Protesters Block Newark ICE Detention Facility Amid Hunger and Work Strike


This story was originally published by THE CITY.  Sign up  to get the latest New York City news delivered to you each morning. Dozens of protesters blocked entrances to  Delaney Hall , a massive Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in Newark, New Jersey, for hours Sunday evening after word spread that guards were trying to move a detainee involved in an ongoing work and hunger strike.

The detainee, Martin Soto, was among those who announced the strike on Friday , calling for the immediate release of medically vulnerable detainees, among other demands. His wife, Gabriela Soto, 28, has also been organizing protests outside the facility.

A commotion erupted Sunday afternoon as Gabriela, a U.S. citizen who is several months pregnant, attempted to visit her husband. “I was not letting that happen.” As she was waiting in line to enter the facility, she saw a man being shoved into a van. Other visitors who were closer to the vehicle told her it was her husband, and she ran toward it. “I was banging on the door of the van,” she said. “I was not letting that happen.”

Attorneys for Martin Soto had earlier filed a habeas corpus petition seeking his release, a claim that could be upended by a transfer to another jurisdiction. Other protesters joined Gabriela and formed a blockade at the gates of Delaney Hall for hours late into Sunday night to try to prevent Martin from being removed.

“Free Martin,” she and the crowd chanted. “Free them all.” As the sun went down, the silhouettes of detainees could be seen banging on barred windows in time with the droves of chanting protesters below. Detainees inside Delaney Hall, an ICE detention facility in Newark, New Jersey, bang on windows as protesters rally outside on May 24, 2026. (THE CITY/Gwynne Hogan) On Monday afternoon a spokesperson for the  Department of Homeland Security  said agents had moved Soto to a detention facility in Elizabeth, New Jersey, after clearing protesters early Monday morning.

“ICE successfully dispersed approximately 70 agitators and removed the barricades obstructing operations and were able to transfer Soto Hernandez to the Elizabeth Contract Detention Facility,” the spokesperson said, adding that visits to Delaney were suspended. Christopher Ferreira, a spokesperson for GEO Group, the private company that runs Delaney Hall, declined to comment on the specifics of Sunday’s protest, deferring to immigration authorities.

“We are proud of the role our company has played for 40 years to support the law enforcement mission of U.S.  Immigration and Customs Enforcement ,” he said in an emailed statement that touted the “around-the-clock access to medical care, in-person and virtual legal and family visitation, general and legal library access, translation services, dietician-approved meals.”

Lauren Herman, the legal director of Make the Road New Jersey later confirmed that attorneys had been in contact with the U.S. attorney’s office, which promised that Soto would not be moved that day due to a federal judge’s standing order barring his transfer out of New Jersey while his habeas corpus petition is pending. But he could still be moved legally to ICE’s other detention facility in Elizabeth. A spokesperson for the  New Jersey  U.S. attorney’s office didn’t return a request for comment. “‘If we release you now, will you tell your wife to stop this protest?'” Sunday marked the third day of the hunger and work strike by Delaney Hall detainees, who are demanding the immediate release of the young, the elderly and medically vulnerable people. The strike kicked off Friday as protesters rallied outside Delaney Hall, and several detainees called their family members to announce their effort inside.

The strike followed a series of letters signed by 300 detainees about poor conditions, lack of medical care and other concerns at Delaney Hall, which opened just over a year ago and is the largest detention facility in the New York metro area.

Gabriela Soto, who has stayed outside Delaney Hall since the strike began, said that starting Friday guards locked her husband in a cell for eight hours and questioned him and his wife’s advocacy.

“‘If we release you now, will you tell your wife to stop this protest? Did you know that your wife was organizing this protest? He said, ‘No comment,’” Soto told THE CITY, adding that guards had asked her husband, “‘Are you the one organizing the strike inside?’”

Soto said her husband was arrested by ICE in Kearny, New Jersey, several months ago, when he had gone out to get diapers for their younger child. She is a U.S. citizen originally from Peru, and the couple has been together for a decade, she said.

Some family members of Delaney Hall detainees  joined the protesters Sunday night. Among them was Erica, a mother whose 18-year-old daughter had been arrested by ICE when she went to visit a friend at an ICE detention facility in Elizabeth. Guards never let her daughter leave, Erica told THE CITY. Erica declined to give her full name out of concern about retaliation against her and her daughter.

“One month and three weeks locked up unjustly,” Erica told THE CITY in Spanish. “My daughter is still in high school. Friday she had prom. She had her prom, and instead she was locked in here like a criminal.”

“I’m afraid for her life,” Erica said. “She shouldn’t be in there for more time. Not her or anyone else.”

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