Deportations start at Alligator Alcatraz
Digest more
President Donald Trump's promise for the “largest deportation program” in U.S. history has not only led to a surge in Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Maryland and the rest of the country,
4d
FOX 5 Atlanta on MSNGeorgia among top states as non-criminal ICE arrests surge around country
Under President Trump’s intensified immigration enforcement, nearly half of ICE arrests nationwide in June 2025 involved individuals with no criminal convictions—up from 23% in May.
4d
Axios on MSNICE arrests of noncriminals surge in the DMV
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests of people without criminal charges or convictions have jumped in D.C., Virginia and Maryland, newly obtained data shows. Why it matters: The numbers illustrate a major shift that occurred soon after the Trump administration tripled ICE's daily arrest quota.
In Frederick and other Maryland counties, sheriff’s offices participate in the “287(g)” program, allowing ICE to delegate immigration enforcement abilities to state and local law officials.
As the number of immigration arrests in the L.A. region quadrupled from April to June, seven out of 10 immigrants arrested in June had no criminal conviction.
The spike in ICE enforcement across the country has been accompanied by a massive surge in arrests occurring outside the usual criminal justice pipeline, including a fourfold increase of street arrests in these states, and a fivefold increase in arrests of immigrants who have no criminal charges or convictions.
Newly revealed arrest records offer the clearest look yet at how President Trump’s immigration crackdown is unfolding in the state.
Some city and Police Commission leaders have called on the LAPD to do more to identify masked individuals who are taking part in immigration sweeps.
A Tribune analysis reveals a sharp overall increase in the number of people booked into detention processing centers in the Chicago area in the 150 days since President Trump was sworn into
Metro Atlanta jails are holding more immigrants for ICE under Georgia’s HB 1105, with Gwinnett and DeKalb counties seeing the biggest increases.