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Federal contract bids show ICE planning to expand operations in Maryland during immigration crackdown

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BALTIMORE, MD (WMAR) — It’s not a question of if ICE will be expanding operations in Maryland, but exactly where and when.

“It’s terrifying, because it has already had a huge impact in our community,” Crisaly De Los Santos said. “That means more families will be separated, more folks are gonna be terrified of going out and doing their daily activities, dropping off their kids at school.”

De los Santos is the Baltimore and Central Maryland director of CASA, an advocacy organization for immigrant communities that has turned to grassroots reports to track ICE enforcement activity over the past year.

Transparency has not been a highlight of the federal agency as it continues the White House directed immigration crackdown, with agents wearing masks and operating out of unmarked cars.

However, federal bids for administrative space show the agency is planning to expand in Maryland.

“The contracts are a good sort of tracer to figure out what’s going on,” federal employment attorney Dan Meyer said.

Late last month, bids seeking competitive lease proposals for “law enforcement operations” in two locations in the state were posted, asking for fully-furnished office spaces that can accommodate security reinforcements.

In Baltimore City, the request was for a location with between 5,100 and 6,801 square feet. And in Hyattsville, 3,750 to 5,001 sq. ft.

“It’s a fairly large amount of square footage for just a regional office of a federal law enforcement agency. So, this looks big. Looks like it could accommodate anywhere from 60 to 100 special agents,” Meyer explained.

Because the party behind the bids has the same address as the ICE facility in D.C., Meyer says, the leases are for ICE. Though, the agency has not responded to WMAR-2 News’ request for comment.

“Frankly, if they were interested in community relations, [they] would be talking to the municipal authorities in Baltimore, and they would agree on a common statement about what’s going on,” Meyer said. “They should just put it out publicly rather than to be seen as trying to wheel a Trojan horse into the city.”

The heads-up is helpful, De Los Santos said, but they’ve already been preparing for this.

“We are continuing to stand with our immigrant community, providing education, know your rights and working with the allied networks for them to know how to report sightings and detentions,” she said.

The contract bids were also posted on the same day Baltimore County agreed to cooperate with the agency, and was removed from a list designating them a sanctuary jurisdiction.

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