WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — The sun was shining outside President Donald Trump’s West Palm Beach golf course on a recent Saturday morning when Alan Mentser got a call letting him know that police were shutting down a road nearby. It was almost time to “show the boss a little love.â€
Mentser, 65, and a group of hard-core supporters have spent years gathering at the same spot to welcome Trump when he comes to play golf, and they have the routine down. They monitor flight trackers to know when Air Force One arrives and traffic cameras to see if the presidential motorcade is on the move.

Alan Mentser, in foreground at left, from West Palm Beach, Fla., joins other supporters of President Donald Trump outside the Trump International Golf Club on March 29 in West Palm Beach.
It’s an intense commitment of time and resources for a brief glimpse of their political hero. Mentser pointed to a gigantic banner showing Trump giving a thumbs up against an American flag backdrop. He said each one costs $300, and he has about eight of them.
But Mentser said it’s worth it at a time when supporters view Trump as a man under siege from his enemies and fabricated controversies.
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“It might give him 30 seconds of seeing, ‘there’s my people,’†he said. “But that 30 seconds matter.â€
Now, it was time to do it again. The cue was a siren as a police vehicle blocked the road in front of the golf club.
“Here we go!†Mentser said. When he glimpsed the motorcade in the distance, he announced, “attention on deck.â€
A member of the group switched the soundtrack on a portable speaker from country music to “YMCA,†the Trump campaign anthem.
The convoy of black cars rolled down the street and turned into the golf club. Trump was wearing his red “Make America Great Again†hat and white polo shirt, and he reached across his chest to wave to the crowd with his left hand.

Brady Collier, a supporter of President Donald Trump, joins others gathered outside the Trump International Golf Club on March 29 in West Palm Beach, Fla.Â
“President Trump! We love you!†shouted Brady Collier, 31, who wore the same hat as the president.
It was over in less than 30 seconds.
A woman with white hair pulled up shortly afterward with her windows down and a dog in the passenger seat. She waved one middle finger at the golf club and another at Trump’s supporters. Someone called her a “baby killer†before she drove off.
The moment didn’t dampen Collier’s enthusiasm. Despite all the times that he’s witnessed Trump’s motorcade, he said “today was special.†This time, the limo seemed to roll slower and closer to the sidewalk, giving Collier a better glimpse of the president.
“There’s nothing cooler than that,†he said. “Other than Jesus Christ.â€
Collier, 31, is from Indiana but spent the winter in Florida, where he’s doing landscaping and food deliveries. It’s also an opportunity to show his support for Trump as often as possible.

Jared Petry, a supporter of President Donald Trump, wears a number 47 Trump shirt as he joins other Trump supporters outside the Trump International Golf Club on March 29 in West Palm Beach, Fla.
Jared Petry, 24, has been doing the same thing. He’s from Ohio and is one of the “Front Row Joes,†a group of superfans who traveled the country supporting Trump at campaign rallies. Petry was in Butler, Pennsylvania, last summer when the president was fired upon in an assassination attempt.
“I heard popping. I didn’t know what was going on,†he said.
Petry was near the front of the audience, and he captured video of Trump, surrounded by Secret Service agents, lurching to his feet and pumping his fist in the air.
“I knew he was OK,†he said.
Now, Petry is outside the golf course every weekend.
“He never forgets his supporters,†he said. “He waves at us.â€
The group chatted about going to a nearby restaurant where Fox News host Sean Hannity is sometimes spotted, but something different happened this time. A group of staff members from the golf club came over to invite them in for a meal.
Mentser said that had never happened before. They ate freshly made omelets and blueberry muffins and walked out to the veranda, where they could see Trump playing one of the holes on his golf course.
The group refrained from trying to get Trump’s attention, Mentser said.
“You don’t want to have the president post on Truth Social that ‘I was lining up my putt and my supporters threw off my game,’†he joked.
The president later said on social media that he was playing in a tournament alongside Finnish President Alexander Stubb, and the two leaders talked about the possibility of the U.S. purchasing icebreaker vessels.
Inside the club, there was artwork that riffed on Trump’s mugshot from a criminal case in Atlanta and an Associated Press photo of Trump after the shooting in Butler.
The whole experience, Mentser said, was “tremendous.â€
“It’s a small way for him to say thank you, I see you,†he said.
How Trump is trying to expand the already colossal U.S. prison system
How Trump is trying to expand the already colossal U.S. prison system

