Cuban immigrant died in ICE custody in suspected suicide, notice to US lawmakers says


FILE PHOTO: The badge of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is embroidered on a polo shirt of an ICE employee in Arlington, Texas, U.S. August 26, 2025. REUTERS/Shelby Tauber/File Photo

WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) - ⁠A Cuban immigrant died in U.S. immigration custody in Georgia in what authorities suspect ⁠was a suicide, U.S. officials said in a notice to lawmakers sent ‌on Friday and reviewed by Reuters.

Denny Adan Gonzalez, 33, was found unresponsive in his cell at the Stewart Detention Center on April 28 and pronounced dead less than an hour later, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said ​in the notice.

President Donald Trump, a Republican, has pushed ⁠to detain many more immigrants as ⁠part of his mass deportation effort. The number of people detained by ICE has grown from ⁠40,000 ‌when Trump took office in 2025 to 60,000, with detention poised to expand further this year.

Deaths of immigrants in ICE custody reached a two-decade high last year ⁠and are on pace to climb higher this year, with ​18 deaths through the ‌first four months of the year.

ICE said that Gonzalez entered the U.S. at ⁠a Texas port ​of entry in May 2019, but was deemed "inadmissible" and deported in January 2020. He crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally in 2022 and was released into the U.S. with an order of supervision, ICE said.

Gonzalez ⁠was arrested by the Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office ​in Charlotte for assault on a female and domestic violence, ICE said. He was taken into ICE custody and transferred to Stewart Detention Center in January 2026, ICE said.

Stewart, located in the ⁠rural city of Lumpkin, is operated by the private prison company CoreCivic.

Ryan Gustin, a spokesperson for CoreCivic, said medical staff arrived promptly and began lifesaving measures once Gonzalez was discovered unresponsive.

"We are deeply saddened by and take very seriously the passing of any individual in ​our care," Gustin said.

ICE did not immediately respond to a request ⁠for comment.

A massive Republican-backed spending package passed by Congress in 2025 gives ICE funding to ​expand detentions through September 2029.

In budget documents released in April, ‌ICE said that it aims to detain an ​annual average of 99,000 immigrants in both fiscal years 2026 and 2027.

(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Nia Williams and Andrea Ricci )

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Marchers demand reopening of Bosnia's last steel mill
Russia pounds Ukraine with drones in daytime attack
Iran crisis hampering aid to refugees as supply chain costs soar, UN warns
Around 3,000 residents evacuated in Tuscany as winds fan forest fire
Ukrainian drones spark new blaze at Russian port of Tuapse
Bolsonaro leaves house arrest for shoulder surgery, wife says
Al Qaeda-linked insurgents call on Malians to rise up, establish Sharia law
Mali attacks spotlight the growing reach of militants across West Africa
Trump heads to Florida stronghold in first public event since foiled attack
US Navy turns to AI firm Domino for options to counter Iranian mines

Others Also Read