NJ state police use tear gas outside contested immigration detention center

ByEyewitness News WABC logo
Saturday, May 30, 2026 12:52PM
ABC7 New York 24/7 Eyewitness News Stream

NEWARK, New Jersey (WABC) -- New Jersey state police shut down direct access to an immigration detention center in Newark on Friday, after days of protestors clashing with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and a group of migrants on a hunger strike inside.

Gov. Mikie Sherrill said she sent in state police to bring order outside Delaney Hall as the demonstrations have intensified.

"It has grown unsafe, and that's completely unacceptable," the Democratic governor said at a news conference announcing the new measures. "We need to take this opportunity to lower the temperature."

As police erected protest barriers, ICE agents who had formed an line in front of protesters moved inside the building's perimeter fence.

New Jersey State Police Lt. Col. David Sierotowicz said ICE officers agreed to stand down with state police assuming responsibility.

Demonstrators had mixed reactions. Some staged a sit-in and refused to move into one of the new protest areas police set up using metal barriers and concrete blocks.

Rachel Cohen worried that demonstrators exercising their First Amendment rights were being silenced.

"It is not helpful to quell protest for the sake of a false peace," she said. "There is no peace while we are torturing our neighbors on government dime inside this facility."

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin, on social media, called the measures a "win for law and order" and noted that Sherrill had resisted sending state police for days.

The protests began a week earlier after immigrant advocates said detainees inside launched a hunger strike over poor living conditions at the 1,000-bed facility, which opened last May.

Demonstrators have been attempting to block people and vehicles from entering and exiting, linking their arms in a human chain and using trash cans, umbrellas and other items as makeshift shields and barricades.

ICE officers wearing helmets and tactical vests have used pepper spray and batons to try to disperse the protesters and clear the roadway for vehicles.

At least six demonstrators were arrested for allegedly assaulting law enforcement officers Wednesday night, and more have been arrested on other nights, according to DHS.

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche shared images online Friday of bloody wounds and bruises sustained by ICE officers.

"These riots are clearly not 'peaceful protests' as you can see from the photos of these horrific wounds," he said. "Assault a federal officer, you'll be held accountable."

Another demonstrator, Lisa O'Dwyer, said she was fine with the designated protest areas.

"I like to get my point across and stay safe at the same time," the Westfield resident said.

Eyesha Marable, pastor at Mt. Zion AME Church in Millburn, agreed even while acknowledging that there were "different schools of thought" among protesters.

"There are people here who are angry. Their family members are inside. Their friends are inside. People have been taken off the streets, out of their communities," she said.

"We have to keep the peace," Marable said. "The goal is to get our people free, to get them liberated, and we cannot do that if we're fighting out here."

State Attorney General Jennifer Davenport said it was important to "de-escalate" the situation as "violence, either against protesters or by protesters, is unacceptable."

Sherril said she did not want to give ICE a "pretext" to expand operations in the state.

"We all need to do everything we can to cool things down now," she said.

The governor and other Democratic officials tried to visit detainees on Monday but were denied entry.

Democratic members of Congress from New York City, however, were able to tour Delaney Hall the day after that. They reported dire conditions, with detainees being fed small portions of often spoiled food and their varied medical needs going ignored.

Families and supporters of detainees also say their loved ones have also been subjected to pepper spray and physical force in retaliation for their hunger strike and the protests outside.

The overnight protests have been growing as word spreads of allegations of inhumane treatment against detainees inside.

The call is escalating for more protesters to stand the line and it has gotten physical with ICE agents using batons to hit people to back them away.

Every day, lawmakers have been showing up and demanding that Delaney Hall be shut down, or at the very least, they are demanding improved conditions inside

"They've been trying to break the people inside for as long as this facility has been open, they want to exert as much fear as possible and as much intimidation as possible so people silence themselves," said Rep. Robert Menendez.

"But also, making sure those elected officials that are about to vote on a budget in which they're going to ask for tens of billions of dollars for ICE, but they know where we stand we have been very clear it's unacceptable and abolishing ICE is the only solution to this work," said Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso

The Trump administration denies all allegations of misconduct.

Delaney Hall is a privately run facility with 1,000 beds. There are about 300 detainees inside, and they have tablets to communicate with the outside.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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