99% Invisible - Ambassador Bridge
Episode Date: August 26, 2025A billionaire family’s private bridge empire shaped Detroit for decades, sparking battles over power, neighborhoods, and the future of an international crossing.Ambassador Bridge Subscribe to Sirius...XM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
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This is 99% Invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
Detroit, Michigan is the home to the Ambassador Bridge,
which links Detroit to the Canadian border city of Windsor.
The ambassador is essential.
CNN once called it the most economically important
one and a half miles of roadway in the Western Hemisphere.
Every day, endless lines of trucks
wait for hours on a concrete plaza flanked by rows of traffic cones
so they can be processed by a border agent.
That's producer, Andrew Laypen.
The ambassador is the linchpin of the North American auto industry.
Cars are constantly being driven back and forth to different factories.
Last year, more than 2 million trucks drove across the ambassador.
In fact, 30% of all trade between the U.S. and Canada rolls over this bridge.
Everybody has to use the bridge because they basically don't have any other choice.
there's a tunnel nearby that's too small for most trucks to drive through,
and the next closest international bridge is some 65 miles away.
To get to the bridge, all those freight trucks first have to drive by a residential neighborhood
in southwest Detroit, called Mexican Town.
And for many years, they had to drive right through it.
Mexican Town is right at the bridge's entry point,
and residents have suffered through loud honking and negative health effects for decades.
Here's how Sam Butler, president of a local neighborhood group, described it to me.
There is this black soot on windows or on the outside of people's homes that face the bridge,
that you can literally take your finger, wipe off a piece of this black soot,
living so close to a international crossing that gets 10,000 trucks per day.
Folks in Windsor don't like the bridge either. It's not well-maintained.
Large chunks of concrete have been known to break off and fall.
on the streets below.
Basically, everyone in the surrounding area hates this bridge, but they have nobody to complain
to.
They can't petition the city or the county or even the U.S. or Canadian governments because
none of them own this bridge.
In fact, for the longest time, the Ambassador Bridge was owned by one guy.
You had to take it up with him if you could get a hold of him.
I'm a quiet private man, but somebody decided.
to make me something other than being private.
I didn't.
That's Manuel Maroon.
He went by Maddie.
He owned the Ambassador Bridge from 1979 until 2018
when the ownership transferred to his son, Matthew.
The elder Maroon may have been private
in the sense that he almost never gave interviews.
But for decades, he was, quietly,
one of the most important people in Detroit.
When Maddie Maroon died in 2020,
he was a billionaire.
A good chunk of his empire was funded with bridge tolls and the duty-free gas stations on the bridge.
By this point, you're probably asking the obvious question.
How can one man and his family own an international bridge?
A critical piece of infrastructure that so many people have to use.
Actually, a lot of critical infrastructure is privately owned.
And the story of the Maroon family and Detroit shows how this kind of relationship can go totally wrong.
The Ambassador Bridge has always been privately owned, and when it was built in the 1920s, that wasn't so unusual.
At the time, the economy was booming, and the country was modernizing.
But local governments were often slow to act.
So big infrastructure projects, like bridges, sometimes needed private investors to get off the ground.
In Detroit, the auto industry was taking off, but there was no easy way to get parts across the river from Kansas.
Canada. They needed a bridge. The city and the state weren't building one, so private investors
started raising money and drawing up plans. I should add, the mayor of Detroit at the time
did not like the idea that this bridge would be privately owned. He tried to stop it. But after
the city passed a ballot proposal by a huge margin, he had no choice. The stakes were driven into
the ground in 1927. At a ceremony to mark the occasion, a 16-year-old girl in high
high heels, bounced across a catwalk over the Detroit River. This girl, Helen Austin,
was the daughter of one of the bridge's original investors. Reports at the time said she was
the first person to walk across the river. Here's what one local newspaper wrote that day.
To the clouds of dark brown smoke that rose above the railroad, one could vision a mighty
steel structure of greater clearance than the Brooklyn Bridge, spanning the Detroit River and
opening a new era in continental transportation.
