--- title: "ICE needs real oversight — demand Senate confirmation now" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/287081053.md" description: "President Trump has appointed David Venturella as acting director of ICE, raising concerns due to his previous ties with GEO Group, which houses most ICE detainees. With billions in new funding for immigration detention centers, there are calls for Senate confirmation to ensure oversight and address potential conflicts of interest. Critics argue that without proper scrutiny, the influx of funds could lead to mismanagement and fraud." datetime: "2026-05-20T06:10:20.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/287081053.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287081053.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/287081053.md) --- # ICE needs real oversight — demand Senate confirmation now President Trump has announced that political appointee and adviser David Venturella will serve as the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement once career official Todd Lyons retires this month. This is a very troubling move for an agency that has not had a Senate-confirmed leader in nearly a decade and is now absorbing billions of dollars in new funding through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, with billions more potentially on the way through the reconciliation bill pending in the Senate. Venturella was a senior executive for more than a decade in the GEO Group, the detention conglomerate currently housing 86 percent of detainees in ICE custody. Upon his arrival as a political appointee last year, Venturella oversaw Homeland Security contracts for immigration detention centers after receiving a federal ethics waiver related to his obvious conflict of interest — overseeing contracts overwhelmingly given to his former employer. Furthermore, the big beautiful bill added $45 billion for immigration detention centers through 2029. The GEO Group stands to receive a significant share of those funds. When he was a senior vice president of GEO Group, Venturella held more than 180,000 shares of GEO Group stock, currently valued at $4 million. According to an ICE spokesperson, Venturella divested his GEO stocks and “has no financial ties to the company,” although there is no public record of any such transactions. When I was appointed chief of staff to Homeland Security Deputy Secretary John Tien (not a Senate-confirmed position — just a senior political appointee like Venturella’s original position), I had to divest from holding $100,000 in California Municipal Bonds before starting. Otherwise, as I was informed by career ethics officials, I could not work on issues “involving the state of California” because of potential bias. Certainly, at least that level of scrutiny is warranted for an executive overseeing an unprecedented surge in immigration detention facilities. Venturella needs to undergo the Senate confirmation process in order to understand whether his ties to GEO Group are disqualifying for him to serve as ICE director, whether it is appropriate for him to oversee the burgeoning detention portfolio, and whether he has actually divested from his GEO stock. ICE is receiving an extraordinary influx of funding. Through the big beautiful bill, reconciliation and multi-year funding, Congress effectively is abdicating its appropriations authority to oversee ICE spending, despite the exponential increase of funds (and opportunities for fraud). At the same time, funding for the Homeland Security inspector general and access to information has been cut, eliminating another mechanism for oversight of Venturella’s conduct as acting ICE director. The Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman was dismantled in May 2026 when the fiscal 2026 budget was passed for the Department of Homeland Security after the 76-day shutdown ended, removing another layer of oversight on ICE detention activities. The Senate and the public deserve answers as to whether the man directing ICE’s detention expansion has a financial stake in its outcome. With billions flowing and oversight gutted, this ICE director cannot simply be appointed — he must be confirmed by the Senate. The Trump administration has transformed ICE into the largest federal law enforcement agency. Its director needs to act accordingly, and the Senate needs to ask him the hard questions. _Mary Ellen Callahan was a political appointee for eight years in the Department of Homeland Security, including serving as chief of staff for former Deputy Secretary John Tien._ ### Related Stocks - [GEO.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/GEO.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [US Supreme Court seeks government's views in GEO Group immigrant detainee pay case](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286816632.md) - [Trump’s ICE Pick Is A Longtime Private Prison Veteran](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286306973.md) - [UK LONG-TERM NET MIGRATION IN 2025 WAS 171,000 VS 331,000 A YEAR EARLIER](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287185940.md) - [Coffee Prices Rise as ICE Inventories Shrink](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286953826.md) - [Prediction market ‘watchdog’ launches six-figure ad campaign ahead of Senate hearing](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286796384.md)