Bennett told The Associated Press that he didn't have time to discuss the situation when contacted Tuesday because he was dealing with ongoing power outages in the area. A woman who answered the phone at the county government building said the county isn't commenting at this time.

In Kansas City, the city council passed a five-year moratorium on non-city-run detention facilities on the very day that ICE officials were spotted touring a warehouse.

Manny Abarca, a Jackson County lawmaker, was initially threatened with trespassing when he showed up Jan. 15 at the nearly 1-million-square-foot (92,903 square meters) building on the outskirts of Kansas City.

He said he was eventually allowed inside where Shawn Byers, the deputy field office director for ICE in Chicago, told him that they were scouting for a 7,500-bed site.

Abarca announced last week he was introducing a similar detention moratorium at the county level.

"When federal power is putting communities on edge, local government has a responsibility to act where we have authority," he said in a statement.

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New Hampshire

The town council in Merrimack — population 30,000 — expressed its opposition to an ICE immigration detention and processing center in a January letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, without receiving a direct response.

Council members fear federal acquisition of a commercial warehouse in Merrimack, 45 miles northwest of Boston, would undermine the city's property tax base by more than $500,000 a year, shifting costs to other property owners.

The Department of Homeland Security told New Hampshire's congressional delegation that ICE is "reviewing its detention structure and acquisition strategy to address a historic operational tempo and increasing arrests" and had no new detention centers to announce. The ACLU of New Hampshire said Tuesday that public records show ICE has consulted with state historic preservation officials about development of a 43-acre site at Merrimack.

Democratic state Rep. Rosemarie Rung of Merrimack said her constituents worry about the strain of an immigration detention center on local emergency services and public infrastructure.

"I really suspect that the silent treatment is deliberate so that they can avoid any protests regarding this facility," Rung said. "It makes us all very suspect."

In Roxbury, council members passed a resolution saying that they aren't in support of an ICE facility after township manager J.J. Murphy spotted ICE officials touring a warehouse there last month. The council also pointed out that the township's zoning regulations prohibit using the warehouse as a detention facility.

ICE's plans for the site are unclear. Murphy said in an interview with The Associated Press Monday that the township has received no information from federal officials about their plans for the site despite repeated emails.

That hasn't stopped the township from sharing an internal memo from the city's engineer about water and sewar issues at the site with the owner of the warehouse. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker also has toured the site.

Elected officials are pushing back after the Department of Homeland Security posted anoticeannouncing a proposal to purchase a vacant warehouse in Chester, a town more than an hour north of New York City, for "ICE operations." ICE said the proposed improvements would include a small guard building and outdoor recreation area.

The notice was needed because the former distribution center for the aftermarket automotive chain PepBoys is in a 100-year flood plain.

New York state Sen. Michelle Hinchey, a Democrat, said in a statement that she would support the town and village boards as they use "every legal, zoning, and environmental tool available" to block the facility.

In Oklahoma City, Mayor David HoltannouncedThursday that he has been informed that the Department of Homeland Security is no longer in talks to acquire a warehouse after the city councilurged federal officials to take part in the city's permitting process.

The department had told the city in a letter last month that it intended to purchase a nearly 27-acre warehouse in the city for ICE operations.

But as crowds opposed to the facility packed a city council meeting this week, the council said the city was exploring legal options. Holt said the property owners then informed him that they are no longer engaged with Homeland Security about a potential acquisition or lease of this property.

"I commend the owners for their decision and thank them on behalf of the people of Oklahoma City," Holt said. "As Mayor, I ask that every single property owner in Oklahoma City exhibit the same concern for our community in the days ahead."

Pennsylvania

ICE paid $87.4 million for a nearly 520,000-square-foot (48,309-square-meter) warehouse, according to a deed that was recorded Monday in Berks County.

Real estate developerspromotedit as a "state-of-the art logistics center" located 45 minutes from Allentown, an hour and a half from Philadelphia and two hours from New York City.

The county spokesman, Jonathan Heintzman, said in an email that the county was informed Monday by the recorder of deeds of the purchase. Heintzman said the county had no prior knowledge of the sale and had no information on future plans for the property.

In El Paso County, commissioners on Monday formally expressed opposition to the construction of detention facilities amid reports that ICE is eying a warehouse in the county. Commissioners also said they working with other officials to try to get more details.

Other cities in Texas also have been named in unconfirmed reports, but officials haven't heard any information from federal officials.

In Salt Lake City, Mayor Erin Mendenhall expressed gratitude last week in her State of the Cityaddressthat the owners of a warehouse that ICE was eying as a detention facility had announced plans not to sell or lease the property to the federal government.

The announcement from the Ritchie Group, a Utah real estate developer, came after Mendenhall sent a letter saying that the building would need to address a host of requirements before obtaining an occupancy permit.