But the celebrations were short-lived.
The ambassador struggled after the Great Depression, and for years had financial problems.
The owners managed to keep it open by making the bridge into a publicly traded company
with shares available on the stock market.
For a time, this approach helped keep the bridge solvent.
But ultimately, the decision to sell shares opened the door to a takeover by one man,
a man nobody in Detroit had ever really heard of.
His basic biography ought to be that of Rags to Rich's American hero,
and instead he's probably the most disliked businessman in Detroit
by far in a couple of generations.
That's John Gallagher.
He's a retired Detroit Free Press journalist
and one of the only people to have ever interviewed Maroon,
who really was a self-made success.
Maroon started working in his dad's garage after college,
and tenaciously grew that into a local trucking empire.
Maddie told me during one of the few times when he was talking to reporters
that as a teenager, he had pumped gas for Jimmy Hoffa.
And, you know, it came from sort of rags to riches, built this enormous fortune,
mainly through his trucking company.
Maddie Maroon outbid some fierce competition,
including from Warren Buffett to get total ownership of the bridge.
Maddie Maroon actually had a long history with the ambassador before he brought.
purchased it. His family had been pushed out of their home by the original construction
project. But 50 years later, the bridge was all his. Basically, a license to print money.
You have a family-controlled private company of scale, right, that, you know, you do the
mass, but they must have been turning millions and millions of dollars of unbelievable profit
from this asset. This is Steve Tobachman, a former Democratic Michigan State Representative
from Southwest Detroit.
He says, after Maddie Maroon bought the bridge in 1979,
he became a notorious figure in the community.
Describing every shenanigan
Maddie Maroon got up to in Detroit would take hours.
I'm not going to do that.
But baseline, according to DeBachman,
Maroon didn't do very much to address the long-standing complaints
about noise and dirt in the neighborhoods near the bridge.
In fact, there wasn't much community outreach at all.
There was no presence for this company in the community other than the commerce they were doing.
So there weren't large investments.
There wasn't like there was a Manny Maroon community center or rec center or, you know, reading room at the high school or anything like that.
Detroit's wealthiest businessman have tended to give a lot to local charities, especially when the city started losing people in the mid-20th century.
But Maddie Maroon wasn't a big public philanthropist.
He was more focused on expanding the bridge empire.
In the 1980s, Maroon bought up a bunch of land near the bridge.
Then he presented a plan to expand the ambassador's entryway, the opening plaza.
This expansion was so the bridge could accommodate more traffic and bring in more tolls.
To accomplish this, Maroon needed to buy up the land near the bridge's opening.
But there was one problem.
That land was already occupied by.
a vibrant residential neighborhood.
I mean, the bridge company wasn't thinking about what they were wiping out.
They had tunnel vision.
Bridge vision, I guess, is what it should be called.
Kathy Wendler is a Detroit native.
She worked for the Southwest Detroit Business Association for decades, first joining in 1981,
two years after the Maroons took over the bridge.
Her job was community development.
She soon realized that meant she would have
have to oppose the Maroons.
It was located in a community.
It was located in a place.
And that place was at least as important as that bridge.
Important and to its residents pretty special.
Southwest Detroit was not some big industrial depot, far from it.
This is a closely knit neighborhood.
A lot of the Motor City is really spread out.
Wide boulevards meant for a lot of cars.
But southwest, it's dense, and it's accessible.
It was walkable.
You didn't have to have a car.
You could get groceries.
You could go to the doctor.
You could get dry cleaning done.
It was vibrant.
For the folks living here, the neighborhood felt special.
And the Maroons and their ambitious plans quickly became everyone's business.
Here's Sam Butler again, the head of a local neighborhood group.
I don't think it's hyperbole to say that a lot of neighbors feel like the bridge company has historically been an existential threat to the neighborhood.
Throughout the 80s, Maddie Maroon bought up a lot of property to expand his bridge empire.
