President Donald Trump announced plans Wednesday to build a massive facility at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba to house deported migrants—following an escalation across the country in recent days as part of what Trump has promised would be the “largest deportation operation” in U.S. history.
Posts on social media claimed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents had targeted members of Native American nations for detention and deportation. Indeed, as ICE ramped up arrests for deportation,
Three days after Donald Trump’s second inauguration, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt declared an early accomplishment: the arrest, and deportation, of hundreds of immigrants she alleged were convicted of crimes. “We’re getting the bad, hard criminals out,” Trump told reporters the next day.
Another point of concern is the Trump administration's promise of "mass deportation" efforts across the country. According to local immigration attorneys, much of what Trump wants to do would require a significant amount of resources — financially, staffing-wise and spatially.
The ICE Air planes are chartered by ICE and are standard large planes that look no different from any commercial jet holding around 150 people. To expand deportations to the levels President Donald Trump has promised for his second term, ICE would have to increase its fleet significantly.
As U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents led Sai Pavuluri out of his Northwest Side home in handcuffs, he turned to look at the camera crew recording his arrest. He wore shorts and a T-shirt.
Fox News exclusively embedded with ICE Boston on Wednesday, witnessing the agency arrest multiple egregious criminal aliens as part of mass deportation efforts.
As promised during his campaign, second-term President Donald Trump is sending ICE agents to detain and deport those without proper documentation and those with criminal pasts out of the United States.
A Texas Republican congressman is calling for greater cooperation between ICE and local enforcement as the Trump administration launches new raids.
President Donald Trump’s mass deportation plan is making waves in the United States. There’s a growing concern of “What’s next?” for illegal immigrants and for those in law enforcement responsible for enforcing this.
"We will be tabling on campus asking fellow students to report their criminal classmates to ICE for deportation," a post from the student group on X read.