The Trump administration has tapped David Venturella, a former official at a private prison contractor, to serve as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed the appointment Tuesday.
Venturella, who most recently oversaw DHS contracts for immigration detention facilities, will assume the role on June 1, when current acting director Todd Lyons officially retires. Lyons announced his departure in April after leading the agency through one of its most turbulent stretches in recent memory.
A quieter approach after a year of chaos
The Trump administration selection reflects a deliberate shift in direction at DHS under Secretary Markwayne Mullin, who took the job following the removal of Kristi Noem amid a broader shakeup of Trump’s immigration team.
At his Senate confirmation hearing in March, Mullin was direct about what he wanted from the agency. His stated goal was for DHS to stop dominating the news cycle and start operating with less friction and more public trust. Venturella, known inside the agency for favoring lower-profile operations, appears to fit that vision.
The Trump administration has faced sustained pressure to recalibrate its immigration enforcement posture after federal agents shot and killed two American citizens during a deportation operation in Minneapolis earlier this year. That incident triggered national outrage and forced the White House to scale back some of its more aggressive tactics.
Venturella’s background and the GEO Group connection
Venturella served at ICE during both the Bush and Obama administrations, where he oversaw the agency’s Secure Communities program. That program coordinated deportation operations across local, state, and federal law enforcement. He left the public sector and went to work for GEO Group, a private company that contracts with the federal government to operate immigration detention facilities. He returned to government last year.
His appointment is expected to raise conflict of interest concerns. White House border czar Tom Homan, a Venturella ally, also worked at GEO Group before his current role. Together, their ties to the private detention industry are likely to draw scrutiny from watchdogs and lawmakers who have long questioned the influence of those contractors on immigration policy and detention conditions.
In March, the New York Times reported that Venturella contacted ICE officials in Miami and pressed them to detain and remove the ex-wife of a Trump ally who was locked in a custody dispute with the woman. DHS denied that the arrest was politically motivated, saying the woman was taken into custody over a criminal charge.
A leadership void that shows no signs of closing
ICE has not had a Senate-confirmed director since an Obama-era official left the post in January 2017. The last Senate confirmation for the role came in 2014. The agency has been led by a series of acting directors ever since, a trend that has continued regardless of which party holds the White House.
The pattern means Venturella will enter the job without a formal mandate from the Senate and without the institutional standing that a confirmed director would carry. That may not be a problem in practice but it does signal something about how both administrations and Congress have come to treat one of the federal government’s most consequential law enforcement agencies.
Whether Venturella can deliver on Mullin’s promise of a quieter, less headline-generating ICE will depend in part on whether the White House and the Trump administration is willing to match the rhetoric with restraint. So far, that has been a difficult balance to strike.