His representatives went door-to-door in the Mexican town neighborhood, purchasing one house after another and putting pressure on the residents who stayed.
Anthony Benevides is a southwest Detroit community activist.
He says the Maroons used a tactic called Blockbuster.
to buy up local real estate.
Basically, they would buy up houses
and depopulate the street
so that eventually everyone would leave.
He was strategically buying houses
throughout the block
and just letting him sit there.
They were vacant, so of course
you had drugs, you had prostitutes, you had
wild dogs. Anthony
loves his community. He's
worked for years at a public park in the
area, in full view of the bridge.
And he saw the systematic
destruction of his neighborhood up close.
The people next door to that house, they sat there looking at a vacant house for years until they are begging Manny Maroon to buy their house.
Sometimes the sales agents gave no indication they were there on behalf of the Maroons.
They'd represent companies with names like Mexican Town Real Estate Company.
Some unsuspecting homeowners were desperate to get out of the area that was being hollowed out and collapsing from blight.
They were happy to so.
Only later did they learn the truth about who bought their property.
Maroon wanted to buy up the land near the bridge so he could one day expand its entry plaza and collect more tolls.
But he bought lots of other property, too.
Enough to become a true baron of Detroit real estate.
One website that tracks landlords in the city estimates the Maroons have owned as many as 978 properties in Detroit alone.
And the Windsor Star estimates that at one point Maroon owned another.
139 properties in Windsor at the bridge's entry point on the Canadian side.
A lot of the property the Maroons were buying wasn't anywhere near the bridge.
And once they owned them, the Maroons weren't that interested in doing anything with them.
In fact, the Maroons accumulated so many blight tickets over the years that they struck
more than one deal with the city to pay them off in negotiated lump sums.
This kind of thing, buying property and just letting it go to seed, it was happening a lot in Detroit
around this time. The city was declining rapidly in the 80s, and land was selling for cheap.
That meant land speculators could sweep in, take advantage of an economic downturn, and hoard real estate
just in case Detroit ever made a comeback without having to worry about keeping it up.
Who was going to foreclose on you? The city? They were broke.
If you can buy that property for $500, $1,000, $3,000, I guess you're investing that on a
speculation that hopefully one day, someday, somebody comes and wants to buy that property,
and they're willing to pay you multiples of that, you know, a few thousand dollar purchase
price, and the properties become valuable. And the worst case scenario is you lose the property
to tax foreclosure. But that is a 30-year gamble, and then you're only out your original
cost. Maddie Maroon's buying spree got so big that he eventually landed on a major piece of Detroit
history. In 1992, Maroon purchased Michigan Central, a massive former train station in the southwest
neighborhood of Corktown. The station was a relic of an earlier era in Detroit, when people still
commuted by train. And its giant, tiled ceilings also welcomed newly arriving migrants and
black Americans coming up during the Great Migration. The building was known as Detroit's Ellis Island.
Michigan Central had seen better days even when Maddie Maroon bought it, but he did nothing with it,
besides building a fence around the property and putting in some windows after the old ones had been busted by looters.
A majestic transportation hub rotting away in plain sight.
To a lot of people, it felt like a metaphor for what had become of Detroit.
Carl Craig, a Detroit techno pioneer, cited the building as a weird kind of inspiration for himself and other musicians as they developed this revolution.
new post-industrial sound in the Motor City.
This is a typical example of Detroit.
Just beautiful structure.
It was booming when I was a kid.
And now 20 years later, it's just totally fucked up.
By the 1990s, Michigan Central was a magnet for graffiti and scavengers.
It embodied the dreaded Detroit stereotype of ruin porn.
Urban explorers went spulunking inside to gawk at the ravages of the rust belt.
Like in this clip from the 2012 documentary, Detropia,
in which an opera tenor wanders through Michigan Central.
The walls are crumbling and filled with graffiti.
It looks like something out of a zombie movie.
And this is what I think is so sad about the whole situation.