"But let me be clear: this isn't just about zoning restrictions," Mendenhall said. "Such a facility has no place in our city. Whether at that site or anywhere else."

In the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia, officials in Hanover County are asking their attorney to evaluate legal options after the Department of Homeland Security sent a letter confirming its intent to purchase and operate an ICE processing facility in an area that includes retail, hotels and restaurants.

Sean Davis, the county's board of supervisors chair, said the facility would cut into tax revenue but acknowledged at a packed meeting last week that there was only so much it could do to oppose it.

"The federal government is generally exempt from our zoning regulations," he said.

Dozens of speakers turned out — some in support of the facility and others opposed.

"You want what's happening in Minnesota to go down in our own backyard, build that detention center here and that's exactly what will happen," Kimberly Matthews of Mechanicsville told supervisors.

Federal immigration officials scout warehouses as they eye more detention space

Federal immigration officials are scouting warehouses and beginning to purchase some of them to transform into detention ...
Melinda French Gates says Bill Gates 'has to answer' for being in the Epstein files

Melinda French Gates spoke out for the first time since the release of Epstein files that contained mentions of her ex-husband, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates.

NBC Universal Melinda Gates during an interview in 2025.  (Chona Kasinger / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)

In an interview with NPR's "Wild Card" podcast on Tuesday, Melinda French Gates said she felt "unbelievable sadness" seeing her ex-husband's name mentioned in the new batch of filesreleased on Friday by the Justice Department.

"Whatever questions remain there ... for those people, and for even my ex-husband, they need to answer to those things, not me," she said. "And I am so happy to be away from all the muck that was there."

"No girl should ever be put in the situation that they were put in by Epstein and whatever was going on with all of the various people around him. No girl," she added. "I mean, it's just — it's beyond heartbreaking. I remember being those ages those girls were. I remember my daughters being those ages."

Bill Gates was one of several of the world's richest and most prominent men mentioned in the millions of files released by the Justice Department on Friday in connection with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

In a series of emails from 2013 that Epstein sent to himself, he appeared to suggest that Bill Gates was having an extramarital affair and seeking illicit drugs.

In a statement to NBC News, a spokesperson for Bill Gates denied the allegations. "These claims are absolutely absurd and completely false," the statement said. "The only thing these documents demonstrate is Epstein's frustration that he did not have an ongoing relationship with Gates and the lengths he would go to entrap and defame."

In one of the emails, Epstein wrote that he had decided to resign from a role he had with the Gates Foundation and BG3, a think tank founded by Bill Gates, because he got "caught up in a severe martial dispute between Melinda and Bill."

"I have the greatest respect for my friend of 7 years, and wish them both well," Epstein wrote.

With multiple typos, Epstein wrote of his relation ship with Gates: "In my role as his right hand I had been asked on mulitple occassion and in hindsight , wrongly acquiesced into participating in things that have ranged from the morally inappropriate , to the ethically unsound and had been repeatedly asked to do other things that get near and potentially over the line into the illegal."

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Epstein described those activities as "helping Bill to get drugs, in order to deal with consequences of sex with russian girls, to facilictating his illicit trysts, with married women,to being asked to provide adderal."

Melinda and Bill Gates were married for 27 years before theydivorced in 2021.She later said that her ex-husband had an affair with a Microsoft staffer in 2019. Sheresigned from the Gates Foundationas its co-chair in 2024. Bill Gates admitted to the affair in a statement toThe New York Timesin 2021 and toldNBC Newslast year, "I have responsibility for causing a lot of pain to my family."

"I had to leave my marriage. I wanted to leave my marriage. I felt I needed to eventually leave the foundation," Melinda French Gates said on Tuesday. "So it's just sad. That's the truth"

Among the other high-profile men mentioned in the Epstein files are President Donald Trump, Elon Musk, former Prince Andrew and former President Bill Clinton.

Trump, Musk and Clinton have denied wrongdoing and have not been accused by authorities of any crime in connection to Epstein. Andrew has denied preying on young women allegedly supplied to him by Epstein and has also not been criminally charged, but has been stripped of his title and evicted from his mansion near Windsor Castle because of his friendship with the fallen financier.

Epstein's former girlfriend and accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, is the only person to have been charged and convicted of crimes associated with Epstein.

Epstein died behind bars while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges in 2019. His death was ruled a suicide.

Melinda French Gates said on Tuesday the details about Bill Gates in the Epstein files are difficult for her because it "brings back memories of some very, very painful times in my marriage."

"I purposely pushed it away and I moved on," she said. "I'm in a really unexpected, beautiful place in my life."

"For me, I've been able to move on in life," she said. "And I hope there's some justice for those women now."

Melinda French Gates says Bill Gates 'has to answer' for being in the Epstein files

Melinda French Gates spoke out for the first time since the release of Epstein files that contained mentions of her ex-hu...

 

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