Trump's immigration crackdown continues
A New Jersey mayor says his city has been “unlawfully terrorized” after federal agents detained multiple people Thursday during what Immigration and Customs Enforcement called “a targeted enforcement operation.
The Trump administration intensified efforts to crack down on illegal immigration, making U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) a central focus.
President Donald Trump signed more executive orders aimed at shutting down the southern border, but the details on how migrants would be blocked from crossing remain unclear.
The Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department does not anticipate major changes in how it cooperates with federal immigration authorities even as officials across the country prepare for an expected crackdown on undocumented immigration under the new presidential administration.
The first of potentially many St. Louis area protests over new ICE deportation measures started Saturday as the volume on a national conversation was turned up.
Mexican national Oscar Valdivia-Salas was sentenced to 10 months in prison for illegal reentry into the U.S. after a previous conviction for the same offense.
The White House says deportation flights have begun. In Illinois, the Pritzker administration is conducting a “know-your-rights” campaign for foreign nationals in the country illegally. At an unrelated event Friday,
The “non-regulatory guidance” on immigration enforcement actions was issued two days after President Trump was inaugurated for his second term.
The president’s Day 1 actions included directives that fly in the face of legal limits on involving the military in domestic operations and the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship.
"I'm being realistic," Homan said in an interview with ABC "This Week" co-anchor Martha Raddatz. "We can do what we can with the money we have. We're going to try to be efficient,