The original owners of the bridge were trying to help grow Detroit's economy during its boom years.
Decades later, the new owners were coming out on the other end
and helping to accelerate the city's disastrous fall.
While many of their properties fell into disrepair,
the Maroons still made huge profits because their main business,
the Ambassador Bridge, became even more indispensable after the passage of NAFTA,
in 1992. Remember NAFTA? You know, the agreement designed to eliminate tariffs between the United
States and Canada. Anyhow, NAFTA led to a big increase in commerce between the two countries
and made the bridge essential. Forbes magazine once estimated the bridge makes $60 million in revenue
every year. After the passage of NAFTA, Maddie Maroon became notably more ambitious in his
dealings with Detroit. He made a pretty brazen move to expand his business.
by starting construction on a second bridge, right beside the first one.
Traffic had increased so much on the ambassador, there was clearly demand for another bridge.
The Maroons knew that.
They also knew that if they didn't act on that demand, the second bridge would be built by someone else,
someone who would threaten their monopoly.
Maddie Maroon didn't have permission from the city of Detroit or the city of Windsor
or from anybody to start building a new bridge.
In fact, Maddie Maroon was supposed to be doing something completely different, something positive for the community.
In 2004, Maroon signed a $258 million deal with the city for an initiative called The Gateway Project.
The Michigan Department of Transportation, residents, stakeholders, and community leaders are teaming up to improve the international gateway into Michigan, the region, and Detroit.
For the Gateway Project, the government would build more roads to ease traffic, and in exchange, Maroon promised to build entryways to connect the bridge to the highway system, so trucks would no longer have to drive through the Mexican Town neighborhood.
It seemed like a great deal for everybody.
But instead of holding up his end of the bargain, Maddie Maroon's company started construction on a second bridge in 2007.
They didn't get very far.
In the end, they only built two ramps that didn't connect to anything.
We call it the Dukes a Hazard Bridge right now.
So it's like, you know, it's never even built.
It's just like a ramp going up.
For years, Maddie Maroon promised to take action and connect up with the highway.
But he never did.
All he did was build that bridge to nowhere, claiming it was part of the gateway deal.
The city appeared helpless.
They waited five years for Maroon to hold up his part of the bargain.
Members of the community fought back against this kind of behavior with dramatic public protests.
Anthony Benavides remembers one of them.
There's people that laid on the road so his trucks couldn't go through.
Literally laid on the road, that's how involved they were.
They literally put their bodies in front of trucks.
More than 100 people formed a human chain to block access to the bridge.
Some elected officials joined them.
So did the Occupy movement.
And the protests spread out of 99%.
And the protests spread out.
The Metro Times, the Alt Weekly, published a cartoon depicting Maroon as Mr. Burns from The Simpsons.
Protesters carried a giant puppet of Maddie Maroon and paraded him in front of Michigan Central,
where they chastised him for owning so many blighted properties.
I'm here because we are sick and tired of Maddie Maroon.
and his broken, torn down, his houses that's dilapidated, renting them to people.
This is crazy with all the money that he has.
He's a billionaire. He's a CEO.
He's the only one getting rich.
Despite these protests and pushback from politicians like Steve Tobachman and Rashida Talib,
the Maroons still largely got their way,
partly because Maddie Maroons spent heavily on lobbying in Michigan.
For years when the state would raise the prospect of dealing with the bridge's problems,
those efforts would die quickly.
They are also known to be very litigious.
To avoid drawn-out legal battles,
local governments usually decided the best way forward
was to cut deals with the family on all bridge matters.
But with so much pushback against the Maroons,
a showdown became inevitable.
In January 2012,
Maroon and his longtime right-hand man, Dan Stamper,
were hauled before a county judge.
Fed up with their foot-dragging on the Gateway Project,
the judge ordered both of them to spend one night in jail.
Maroon was 84 years old.
One of the richest and most powerful men in the city
was thrown in county lockup.
John Gallagher remembers this well.
