ICE Entices Its Retirees
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Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials will be given access to the personal data of the nation’s 79 million Medicaid enrollees, including home addresses and ethnicities, to track down immigrants who may not be living legally in the United States,
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The Mirror US on MSNICE pleads with former agents to return to work as deportation quotas missedO fficials from the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are reportedly pleading for former agents to return to service as the agency, recently made the largest law enforcement operation in the country, struggles to keep pace with the Trump administration 's unprecedented arrest quotas.
A Queens high school student has been reunited with his family in New York after being detained by federal immigration officials since June.
Immigrants who arrive illegally in the U.S. may be detained for months or years as they await a resolution to their immigration cases.
The memo instructs ICE employees on how to deport people to countries other than their country of origin, in some cases in as little as six hours.
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.
A former acting ICE director told Newsweek that increased resources could allow the agency to deport public safety risks.
Immigration officials may deport migrants to countries other than their own with as little as six hours' notice, Trump administration memo says.
A Guatemalan national charged with first-degree rape remains in Limestone County Jail under an immigration hold and faces deportation at the conclusion of his case — part of a growing trend in Alabama of undocumented immigrants charged with crimes being flagged for removal under the Trump administration.
A majority of the people deported by ICE this year were convicted of traffic or immigration offenses, not violent crimes, according to data obtained by CBS News.
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WPBN on MSNICE Detroit arrests suspected Tren De Aragua member in Traverse City on Independence DayUnited States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said agents with ICE Detroit arrested a "suspected member"