Live News
Last Update

Anti-ICE demonstrations at Newark's Delaney Hall enter 9th day as New Jersey state police take over

Anti-ICE agitators and pro-ICE counter-protesters gathered at Newark's Delaney Hall as state police assume public safety responsibilities. Tensions remain high after clashes between agitators and federal agents this week.

6Posts
1:24 PM, May 30, 2026
Pinned

Delaney Hall menu shows three-square meals despite detainees claiming they aren't being fed

A food menu from Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, shows a wide array of meal options, as detainees' claims of not being properly fed have fueled violent anti-ICE demonstrations outside the facility for the past week.

The menu, which the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shared with Fox News, shows differing meal selections for three square meals, seven days a week.

Breakfast on a Monday, for example, included cereal, scrambled eggs and potatoes with onions and peppers. Lunch for the day was chicken legs with cream gravy, peas and carrots and beans with rolls. Lunch also included a fruit cobbler. Dinner items for the day included garlic bread, salad, green beans and pasta with meat sauce.

Meal items listed for other days included taco meat, beef and bean burritos, Spanish rice, chicken fajitas, fried eggs, cinnamon oatmeal, mixed vegetables, Salisbury steak patties, cake, cornbread, coffee, fruit and more.

Anti-ICE demonstrations, which are going on their ninth day Saturday, were seemingly sparked on Friday May 22 when Delaney Hall detainees penned an open letter claiming mistreatment that included a denial of access to medical care and a lack of adequate food options.

"We are being tortured physically and psychologically due to the poor food resources provided in these detention centers," the letter read.

DHS denied those claims in a statement.

"The facts are all detainees are provided with 3 meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, soap, and toiletries. Illegal aliens also have access to phones to communicate with their family members and lawyers," the agency wrote.

Posted by Robert McGreevy
2:33 PM, May 30, 2026

Sherrill says 'ICE surge' at Delaney Hall jeopardizes safety, state police there to defend agitators

New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill seemingly placed the blame on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for security concerns outside Delaney Hall, claiming that her decision to send state police to the scene was made to protect agitators.

"My top priority is keeping New Jerseyans and our communities safe – and an increased ICE surge in the area outside of Delaney Hall is a threat to public safety. We know that lives would be at risk were that to happen. And I will not accept that risk," the Democratic governor wrote on X Saturday morning.

"That is why last night, the New Jersey State Police Public Safety Response Team acted to secure the area outside of Delaney Hall," she continued. "This was absolutely necessary to protect public safety, and avoid escalation from ICE. As Americans, we have a right to protest – and we will continue to ensure New Jersey residents can peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights."

"Today and going forward, I urge everyone who is protesting to do so peacefully in the safe areas, and work together to bring the temperature down," Sherrill added. "We need to focus on advocating for better conditions for the detainees, for their families, and ultimately, for the closure of Delaney Hall."

Her post comes as the Department of Homeland Security said that federal immigration officers have been bitten, kicked and punched by violent crowds of anti-ICE agitators outside Delaney Hall for the past week. Federal authorities have deployed pepper spray and beaten back crowds wielding umbrellas and masks before Sherrill announced Friday that state police would take over public safety operations at the facility.

DHS previously slammed Sherrill for refusing to allow local law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration authorities in the Garden State.

Posted by Robert McGreevy
2:05 PM, May 30, 2026

Proud Boys arrive to support ICE as rival NJ detention center demonstrators clash

NEWARK, N.J. — A pair of rival demonstrations outside Delaney Hall sprang into life shortly before 1 p.m. Saturday when members of the Proud Boys arrived in support of ICE and law enforcement.

Anti-ICE activists and a smaller group of pro-ICE supporters had gathered on opposite sides outside of the immigration detention facility throughout the morning before the notorious right wing Proud Boys arrived.

At about 12:45 p.m. EST Proud Boys supporters arrived carrying pro-ICE flags, cases of water and food to give to immigration authorities. Several wore the group’s traditional black-and-yellow clothing and insignia.

Anti-ICE demonstrators quickly alerted others to their presence and rushed toward the group, shouting slogans as the Proud Boys made their way through the crowd toward the pro-ICE side of the protest.

The agitators shouted expletives at them while Proud Boys said they were there to support ICE and law enforcement.

The arrival energized the demonstration, with both sides trading chants across police barriers as the atmosphere became noticeably louder and more confrontational.

Anti-ICE agitators changed their chants from targeting immigration authorities to shouting “Proud Boys go home.”

Posted by Michael Dorgan
1:34 PM, May 30, 2026

Rioters defy state police order to protest in ‘First Amendment zone’ at Delaney Hall

Rioters outside the Delaney Hall detention center in Newark, New Jersey, defied state police orders to confine their anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) demonstrations to a designated First Amendment zone on Friday.

While New Jersey State Police directed the rioters to relocate, one woman responded "No! We will not! I'm expressing my First Amendment right here!"

A man next to her then chimed in, "We designate our First Amendment zones."

State police took over responsibility for public safety from federal authorities Friday at Democratic Gov. Mikie Sherrill's direction.

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin had previously criticized Sherrill for refusing to allow state authorities to assist federal law enforcement as violent clashes persisted for about a week.

Fox News Digital's Preston Mizell contributed to this post.

Posted by Robert McGreevy
12:30 PM, May 30, 2026

Pro-ICE supporters enter the fray on ninth day of NJ immigration detention center demonstrations

Supporters for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) clashed with anti-ICE agitators outside Newark, New Jersey's Delaney Hall on Saturday as the raucous detention center demonstrations entered their ninth day.

Supporters carrying signs reading "America First Republicans SUPPORT ICE" were met with jeers and profanity from anti-ICE demonstrators who screamed through megaphones and banged loud drums in the pro-ICE individuals' faces.

Local authorities repeatedly stepped in to separate intensifying conflicts which spilled out into the road outside the detention center.

After initially receiving criticism from Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin for not allowing state authorities to assist federal authorities in deescalation, New Jersey's Democratic Gov. Mikie Sherrill authorized State Police to take over public safety measures from federal authorities.

Large plastic orange barricades surrounded the center Saturday, as well as metal barriers meant to separate the opposing sides. Despite the barriers, the rivaling groups still managed to clash physically, prompting repeated attempts from law enforcement to separate them.

Posted by Robert McGreevy
11:56 AM, May 30, 2026

Anti-ICE agitator charged with allegedly biting officers during Delaney Hall clashes

An anti-U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agitator was hit with federal charges after gnarly photos showed bloody bite marks he allegedly made into federal agents' arms during violent clashes outside Delaney Hall detention center in Newark, New Jersey.

Brendan John Geier, a 26-year-old man from Madison, New Jersey, was part of a group of agitators blocking the road near Delaney Hall on Thursday night when ICE deportation officers instructed the group to move away, the U.S. Department of Justice said. 

The group allegedly ignored the commands and instead violently engaged with the officers, according to the DOJ. Geier then "engaged in a struggle with deportation officers, kicking officers and ultimately biting an officer’s forearm, and another’s knuckle. Both victims received treatment at a local hospital," prosecutors said. He was charged with assaulting federal officers and causing bodily injury and appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Cari Fais on Friday, the DOJ said.

"We will not tolerate the vicious attacks on ICE officers we’ve seen in New Jersey the last few days. These riots are clearly not 'peaceful protests' as you can see from the photos of these horrific wounds. Assault a federal officer, you’ll be held accountable," Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote in a Friday afternoon post on X.

This is an excerpt from a story by Robert McGreevy. Read the full story here.

Posted by Robert McGreevy

Live Coverage begins here