It was astonishing that a guy of his stature,
I mean, a billionaire businessman,
would be thrown in jail for resisting, you know, a court order.
The stay-in-the-pen wasn't too bad for Maddie Maroon.
He got approval to have the Detroit Athletic Club,
a swanky member-only venue in the city.
send over a catered dinner that night.
When he got out, he had a big smile on his face.
Hi.
How are you?
I'm fine.
How do you feel to be out?
I love our country.
Best country in the world.
For a long time, it seemed like the Maroons Bridge Monopoly would never end.
Ultimately, the only group of people with the clout and the ability to stand up to the Maroons was the Great White North.
Yes.
came to the rescue to bail out America. And when Canada came swinging, the final battle over
the future of the ambassador began. Canada's top ministers actually agreed with the maroons
about something. There should be a second bridge connecting Detroit to Windsor. They just didn't
want Maddie to own it. Beginning in 2004, the Canadian government made a series of proposals
to build a second bridge. Their bridge would link up directly with the freeway, making the trip
easier for truckers and the quality of life better for the neighborhoods in Detroit.
It would introduce competition, and it would bring back pedestrian walkways.
The ambassador had closed theirs years ago.
A Canadian diplomat named Roy Norton was the public face of the effort.
He made it clear, breaking up the Maroon's bridge monopoly would be no easy task.
I confess to having had periodic visions of a Maroon-owned 18-wheeler bearing down on me
and forcing me off the road as I crisscrossed the state of Michigan.
The bottom line in Michigan, the Maroons win.
At least historically, that's been the case.
Norton called the Maroons liars and scoundrels.
He chastised the lawmakers who took their campaign money
and suggested the whole family should be investigated for violating antitrust laws.
This tough talk paid off.
In 2012, an agreement was reached.
A second bridge would be built and controlled.
controlled entirely by the Canadian government.
It would be named the Gordy Howe Bridge, in honor of the Canadian hockey star
who played most of his career with the Detroit Red Wings, a symbol of bi-national unity.
And here's the sweetener.
Canada would pay the entire cost of the new bridge.
American taxpayers would pay nothing.
This didn't sit well with the Maroons.
Another bridge would mean they'd have to adopt competitive pricing and make costly improvements
just to stay afloat.
So they pulled out all the stops to try and prevent the Gordy Howe from being built.
Maddie Maroon's son, Matthew, made his case to the media.
We've got a Michigan business that's been here for 83 years
and contributed economically to the city and the state.
The Maroons fought back with some pretty aggressive tactics.
In 2011, when the Gordy Howe was still in the planning stage,
a bunch of yellow eviction notices went up in a neighborhood close to the proposed bridge site.
A lot of people, understandably, freaked out.
But the notices were fake, a scare tactic meant to drum up opposition to the Gordy Howe Bridge.
A conservative lobbying group, Americans for Prosperity, took credit for the fake eviction notices.
Then there was the ballot box.
Maddie Maroon spent more than $30 million to get an amendment passed by Michigan voters called Proposal 6.
Proposal 6 would make all future bridge projects subject to a referendum by both states.
and local voters.
The whole thing was designed to make approval
for projects like the Gordy Howe Bridge
much more difficult.
Groups supported by Maddie Maroon
ran ads implying that voters
somehow would have to pay
for the Gordy Howe Bridge.
And that Proposal 6 would stop that from happening.
Here's why Michigan voters
are voting yes.
On Proposal 6,
there's no such thing as a free bridge.
There's no such thing as a free bridge.
Someone pays.
I don't care who owns the bridge.
All I care about is paying for a new one without even being asked.
Yes means we have the power.
No means we give it away to the politicians.
They called their campaign, the people should decide.
Ultimately, the bridge amendment failed, with 60% of voters rejecting it.
Still, the Maroon family wouldn't go down without a fight.
The Maroons took the new bridge authority to court, filing lawsuit after lawsuit to delay its construction,
and appealing all the way to the state Supreme Court.
