ICE, Trump and immigration arrests
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ICE to ramp up deportations in 3 cities
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Multiple arrests near Portland ICE building
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Despite the regular press releases promoting their arrests and detentions, ICE has made it challenging to access consistent data on their activities since the Trump Administration took office.
"They did an injustice on him," says the stepmother of one of the men detained by ICE in Massachusetts recently.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is using different tactics to arrest people in Arizona. Here's what you need to know.
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ICE arrests Emelio Neftaly Pineda, brother of anti-ICE activist Lucy Pineda who runs Latinos Unidos en Massachusetts, after two previous deportations and multiple criminal convictions
How did just two detentions of migrants at an ICE check-in touch off a major backlash in Spokane, leading to 30 arrests? It's a story of the Trump times, writes columnist Danny Westneat.
The ramp up in deportations may be controversial to some but the results appear to be making America’s streets safer.
More than 75% of people booked into ICE custody in fiscal year 2025 had no criminal conviction other than an immigration or traffic-related offense, according to ICE records from October through the end of May. And less than 10% were convicted of serious crimes like murder, assault, robbery or rape.
Senate President Karen Spilka compared sweeping arrests by federal immigration authorities since President Donald Trump took office in January to Adolf Hitler’s rise to power in Europe during the