Federal agents, protesters clash outside Delaney Hall

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Federal agents used pepper spray and batons as protests outside Delaney Hall in Newark escalated Tuesday night.

Why this matters

The confrontation highlights escalating tensions around immigration detention, protest activity, and conditions at Delaney Hall. It also underscores a broader political dispute in New Jersey over federal immigration enforcement.

Federal agents used pepper spray and batons Tuesday night during a confrontation with anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement protesters outside the Delaney Hall detention center in Newark, New Jersey, after several days of demonstrations at the privately run facility.

Video shared by FreedomNewsTV showed protesters attempting to block vehicles from leaving Delaney Hall. Authorities were seen trying to clear people from the road and prevent them from obstructing traffic.

The video showed the encounter becoming physical as federal agents pushed back protesters who made contact with the hood of a vehicle leaving the facility. Some agents were seen using pepper spray, while others used batons.

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin addressed the confrontation in a post on X on Tuesday night.

“ICE law enforcement officers were assaulted by anti-ICE rioters who sprayed law enforcement with an unknown chemical substance,” Mullin wrote, adding that two people were arrested on allegations of assaulting, resisting, and impeding federal officers.

The clashes followed weekend protests over conditions for detainees at the facility, prompted by a reported hunger strike by detainees.

Mullin denied those claims Monday, writing, “There is NO hunger strike at Delaney Hall. There are no subprime conditions.”

During the demonstrations, New Jersey Democrats, including Sen. Andy Kim and Gov. Mikie Sherrill, went to the facility. Kim was allowed to enter, while Sherrill was denied access.

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