Eventually, they ran out of legal avenues, but they were able to drag things out for six years.
In 2018, during President Trump's first term in office, the Canadian bridge was due to finally begin construction.
So Maddie Maroon tried a Hail Mary to save his family's monopoly.
Dear Mr. President, there are two grand new bridges being proposed in Detroit between America and Canada.
One is American-made, American-owned.
It uses American-made steel, 5,000 American workers.
The other would be Canadian-made, Canadian-owned, Canadian workers.
Who knows who would make the steel?
This ad ran on Fox News in the hopes that Trump would see it and intervene.
Given that the president was known to watch Fox News constantly, it wasn't a bad plan.
In this ad, the Maroons tried to paint their idea for a bridge project as a patriotic alternative.
Choose American.
Thank you, sir.
Signed America.
Despite all of this, let's just call it lobbying.
Trump never intervened.
And the Gordyhow Bridge finally broke ground that June.
This fall, the Gordyhow Bridge is set to open.
It's a brand new symbol of Canadian-American friendship.
At a moment when relations between the two countries and their leaders
are at their lowest point since the war of 1812,
when British troops burned down the White House.
As another Canadian once said, isn't it ironic?
Since the loss of the bridge monopoly, the Maroons have taken a step back.
The same month that Gordyhow Bridge began construction in 2018,
the family sold Michigan Central to the Ford Motor Company for $90 million.
In 2020, Maddie Maroon died at the age of 93 from heart failure.
He had already transferred control of the family's enterprises,
including the bridge, to his son Matthew.
Since then, the Maroons have continued their blockbusting
in new areas of the city,
connected to other business ventures.
But the tone and the family's tactics have softened.
They've held public events.
They reached a community agreement with Southwest Detroit
that clearly defines where they can build and where they can't.
And earlier this summer,
they tore down the bridge to nowhere.
And Michigan Central, oh boy, Ford Motor Company spent nearly a billion dollars renovating it
and turned it into a tech hub and tourist destination with a luxury hotel on the way.
They turned the whole project into a major community effort.
And they even welcomed the station's looters to return the historic stuff they stole, no questions asked.
And many did.
When the building reopened last year, it included a public exhibit of all that report.
patriated loop.
A reopening concert brought out Detroit's finest musicians, like Eminem, Diana Ross, and Jack White.
Between the new bridge and Michigan Central reopening, there are a lot of reasons for
Detroiters to celebrate the city right now.
In 2013, Detroit filed the largest municipal bankruptcy in American history.
But from this embarrassing failure, things started looking up.
New people and businesses have moved in, and developers reshaped the city at lightning speed.
The new bridge has been part of that excitement.
Here's John Gallagher.
There's a generational change where some younger people came in,
some people who didn't have the same negative image of the city that maybe their parents had or something.
And the city just began to turn around.
And, you know, by 2015, 2020, it was pretty apparent that a lot of great stuff was happening.
It's hard not to see the shift in attitudes around Detroit.
When I interviewed Kathy Wendler at a Michigan welcome center, she excitedly pointed through the window to the sidewalk outside, not to the Ambassador Bridge, but to something else.
I don't know if they just caught that couple with the two kids walking by.
but at one point
to this neighborhood
would have never been a place
where a family moved in.
For Kathy Wendler,
this was a sign of what she's been fighting for
over the past few decades,
the revitalization of the Motor City.
It's tremendous,
especially for the people
who held out and said
we raised our kids here,
we sent them to school here,
properties that are still here are getting invested in, new constructions going on.
There is hope. There's always hope. If you can live long enough, there's always hope.
For decades, the Maroons have been seen as civic villains by lots of people in Detroit.
Maybe things would have turned out differently if another family had owned the bridge.
But Kathy Wendler says, it doesn't matter. To her, there's a much simpler lesson.
here. International border crossing shouldn't be privately owned.
