Trump administration, New York City and immigration
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On the night of July 4, a group of assailants mounted a coordinated attack on an immigration detention facility near Fort Worth, Texas, using vandalism and fireworks to draw officers out and into the sights of two shooters positioned in a line of trees across the street,
Albuquerque Democratic Mayor Tim Keller issued an executive order on Monday to “protect immigrant rights" amid ongoing ICE raids occurring throughout the country.
The speculation follows "border czar" Tom Homan’s promise to “flood the zone” – New York City – with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. The threat followed last weekend’s shooting of an off-duty Customs and Border Protection agent at Fort Washington Park in Upper Manhattan.
Trump’s “one-two punch” targeting immigration courts will test Texas detention centers, experts warn
Moves to end bond for migrants and fire dozens of immigration judges deprive undocumented detainees of due process and may keep them in overcrowded centers longer, experts say.
Statistics show dramatic rises in ICE arrests under President Trump compared to Biden's final months, though attacks on ICE personnel are up 830%.
ICE agents last month arrested the most people in at least five years, but deportations are still lagging far behind what President Donald Trump has promised.
The hardening of public opinion against mass immigration that took place when the border was in shambles under Biden may be softening as net immigration drops.
Trump extended a federal hiring freeze until Oct. 15, with exceptions for the military, immigration enforcement and national security.
Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino announced Wednesday that 39-year-old Elpidio Reyna was arrested for allegedly throwing rocks at federal officers