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When Karen Newton finally stepped back into her Hertfordshire home after six weeks in US immigration detention, the first thing she noticed was the silence. The second was what was not there. Her luggage — confiscated when she and her husband were detained at the US-Canada border — never made it back.

Inside were clothes, personal items and mementoes from what had begun as a long-planned holiday. Months later, Newton says she still has no explanation for where those belongings went.

Her confiscated luggage's case has since raised an uncomfortable question: what exactly happens to property seized by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)?

Newton, 65, had travelled to the United States in 2025 with a valid tourist visa. As reported by The Guardian, she was detained for six weeks despite having no criminal record. While much of the focus has centred on the legality of her detention, the unresolved issue of her confiscated luggage has struck a chord online.

What Happens When ICE Confiscates Your Belongings?

In most US jails, personal property is inventoried, bagged and returned upon release. ICE policy similarly states that detainees' property should be logged and stored. Yet critics argue that, in practice, the process can be opaque.

On Reddit, one commenter claimed, 'They keep all your shit, it's called confiscation most of the time it's not even logged in it goes directly into their pockets.' As of recent, however, there is no evidence presented to substantiate that allegation. But the blunt language shows a level of distrust after reports of ICE agents stealing while actively detaining illegal immigrants surfaced.

Another wrote, 'People aren't getting their possessions back most of the time.' The same user alleged that independent journalists had reported cases in which mobile phones were traced to pawn shops.

One user suggested a more bureaucratic explanation, posting simply: 'Civil asset forfeiture. If I had to guess.' Civil asset forfeiture is a legal process allowing law enforcement to seize property suspected of being connected to crime. However, its application in immigration detention should vary case by case and should not be applied at all times.

Some reactions veered into incendiary territory. 'The ICE terrorists are stealing and selling these belongings for their own personal profit,' one commenter alleged, adding that federal oversight would not intervene. Another compared the situation to historical atrocities, writing, 'The nazis did this too.'

More measured voices asked practical questions. 'If it's a pawn shop, victims of this should be able to file a police report and press charges,' one user observed, pointing out that without knowing where property ends up, recourse is nearly impossible.

British Tourist Wants Answers

Newton herself has not accused individual officers of theft. Instead, she says she simply never received her luggage back. She has filed a travel insurance claim and is still seeking clarity. 'Every so often I think of something else that was in my suitcase that I'm never going to see again,' she said.

What makes this striking is not just the loss of personal items, but the absence of a clear paper trail. If belongings are logged, where is the documentation? If they are transferred, who is accountable?

ICE has previously stated that officers follow federal procedures regarding detainee property, and there is no official confirmation of systemic misconduct in handling confiscated goods. Yet for former detainees like Newton, the lack of transparency leaves lingering doubt.

Her experience arrives as declining international tourism strikes the United States, with industry bodies estimating billions in lost revenue in 2025. Trust matters — not only in border procedures, but in what happens after a suitcase is taken away.

For now, Newton's belongings remain missing. And for many online observers, until her belongings are back, there is a chance that the 'stealing' rumours are true.