The Ambassador Bridge has been in the news recently for some pretty upsetting reasons. More with
Andrew Lapin after this. So I'm here with producer Andrew Lapin. Hey, Andrew. Hey, Roman. So you live in
Michigan. And how often do you actually?
use the ambassador bridge.
All right. Well, I'm not a long-haul trucker, so I'm not using it all the time.
But whenever I go into Canada, yeah, I do pay my fair share of coin to Maroon Enterprises.
A few weeks ago, the family and I took a trip to Toronto.
We drove over the bridge. We paid our toll.
And then we sat through the customary eight to ten traffic lights that separate the bridge
from the trans-Canadian highway on the Windsor side. So we got the full trucker experience.
And so how excited are you for the new Gordy Hombridge to open?
I think this is really cool.
Everybody here is talking about it.
I should add that like Gordy Howe was also the originator of the phrase elbows up,
which has become this like Canadian anti-Trump rallying cry,
which I just think is kind of funny in the current moment.
We did recently hear that even though it was slated to open up this fall,
it might actually get delayed until next year.
That's looking like more and more of a distinct possibility.
And that's because the Canadian government, which is paying for all the construction, has not yet fully built out the entry ramps.
So even though the bridge itself is they say 98% complete, something like that, some of the surrounding infrastructure isn't quite there yet.
Well, there really is nothing easy about the infrastructure, you know, bridging these two countries at this point, is there?
No, I guess that's why they only do it once every hundred years.
So one of the reasons we want to do this story about the Ambassador Bridge is that it's,
been in the news recently. So could you fill us in on some of the recent developments?
Yeah, for sure. It's been in the news for a pretty dark reason. So the ambassador is obviously
an international crossing, and there's been a lot of focus in this new Trump administration on the
border and on various international crossings, mostly on the southern border, but also here in the
north. We just had Christy Nome, Trump's Homeland Security Secretary in town recently doing an event
called Secure Our Northern Border, where she claimed that gang members from South and Central America
might be plotting to cross the ambassador. And I don't really know how likely that is. But
concurrent with that, we have seen increased detainments of migrants at the bridge, mostly by
Customs and Border Patrol, but also increasingly by ICE. So there has been more activity at the
Canadian border. I mean, we mostly hear about news on the southern border, but the Canadian border is
also showing a lot of activity. Yeah. And at the ambassador, there's like this unusual twist to it
that is so strange, which is that this bridge, it's not particularly well marked. Like only in the last
several years has it actually connected directly with the highway. And the signs that tell you you're
going on to the bridge come at you really fast. And it's sort of notorious because it says bridge to
Canada, no reentry to the U.S. And so if you take that, you are stuck. You kind of have to go over the
bridge. There was a Detroit free press investigation recently that found, oh, actually there is a way
that is completely unmarked where if you make this turn, you don't have to go on the bridge and pay
the toll, but most people just don't know about it. So they're pushed into the bridge, into this
toll lane. They're forced into Canada. They have to turn back around, which means they have to get
processed by border security. And we've just seen a lot of migrants get nabbed this way since the
start of the year. Like a lot of people make this turn by accident, but just a lot of people make this turn by
accident, but just in the first part of this year from January to March, the statistic came out
that more than 210 people were detained at this bridge crossing, and more than 90% of them
had crossed onto the bridge by accident.
90%.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, this is a number that comes from the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan and the offices
of Rashida Talib, who's the Detroit Congresswoman, who made this congressional visit in April
to this detention site.
right next to the bridge that's run by CBP.
So I spoke recently with someone at the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center,
their legal group that helps immigrants in the state.
So they worked with the ACLU to like get these numbers,
which they say come directly from CBP,
including that stat about more than 90% crossing it by accident.
We don't really know how many people have been detained in this manner since March.
So since then, I've been told that, you know,
CBP has kind of stopped holding migrants in these windowless detention.
facilities, but that's only because they've farmed out the responsibility of holding the migrants
to ICE, which is using this privatized facility at the other end of the state.
Oh, my God.
