In a move that sparked widespread reaction on social media, the Butler County Sheriff’s Office posted a photo of a pond with inflatable alligators, dubbing it the “Butler County Crocs.” According to FOX19, this was in response to Florida’s immigrant detention facility known as “Alligator Alcatraz,” a reference to its location in the swampy Everglades region. The Facebook post, which quickly went viral, was intended to represent an Ohio version of the controversial center playfully.
The fake photo posted by the sheriff’s office showed five inflatable alligators supposedly swimming in a digitally rendered pond. The gag was to seemingly link to Florida’s facility, and the sheriff’s office Facebook caption boasted, “Florida has Alligator Alcatraz!! We have the Butler County Crocs!!” However, this post drew a mixed reception, with some finding humor in the image and others decrying the office’s levity on an issue as grave as immigration detention. In exclusive reporting by the Cincinnati Enquirer, Sgt. Kim Peters confirmed that the pond was AI-generated, although the inflatable alligators were real.
The original Alligator Alcatraz was established to facilitate the Trump administration’s mass deportation plan, with the capacity to detain up to 3,000 people. Critics of the Florida facility have condemned the nickname as dehumanizing and raised concerns about the suitability of its temporary structures for housing individuals amidst the region’s extreme weather conditions. The Butler County Sheriff’s Office, under Sheriff Richard Jones’s leadership, has drawn attention this year for renewing contracts with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and empowering deputies to perform immigration arrests, as reported by FOX19…