During his first month in office, President Donald Trump has made moves to expand the United States' already gargantuan carceral system. The Trump administration's goals, from mass deportation to harsher punishments for some crimes, are reliant on the federal government having access to more prison and jail cells. Without that carceral infrastructure, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to enact his promises on immigration and crime and punishment.
During his presidential campaign, Trump vowed to deport a . And while Trump's focus so far has been on undocumented immigrants, his criminalization efforts extend to U.S. citizens too. Attorney General Pam Bondi has that could encourage federal prosecutors to seek harsher sentences in many circumstances.
Detaining and incarcerating more people necessitates more places to put them, and the administration is already hitting limits, reports. During the first week of February, space inside Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities reached .
This lack of space is one of the major barriers to ramping up deportations, and ICE is limited by its budget. But Trump is now considering tapping into defense funds. Those funds "would allow civilian-run companies to quickly and rapidly expand temporary detention facilities," such as tents, .
ICE has also begun . But the BOP was already in crisis before Trump took office, . The of staff to incarcerated people has to provide security and basic services to the people imprisoned in its facilities, putting their safety—and that of employees—at risk.
Private prison companies are celebrating the Trump administration's need for more cells. In a Feb. 10 and earnings call, CoreCivic's CEO told investors that this was one of the most exciting periods of his career, and it may lead to the ." The company, which has contracts to detain people for ICE, said they expect the immigration agency to .
Company officials believe they may also see growth in the Bureau of Prisons, . One of Trump's first actions as president was to , after then-President Joe Biden canceled BOP private prison contracts. (The use of private detention for immigration has continued under both Democratic and Republican administrations, with for much of the infrastructure .)
Yet another sign of a private prison infrastructure expansion is a report that the Trump administration is preparing to restart family immigrant detention, including incarcerating families with young children, and is expected to ask companies to bid for contracts, .
While much attention has been given to private companies, local jails are the most common type of detention facility that ICE uses, , an advocacy organization working to end mass incarceration. The Biden administration already had agreements with local jails to house ICE detainees. But Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, has been encouraging sheriffs to make even more space available for immigrant detention. At the the first week of February, he told sheriffs: "We need your bed space."
Homan promised to make it easier for local jails to incarcerate people for ICE by lowering detention standards and limiting the number of federal inspections. He said he hoped to eliminate federal rules and instead defer to state-level standards. "If that's good enough for a U.S. citizen in your county, it's good enough for an illegal immigrant detained for us," Homan said.
Local officials are often incentivized to provide jail space to ICE because of reimbursement rates. Sheriffs and politicians have talked about how . Other sheriffs have said they will to do what the federal government is asking counties to do. Some local politicians are offering space because of ideological support for Trump's goals. An Arizona state senator said he plans to introduce a bill allowing ICE to use two empty state prisons for just a . And Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has offered Trump the use of .
Other state politicians have resisted cooperation with ICE. A law in Illinois prohibits local sheriffs from renting jail space for immigrant detention. Trump is now .
The president's search for more prison and jail cells for imprisoning both citizens and undocumented immigrants extends beyond U.S. borders.
In early February, Trump said he was considering El Salvador's offer to incarcerate both deported immigrants from any nationality and U.S. citizens in its infamous prisons. Trump said the Central American country offered to detain people for a "small fee." He also said, "." Experts , and while it is, in some cases, legal to deport a non-citizen to a third country, it's a complicated process.
Trump has also indicated that he wants to house more than in Cuba. The naval base has a long history of allegations of , and lawyers have that immigrants are being sent into a "," according to The Washington Post. Around three dozen people have already been sent to Guantánamo, but there are major hurdles to reaching the numbers Trump has projected. The most the facility has ever held is , according to NPR, and housing more would be incredibly expensive. In addition, the administration has already hit legal hurdles— a judge in New Mexico blocked, for now, the administration's effort to send three Venezuelan men to Guantánamo.
Many have speculated that Trump's sending people to Guantánamo, , is an attempt to intended to project power and instill fear.
But despite the significant legal and practical barriers, the Trump administration's numerous efforts to find more jail and prison cells indicate a clear desire to build a larger carceral system.
Trump has styled himself as a "law and order" president and is using that frame in his efforts at expanded incarceration. But despite his wide-ranging moves to increase prison and jail space, he has been selective in who should be imprisoned or punished for illegal behavior.
Trump himself has been convicted of numerous felonies. On the first day of his administration, he granted clemency to . And at the beginning of February, the Justice Department ordered prosecutors to against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who was accused in September of . Multiple department employees have . A Justice Department memo, obtained by The Associated Press, said the charges should be dropped because they were interfering with Adams' ."
was produced by , a nonpartisan, nonprofit news organization that seeks to create and sustain a sense of national urgency about the U.S. criminal justice system, and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.