So have any news stories leaked out about who is getting detained and, you know, what the tragedy
of their detainment is all about?
Yeah, there are some pretty horrifying stories here, just to give you a sense of just how
incidental all this tends to happen.
There was this one mother with her family, and they were just trying to get to Costco,
but they had accidentally mapped out directions to the Costco in Windsor, which took them
across the bridge, which resulted in the CBP throwing them in a detention facility for several
days.
And then there was this other very well-publicized story from the New York Times, this Venezuelan
man named Ricardo Prada Vasquez, who had been working in Detroit as a delivery driver.
And so in January, actually, like a few days before Trump's swearing in, Vasquez made a wrong
turn onto the Ambassador Bridge and was added to a deportation list. And then, you know, months later,
his family had not heard from him. And he essentially seems to have vanished from the government's
records of migrants that they had deported. So there was this period of time where he seemed to have
been functionally disappeared by the U.S. government. People just didn't know where he was.
Since then, there have been reports that indicate that he was sent to Seekot, which is a notorious
prison in El Salvador where, you know, Trump is sending a lot of these migrants. So he was not sent
back to his country of origin, which was Venezuela. And the Department of Homeland Security has claimed
that he was affiliated with gangs and that they had reason to deport him. But again, all of this
happened because he drove on to the ambassador by accident. Right. I mean, I mean, it's not the
bridge's fault that the government has taken these sort of horrific actions against the people
who crossed the border by accident. But the way I see the world is that bad design can
tributes to horrible decisions and everything gets more complicated and it adds to the bridge's
complicated legacy. Yeah, totally. I mean, this to me feels like one more kind of unfortunate
chapter in the history of this giant piece of infrastructure that has been managed in these
very specific ways over the years and how it's sort of formed this chokehold on the livelihoods
of everybody who lives around it and relies on it because this bridge has been the only game
in town. It took so much work just to get these highways to link up with the bridge, and then
it took so much work recently to improve the signage that there's a big Canadian flag on it for
people who may not read English or may not be able to decipher the sign quickly enough. But all
of this stuff just adds to this stew of reasons why it's probably not in the best interest of the
public to rely so much on the owners of this one bridge. You know, you may have heard about this other
instance, these protests in 2022 where these like Canadian truckers literally blocked the bridge
for several days because they were protesting COVID vaccine mandates, like nobody could get through.
This was like a six-day protest. And over those six days, $300 million was lost because the auto industry
and all these other businesses that relied on the bridge just had literally no way to get their
product across the bridge. So it helps explain why Canada was so desperate.
it to get another bridge in place here and why so many people are fed up with the fact that
this one bridge has been the only economic through line between these two extremely valuable
nations.
Well, it's really sobering stuff, and it's such a fascinating story.
I'm so happy that you reported it for us.
I mean, I just enjoyed the process of watching the story develop so much.
So thank you for reporting it.
I appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
It's been a real treat to dive into this.
99% Invisible was produced this week by Andrew Lapin.
Andrew made a podcast called Radioactive about Detroit's inflammatory radio priest,
Father Charles Coughlin, and you can check it out at Andrew Lapin.org.
Editing this week by Chris Perube, fact-checking by Graham Hesha,
mixed by Martin Gonzalez, music by Swan Real.
Special thanks this week to Thomas Klug, Ray Lazarno, Glenn Lapin, and Anna Megdale,
and the archival staffs at the Burton Historical Collection at the Detroit Public Library,
and the Bentley Library at the University of Michigan for help with research.
Recording help this week from Peg Watson at Michigan Public and Eric Wazon at Solid Sound.
Our executive producer is Kathy, too.
Our senior editor is Delaney Hall.
Kurt Colstead is the digital director.
The rise of the team includes Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Lay,
Lashamadon, Jacob Medina Gleason, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% of visible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the SiriusXM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north, in the Pandora building.
And beautiful, uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find us on blue sky as well as our own Discord server.
You can find all of our past episodes at 99PI.org.