Residents urge commissioners to end ICE contract, cite legal and humanitarian concerns

5967646 · October 21, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Multiple residents urged the Butler County Board of Commissioners to end the county's contract to house Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainees, citing potential civil-rights abuses, family trauma and liability exposure; commissioners directed inquiries about detainee records to jail leadership.

Dozens of residents used the public-comment period at a Butler County Board of Commissioners meeting to urge the board to end the county's contract to house ICE detainees and to question the fiscal and humanitarian consequences of that arrangement.

Speakers at the podium — including Linda Snow Griffin of Fairfield Township, Linda Spurrier of Hamilton, Lois Mead of Oxford and Karen Albrecht of Liberty Township — said contract revenue should not outweigh concerns about civil rights, family separation and local liability. Linda Snow Griffin said a local news article reported that the new rate for housing ICE detainees "will increase Butler County coffers by $20,000,000 a year," and she framed the change as a moral concern: "We are... making a profit on their human bodies," she said.

Other speakers described incidents and national reporting they said demonstrated civil-rights abuses during ICE operations. Linda Spurrier cited reporting from ProPublica about U.S. citizens detained in ICE operations and said, "When I see masked unidentifiable homeland security agents using tear gas, pepper balls, and violent takedowns in American streets, I know it's just a matter of time before innocent people are killed." Karen Albrecht described a widely reported Los Angeles case in which a U.S. citizen and Iraq war veteran was detained in an ICE raid; she said the incident illustrated potential legal exposure and reputational risk for the county.

Several speakers raised fiscal concerns, saying that short-term revenue could be offset by future lawsuits. Karen Albrecht said she did not want tax dollars used to defend possible legal challenges related to ICE operations. A speaker who identified themself as Jansen requested the names, ages, alleged crimes and custody status for 23 people the sheriff said had been arrested under the ICE cooperative arrangement; the commissioners' staff advised him to request those details from the jail's leadership, noting the county does not retain the detainee records.

Other public comments during the same period touched on related concerns: fear of masked agents, pressure on local police, and the trauma to children when a parent is detained. Several callers explicitly asked the commissioners to terminate the ICE contract; others asked the board to apply a hiring freeze to the sheriff's office consistent with countywide freezes.

No formal action to end the ICE contract occurred during the meeting. The commissioners closed the public-comment period and continued with scheduled agenda business; one staff member directed attendees seeking information about individual detainees to contact the jail's chief.

Speakers included multiple Butler County residents, and several asked the board to consider both moral and financial implications of continuing the ICE housing arrangement.