By bits and pieces, we’re learning a little more about those new DETENTION CENTERS ICE is proposing, including a couple in Hammond and Port Allen.
We’ve even managed to score photographs of one of the warehouses being proposed for use. That warehouse is a cozy 250,000-square-foot facility (with 50,000-square-feet available for lease, according to online information) at 2070 Commercial Drive in Port Allen.

It sits on a 13.6-acre lot convenient to I-10 that previously housed Conn’s HomePlus. It is CURRENTLY LISTED by Saurage Rotenberg Commercial Real Estate, whose info sheet says it is available for a cool $6.50 per square foot per year, or a little more than half-a-buck per month. Either way you figure it, it comes out to a pretty good commission for some lucky agent.


Online property listing photos of 2070 Commercial Drive in Port Allen.
It would be one of the smaller facilities, capable of housing only about 500 detainees as opposed to the facility planned for HAMMOND with a capacity of about 9,000 human souls.
As yet, there is scant information about the location of the center being proposed for Hammond. It’s not clear, for example, if an existing building is to be used or if new construction is planned. If the former, then the Hammond Industrial Park would seem to be the most logical location, though it is located adjacent to a children’s sports park. If new construction, an area near the Hammond Airport, just down the road from the industrial park, might be more suitable.
But with the feds, saying a facility will be located in Hammond means it could be anywhere in Tangipahoa or even across the parish line in Livingston Parish. We won’t know until more information is released.
Of course, not everyone is thrilled about having a prison located next door. Nor are the local authorities even notified necessarily. Hammond Mayor Pete Panepinto, for example, said the report of the ICE facility was news to him, that he had not been informed of any such plans.
In fact, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said she will consider other sites after Mississippi Republican Sen. Roger Wicker voiced his opposition to a new facility in Byhalia, Mississippi because, in Noem’s words, the “strain” housing 8500 inmates on a town of 1300 would cause. Noem said the facility, which apparently had already been selected, should be used for economic development.
Economic development, like beauty, most probably lie in the eyes of the beholder.
Private prison companies like GEO, CoreCivic and LaSalle would probably look upon the opening of a new facility in which to cage detainees as a good example of economic development. After all, ICE’s expansion under Trump has been virtually UNRESTRAINED AND UNACCOUNTABLE, thanks for an eye-popping $45 billion in funding for ICE detention just during his second term as the increase in the use of “at large” arrests has increased by 600 percent.
CoreCivic reported TOTAL REVENUE of $538.2 million just during the company’s second quarter of 2025. That represented a 10 percent increase over the same period in 2023. GEO Group, ICE’s largest contractor meanwhile reported second quarter revenue of $636.2 million, a 9 percent increase overt the same period in the previous year. In case you’re not adept at math, that’s nearly $1.2 billion just for those two companies.
More than 70,000 people are presently being detained by ICE with plans by Trump to double that number to about 135,000 detention beds by 2029. To encourage him to do so, the leading for-profit prison companies CONTRIBUTED about half-a-million dollars to Republican members of Congress while chipping in chump change of $37,000 for Democrats between 2021 and 2025. Private prison firms contributed more than a million dollars to Trump’s reelection.
A 2022 report indicated that private contracted but unused private prison space in Louisiana COST TAXPAYERS $8 million per month, so it’s easy to see why it is economically advantageous to have every prison bed occupied.
The way it works is the more bodies there are in the beds, the more the private companies get paid. The more they get paid, the more they contributed to political campaigns. The more contributed to political campaigns, the greater incentive by politicians to keep the beds filled.
And the money wheel keeps on turning.
But here’s the kicker: empty or filled, of the three—taxpayers, politicians and private prison contractors—only one loses money.




