Venturella, who served as a senior vice president of client relations for GEO Group until 2023, has been granted an ethics waiver by the administration to navigate federal rules that typically restrict government officials from overseeing contracts held by their former employers. GEO Group, which operates detention centers and provides GPS tracking for immigrants, saw its fiscal year 2025 profits soar to $254 million—a 700% increase over the previous year. The company’s political action committee also donated significantly to President Trump’s 2024 campaign.
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Trump Names Former Prison Executive to Lead ICE Amid Profit Surge
The Trump administration has appointed David Venturella, a former senior executive at the private prison giant GEO Group, to lead U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in an acting capacity. The move follows his tenure as a senior adviser at the agency and arrives as the firm reports record-breaking federal contract wins.
Critics argue the appointment signals a deepening alignment between federal enforcement and private sector interests. Rep. Delia Ramirez (D-Ill.) characterized the move as a strategy to ensure corporate entities profit from detention operations, even as the agency faces mounting scrutiny over rising deaths in custody and reports of abuse. Meanwhile, congressional Republicans are pushing a budget proposal that includes $38 billion for ICE to expand detention facilities, transportation, and technology, further fueling concerns about the agency's reliance on private contractors.
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