Agents from a handful of federal agencies combined to arrest more than 40 people in the country illegally early Sunday during a raid in Adams County, the local office of the Drug Enforcement Administration said.
It appears the north county has been a target for members of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement this week. Even before U.S. Rep. Nick Langworthy came to Mayville to voice his support for the Trump administration’s decision to go after criminals who are not citizens living in the United States,
President Trump's "border czar" Tom Homan and other top officials oversaw immigration enforcement efforts in Chicago on Sunday, as ICE officials announced Sunday 956 arrests in one day. The latest: ICE has made over 3,
Aurora, Colorado, which had been a focus for President Donald Trump during his campaign, will be the next city where an operation is conducted, sources told NBC News.
The Associated Press plans to observe operations this week. The DEA’s Chicago ... publicized around the country, which U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement says are ongoing.
Also Tuesday, Colorado Public Radio and CBS4 were among outlets that reported the U.S. military was preparing space at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora for staging, processing and temporary holding of “criminal aliens” detained in ICE operations, according to a U.S. Northern Command statement.
The Trump administration launched an immigration enforcement blitz nationwide Sunday that included multiple federal agencies and resulted in the arrest of nearly 1,000 people, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The measure is a response to a new directive from President Donald Trump’s administration that removes immigration enforcement restrictions at schools and other “sensitive places.”
Immigration since President Donald Trump's inauguration has been a hot topic. Here's what has happened, and what you need to know.
ICE’s daily arrests, which averaged 311 in the year ending Sept. 30, stayed fairly steady in the first days after Trump took office, then spiked dramatically Sunday to 956 and Monday to 1,179.
In a display of force aimed at increasing arrests and generating publicity, the administration targeted the nation’s largest city, where sanctuary policies limit cooperation with ICE.