ICE, Medicaid and Presidency of Donald Trump
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Immigration agents will arrest anyone they find in the country illegally, even if they lack a criminal record, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said in an exclusive CBS News interview.
L OS ANGELES — In the era of Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, even the simple act of buying pan dulce can set nerves on edge. So it was when Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass stopped by an East LA bakery one morning only to find the doors shut and the people inside conspicuously ignoring her knocks on the window.
We're highlighting a few articles focusing on the potential growth of ICE in the coming years, new tools they and Border Patrol agents can use to expand crackdowns and what the actual numbers say.
You served the United States of America with distinction and honor. Now, your country calls upon you to serve once more,” read an email sent by ICE to a retired employee and obtained by The
Louisiana, long known for its 'prison economy,' now houses more ICE detention facilities than any other non-border state.
President Trump says he wants to hire 10,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and 3,000 Border Patrol agents. The Department of Homeland Security says it's already making progress on new hires,
Four I.C.E. agents discuss their pride in protecting the public, explaining how detention centers operate and debunking claims about cages while detailing bond hearings
Arrests of unauthorized immigrants living in Minnesota have doubled, and the time it takes to deport someone has been cut in half since President Donald Trump took office. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents made 878 arrests in the state between Trump’s inauguration on Jan.
Civil rights groups sued the Trump administration on Wednesday in a bid to stop the government’s policy of allowing Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to arrest undocumented migrants who show up for immigration hearings at courthouses.
Trump and his top immigration aides have repeatedly said they are focusing on deporting "the worst of the worst" — people with violent criminal convictions. But the cases on Long Island underscore a national trend: Authorities are sweeping up many immigrants without prior criminal records or with misdemeanor offenses.