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SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS797
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TUE · 2026-07-14 · 15:33 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0714-92982
News/Tuberculosis outbreak at Colorado ICE jail sickens at least …
NSR-2026-0714-92982News Report·EN·Human Rights

Tuberculosis outbreak at Colorado ICE jail sickens at least 12 detainees

At least 12 detainees have contracted tuberculosis at the federal immigration jail in Aurora, Colorado, according to testimony from inside the facility. Dozens of others have reportedly been placed in quarantine, with those infected enduring isolation without air conditioning during a heat advisory.

Richard LuscombeThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-07-14 · 15:33 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Tuberculosis outbreak at Colorado ICE jail sickens at least 12 detainees
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
797words
Sources cited
1cited
Entities identified
8entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

At least 12 detainees have contracted tuberculosis at the federal immigration jail in Aurora, Colorado, according to testimony from inside the facility. Dozens of others have reportedly been placed in quarantine, with those infected enduring isolation without air conditioning during a heat advisory. Mass testing of 88 individuals in one pod revealed 12 positive cases, an increase from a single case days prior. The detainees were kept together with those not sick and instructed to quarantine for at least a week. This outbreak is the latest in a series of health concerns at the facility, which is operated by the Geo Group under contract with ICE.

Confidence 0.90Sources 1Claims 5Entities 8
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Rights
Public Health
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
1
Limited
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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The facility is operated by the Geo Group under contract with ICE.

factualarticle
Confidence
1.00
02

All 88 people in one pod were tested, with 12 positive cases, up from one case three days prior.

statisticdetainee
Confidence
0.90
03

At least 12 people detained at a federal immigration jail in Colorado have contracted tuberculosis.

statisticdetainee
Confidence
0.90
04

Detainees affected by the outbreak are being held in isolation without air conditioning.

factualdetainee
Confidence
0.80
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The air conditioning in the pod broke down on Sunday, and electric fans were distributed.

factualdetainee
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

4 min read · 797 words
At least 12 people detained at a federal immigration jail in Colorado have contracted Tuberculosis in recent days, according to testimony from inside the facility where dozens of others have reportedly been placed in quarantine.Those affected by the outbreak are also being made to endure their isolation without air conditioning, one detainee who has been at the facility in Aurora since December told the Guardian, through his partner, in a telephone call on Monday afternoon.Neither the Department of Homeland Security, nor the Geo Group, the Florida-based private company that operates the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) processing center under government contract, responded to a request for comment or confirmation.But the Mexican detainee in his 30s, whose name the Guardian is not publishing for fear of possible retribution by guards, gave a detailed account of developments inside the troubled center over the past few days, which have included the mass testing of everyone within one of the center’s so-called pods.The person said that all 88 people he is detained with received testing on Saturday, with 12 positive cases coming back, up from a single case three days earlier. Instead of separating those infected, he said, guards kept them together with those who were not sick, and the entire group was told they must stay in quarantine for at least a week.To make matters worse, the detainee said, the air conditioning in the pod broke down on Sunday, and staff distributed electric fans. On Monday afternoon, Aurora was under a heat advisory with the outside air temperature at 96F (36C).It is not known how many people are incarcerated at the center, which has a published capacity of 1,532, and the person said he was unaware if any of the other pods of detainees had been tested or returned any positive results.He described the situation inside as “uncomfortable”, but said he had seen some of his fellow detainees receiving medication in the mornings and afternoons.His long-term partner, a US citizen who lives in south Florida, whose identity the Guardian is also withholding, said the apparently worsening conditions at the facility were causing anxiety. Tuberculosis is a serious bacterial infection that in its active form can be transmitted in the air, and can prove fatal if left untreated.“I don’t know if they understand the severity of what TB is,” he said.“Obviously it’s not a good thing, and he has some other underlying health conditions which are a concern for us. The first day he was very scared, very worried.“Their focus is more associated with having no air conditioning. I don’t understand what the hold up is. I manage restaurants and if they lose AC we get it fixed inside 24 or 48 hours. I don’t know why a multimillion dollar corporation can’t get an air conditioning technician out there.”The reported infections are the latest in a series of health concerns at the Colorado immigration jail. There was another apparent TB outbreak in April last year, according to a lawsuit filed by a number of Democratic politicians seeking more transparency from the Trump administration over deaths and disease in federal detention facilities.One of the plaintiffs, Jason Crow, a Democratic congressman who represents Aurora, has maintained an online database of oversight visits. It features occasions on which he was also refused admission, and requests for information about conditions at the facility, which housed 1,249 detainees as recently as March.Since 2019, Crow, or his staff, have visited the facility to conduct oversight more than 90 times, according to the congressman’s office, and a spokesperson said he was determined to keep monitoring the situation inside closely.“For-profit prisons have perpetuated ICE’s lawlessness and endangered our communities,” Crow said in a statement to the Guardian. “I’ve led the charge to end this broken and humane system. Until we do, I’ll continue to conduct oversight to hold ICE accountable.”The Geo Group, which has close ties to members of the Trump administration, a report found in May, has faced lawsuits of its own over “inhumane and unsanitary conditions” at facilities it runs.In the latest action last month, Jennifer Davenport, the attorney general of New Jersey, sued to try to force the company to allow officials from the state’s department of health into the notorious Delaney Hall ICE detention center in Newark.Detainees there staged a hunger strike over visitation, conditions and what they said was a lack of medical care provided by Geo Group staff and contractors. A number of protesters were hurt in a series of violent clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement outside the facility.On its website, Geo Group said it provides “around-the-clock access to medical care, in-person and virtual legal and family visitation” at its Aurora facility, and that “health care staffing at GEO’s ICE Processing Center is more than double that of many states’ correctional facilities”.
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Entities

8 identified
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Keywords & salience

9 terms
tuberculosis outbreak
1.00
ice jail
0.90
detainees
0.80
colorado
0.70
quarantine
0.60
infectious disease
0.50
public health
0.50
immigration detention
0.40
geo group
0.40
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